Authors Can’t Make Ends Meet, and Other News

Hobos

Photo: Library of Congress



New statistics—the Guardian calls them not “shocking” but “ ‘shocking’ ”—suggest that “the number of authors able to make a living from their writing has plummeted dramatically over the last eight years, and that the average professional author is now making well below the salary required to achieve the minimum acceptable living standard” …
… So why are authors undervalued? If they’re “reluctant to see what they do as a real job, deserving of a real salary, then who can blame the public for taking advantage of their work? … In the dark old days, the storyteller always had the best place by the campfire. Those days may be gone, but the power of story remains.”
On palimpsests, digital reading, and erasable books: “To make a kind of loose analogy between a palimpsest and modern technology, computers often use a codec, or program that transfers information from one format into another, and a codec often loses content when moving between formats … What information are we devaluing now?”
Talking to Richard Linklater about his new movie, Boyhood, which was filmed over twelve years as its lead grew into an adult: “There would be few big moments. Instead, Linklater sought out the small truths of youth: friends lost forever after a move, adult choices children can’t understand, dull shifts at minimum-wage summer jobs. Passivity—not drama—dominates Mason’s days … Linklater admits he’s ‘at war’ with traditional narrative.”
Who’s the better prognosticator, Isaac Asimov or Tyra Banks?
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 10, 2014 06:30
No comments have been added yet.


The Paris Review's Blog

The Paris Review
The Paris Review isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow The Paris Review's blog with rss.