I am writing a lot of stories set in the history of the Price-Healy family, slowly pushing my way toward the modern day. There are also stories set in the present day, such as the Antimony-centric novella, "Bad Dream Girl," which is going to appear in the anthology Glitter and Mayhem. A lot of these get given away for free on my website, in a variety of formats, with covers and everything. I like keeping the canon centralized.
That said, unless an anthology is commissioning something, it can be hard to carve out the time for what is essentially unpaid work. I need to prioritize my time according to what I'm getting paid for (which is why, for example, the rate of "Velveteen vs." stories went up so sharply when I got a print contract). So...
How would people feel if I opened a "tip jar," with the understanding that for every X amount of dollars, I would add a story in one of my universes to the master list of Paid For Things? Those stories would still have to fit around everything else, but it would make them easier to schedule, and would also make my lights easier to keep on. The stories themselves would remain free on my website, so if you didn't want to donate, you could just stand back and wait for nature to take its course.
Thoughts?
March 12 2013, 05:30:51 UTC 4 years ago
Kickstarter has issues, including the need to commit to firm delivery dates, and the fact that people want "extras." This isn't my primary source of writing income; it's just to carve out more space in the schedule. If I have to say "you get one story every two months AND six Field Guide entries AND a phone call," or whatever, I can't afford to do it without increasing the cost per story well beyond what I think is fair.
March 13 2013, 00:49:37 UTC 4 years ago
Yeah, Kickstarter does indeed have the issue of backer levels. Sometimes they're easy to do (buy this print comic and get a free PDF version and the like), sometimes not. The crowd-funding is really more for single projects, rather than being geared towards ongoing projects. It was just a thought.