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Sure, it would be great for my bank account if art were free, but what is the creator supposed to feed or house herself with? If you find a landlord who takes likes in lieu of rent, let me know.

Go to my local library you say? I have. My local library does not have any books, print or digital, in the MM Romance genre. I have repeatedly requested mm romance books, I have even written letters to the administration of my local library asking them to have mm romance books available. Their response essentially was that they did not think there was enough interest in the mm romance genre in my area to waste money on them. Even after repeated requests, my library does not have any of your books.
Essentially, if I want to read mm romance books more often than once every three months, I really have no choice but to pirate them.
I realize that we need to support the artists or there will be no more art available, but it’s still not fair that only those with the income to pay for it are allowed to partake of the art. In your example of the bard playing his harp, he played to everyone in the room, not just to those with the coin to pay him to play.
I am not an entitled 16 year old who thinks everything should be free because they have never had to pay for anything or live in the real world. I am an adult with a disability who has a seriously limited income. Reading is pretty much my only source of entertainment because I can’t afford to have a tv, I can’t afford to go to movies or concerts, I can’t afford to even eat out more than once a month. So yes, I pirate books because they are the only thing in my life that brings me a bit of joy. I’m sorry if you think I’m a bad person for that.

Have you tried requesting books through the Interlibrary Loan department of your library?


Five books a year?! Geez, my library lets you ILL 5 books at a time. When you bring them back, you can ILL another 5.


I forgot to mention a couple of other things that may help. Goodreads now sends out an email if one of the books on your To Read shelf goes on sale. I'm not sure what the price cap is.
BookBub is a free online service that sends out a regular newsletter (daily or weekly, your choice) with ebooks that are $2.99 or less. Some of the ebooks are even free. You can choose the categories you're interested in, and they do cover M/M romance. You can also search their database (although it has a terrible search engine) and bookmark specific books you're interested in, and mark them "deal alert." If that book ever goes on sale for $2.99 or less (or for free), they'll email you.
Hope this helps.



Here's my take on "free" stories. A good story is a wonderful and powerful thing that can transport me to a different time or place. I get to know characters that I would never meet in my r..."
Thank you so much, Kathy! Your words are much appreciated.

It's partly generational, for sure. But I've also seen -- in an interesting twist -- grown-up people SELLING pirated work to make a little extra income for themselves. I guess it was a natural development, a natural step in the logic that argues I-don't-have-money-for-fripperies-OH-WAIT-I-can-haz-money-but-selling-stolen-fripperies. ;-D

I see this with my own nieces and nephews--who are (yes, I'm biased, but this is true nonetheless) kind and generous kids -- good-hearted kids who didn't see a problem in downloading manga since their pals on the internet (i.e, everyone) was doing it. It just honestly never occurred to them that there might be an issue. Particularly since the books weren't available for them to buy in this country.
So some of this is a matter of ignorance and misinformation.

Hi Rachel,
Possibly you're confusing my post with another post, since I never mentioned libraries and I specifically said I'm not referring to the occasional "pirating" by an individual who might share a book with a friend or rip a copy of a CD and so forth.
But the fact that you feel indignant enough to jump on your soapbox here in the comment section of my blog frankly makes me less sympathetic to your plight. It's one thing to be forced by circumstances to do things we wouldn't ordinarily do (and certainly wouldn't boast about). It's another to try and justify behaviors we know are wrong--that society as a whole condemns as wrong (stealing from artists, in this case -- who are mostly as poor or poorer than YOU) -- in public at the top of our lungs because we imagine....what?
That your need for genre fiction is the greater?
*splutter*
People pirate for different reasons. That's true. But to try and equate genre romance reading with the essentials of life is a stretch. Especially given how many venues there are for freeding (reading for free through authorized channels): Scribd, author promos and giveaways and perma-free books. On my own (I'm running several free book promos right now just for joining my mailing list -- and I also have a book I'm serializing on Wattpad AND I have perma free titles on all the bookselling sites.
As does pretty much every author I know.
What you seem to be saying is that's not enough. Your argument seems to be that your reduced circumstances should not affect your access to the pleasures of unlimited discretionary income.
And when has that been true in the history of the world?
Never.
Like I said, I have a mostly tolerant view about piracy -- by which I mean the low level activities of individuals like yourself who truly, for whatever reason, can't be the generous and law-abiding people they would choose to be in other circumstances.
But not all authors feel that way. Not all authors are in a position to feel that way when average author earnings are declining -- and they're low to start with. Like $11,000 a year or less low.
I understand the power of fiction. I understand the role fiction and stories play in making life bearable, frankly. However. It's one thing to be forced to pirating the books you would happily pay for were things different. It's a very different thing to try and justify that piracy to the very people you're pirating from. Some of them in as bad or worse circumstances than your own.

Yes, but here's the problem. A good portion of those people living below the poverty line are authors and other artists. People who gambled on a dream, who chose to give up steady incomes in some cases because they were driven to create art -- and then discovered that dedication and passion are not acceptable currency when it comes to paying the bills.
Artists have to eat too.

Hear, hear.

Rachel, I have difficulties believing that you posted several posts justifying piracy here, in author's blog.
Piracy IS STEALING. No matter what the circumstances are. It's that simple.

There are sites like booklending.com and lendle.me, where people with books to lend through the Kindle lending program are hooked up with people looking to borrow those books. There are TONS of m/m titles available there. Maybe not the exact book you want at the exact moment you want it, but hey. Free and legal. Most of the romance groups here on GR have lending threads, too. And they all have freebie and sales threads- including Josh's group.
Kobo and ARe are third party retailers with reader reward programs, and LooseId and Riptide are publishers with rewards programs if you buy directly through them. Riptide gives away a book every week in their newsletter. A lot of authors give away a book in their monthly newsletters. Book tours are incredibly popular, and they all give out books and/or gift certificates.
There are also rewards programs like Swagbucks that allow you to earn Amazon gift certificates for, basically, letting them advertise at you. I earn at least one $25 Amazon gift certificate a month for very little effort. If you're willing to work at it a little bit you can get a lot more.
So no, I'm sorry. "I have to steal books because I'm so poor" doesn't cut the mustard.

Rachel, pirating is not the way to go. What you need to do is beef up your web searching skills. There's tons of free fiction to be found on the web. Yes, admittedly, some of it is just awful, but there are plenty of sites dedicated to decent free fiction. You might have to filter it depending on your tastes, but it does exist.
Some places even put up monthly chapter updates, like Less Than Three Press. Some authors actually put up books for free on their blogs, or as Josh mentions on places like Wattpad, Smashwords, Adult Fanfiction, Fiction Press, and Gay Authors.
Stealing from authors never made sense to me. They put their heart and soul into their writing and they deserve the rewards of that work.
I'm willing to spend a little bit more for books in the more niche markets, and I have a budget for them I try to stick to, but I do keep an eye out for deals too, especially on books that I really want to read.
Here's my take on "free" stories. A good story is a wonderful and powerful thing that can transport me to a different time or place. I get to know characters that I would never meet in my real life. Reading a good book is like a mini vacation - an experience. I can pull it out and revisit it whenever I want to. I love a good story and appreciate the talent and hard work that has created it. I'm happy to pay the small amount that books cost in our digital age so that authors (and editors, publishers, etc) are compensated.
I discovered your books recently and love them. I hope your inspiration returns quickly. We need more of your stories!