in reply to Re: Re:^4 New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
in thread New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6

Could you elaborate on the cost to the authors? Thanks.

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Re: Re: Re: Re:^4 New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
by Elian (Parson) on May 22, 2003 at 20:59 UTC
    There is no cost as such--the negative paymens are virtual rather than actual. What publishers do is potentially give an author an advance on royalties. Then as the book sells you get a statement (usually semi-annually or quarterly) that shows what the sales have been, what your royalties on those sales are, and what they've paid you so far. If they've paid you more than the sales so far, the royalty statement shows negative.

    You can get a negative statement either because you've not sold enough copies to cover the advance, or if the returns exceeded sales for the royalty period. (Which does happen--publishers do take back unsold books in a number of circumstances)

    You don't ever have to mail your publisher a check or anything, you just won't get a check from them. (Potentially ever, I suppose, if sales never cover the advance)

      Could you shed some light on how O'Reilly compensates authors for publishing their works through safari? Thanks.

        Erm... I have no clue. (I know--Bad Dan! Read your contracts! :)

        I have an amended contract for P6E sitting at home, so I can see how it works. I expect O'Reilly has it on their website somewhere--none of the info I've posted has been at all proprietary. (I remember finding it when I first went looking, though I don't remember the details now) I expect Safari payments, such as they are, get credited the same way as paper copy royalties.

        If you're interested in writing a book for O'Reilly, this is something to discuss with the editor you get, before you sign the contracts. They're in a far better position to comment on it than I am.

      Thanks for the clarification :)