>For Love Or Money?
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That’s the big dream of a lot of writers–to be able to earn enough money pursuing the muse to be able to pursue the muse. Such a small proportion of writers actually hit that mark that–well, Han Solo was right. Never tell me the odds.
Since then I’ve had articles and fiction printed in publications small and large, national distribution, some of them. Two books in print, two stories out in Cup of Comfort book editions in the last few years. All of which I’ve been paid for. Not enough to give up my day job by a long shot.
Fellow writers are confused about my devotion to my blog and my Firefox news writing as they don’t come with a direct paycheck. (Well, the Firefox gig pays with a share of ad revenue, but only as a result of clicks on the Google ads on the page. If no one clicks, then…nada.) Why waste your time publishing what doesn’t pay? You should concentrate on the works-in-progress that have monetary potential, they say.
I put some thought into this at the end of 2007, when I started my blog at awalkabout.wordpress.com . It was fairly quickly apparent that I couldn’t collect ad revenue at a WordPress-hosted site, so I put the ad on my homepage. Not exactly making money hand over fist. At Firefox too, I might earn pennies a day. But is that all that matters?
Writers write, so readers can read.
Oh, sure, there’s the “something flows from inside of me and I must put it down on paper, else I shall simply burst!” part. But none of that applies to a check, either. We write so others will read what we write. By this process, we share something special.
Awalkabout’s Weblog has now been accessed more than 40,000 times. Of course, those aren’t all discrete readers–I hope at least one or two of you stop more than once! But in the months it’s lived and breathed, that’s about 1,400 times a month someone has read my words.
I totalled up the Firefox hits the other day–since I started writing for that site in 2008, I’ve had over 60,000 separate hits on my stories. Those are much more likely not to be the same folks over and over, just because of their fanbase. So between the two, I’ve had someone read my words some 100,000 times in the last couple of years.
Sure, I keep writing the other, the novels, the short stories, the travelogues, hoping they’ll catch the eye of an editor or agent somewhere, so that I can invest in my pursuit of happiness. In the meantime, there’s 100,000 people who have read what I’ve written, people from all over the country–perhaps all over the world.
These may not have “paid,” in the way so many of us would like to be. But I’ve got to believe the words have paid off, in the way that has been true since the first storytellers began, in the connection of one person to another, an idea that sparks from one mind to the next, changing both people, even in some small way, forever.
Barbara Mountjoy has been a published writer for over 35 years, including seven years as a reporter and editor at the South Dade News Leader in Homestead, Florida. The Elf Queen, her first novel (under the pseudonym Lyndi Alexander), was released in July 2010, and two more books in the Clan Elves of the Bitterroot series will follow in 2011 and 2012.
Her other publications include the non-fiction book 101 Little Instructions for Surviving Your Divorce, published by Impact Publishers in 1999, stories in A Cup of Comfort for Divorced Women, in December 2008, and A Cup of Comfort for Adoptive Parents, in June 2009.
She regularly writes technology articles/television reviews at Firefox News (www.firefox.org/news), and blogs on a variety of subjects, including autism, science fiction and life at http://awalkabout.wordpress.com.