MoneyTree
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Music to write by: “Just Because” by Jane’s Addiction

First novels advances are notoriously low these days, yet new authors still have dreams of being able to quit their day jobs. Story of six figure advances abound, but how much, really, are new authors making? Tobias Buckell has compiled a list of first novel advances and nicely categorized them into sections (such as agented and unagented) and genre. He’s been doing this for a couple of years and amassed a pretty accurate picture of the kinds of advances being doled out. He’s currently soliciting more stats, so if you’ve recently recieved your first advance, drop by his blog and let him know.

According to Tobias, the average first novel advances break down thusly:

Genre Agented Unagented
Fantasy/Sci-Fi 6000 3500

Career Advances are a little better:

Genre Agented Unagented
Fantasy 15000 9000*
Sci-Fi 12500 7500

*Extrapolated

Brenda Hiatt has done virtually the same thing for romance novels, but she’s broken it down by publisher. She’s got a clever trick which prevents me from deep-linking to the list, but it’s highlighted on the left side of her blog under the title Show Me the Money.

Looks like Pocket and HarperCollins are tops in Romance at 15,000 and 13,500 respectively with advances ranging all the way down to zero (Wings E-Press).

What does this mean for us? Don’t quit your day job. Of course, you could always hope you get lucky. Stephen King’s “Carrie” sold for 200,000 back in the 70s. Who knows? That could be you!

This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 6th, 2007 at 12:51 pm and is filed under The craft. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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2 Comments(+Add)

1   Andrew LeBlanc    http://www.criticaloddness.com/blog
June 11th, 2007 at 12:24 pm

In Stephen King’s case, though, he didn’t make the big money when he first sold Carrie. He first sold it to Doubleday for $2500, and only when the paperback rights were sold later did he make the big money.

Is that even possible today, I wonder? One imagines that they buy up all of the rights at once for the first price. The low price.

2   Jordan Lapp    http://www.jordanlapp.com
June 11th, 2007 at 12:30 pm

In “On Writing” he claims his advance for Carrie was 200K. Ideally, you make the same amount of money regardless of your advance. We all know this doesn’t happen, but what can you do?

I’ve heard of authors getting huge advances for their first book. The key is to get a bidding war going between two different publishing houses.

One Trackback/Ping

  1. The Money Side of Writing at Tales from the Raven    Jun 11 2007 / 3pm:

    [...] Jordan for this info and link to Tobias Buckell’sĀ Author Advance Survey, I now feel [...]

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