How much does checking out books at a library help you, the author, if any?
Dear yriafehtivan,
Why thank you for asking. If you can’t afford my book, you can check it out from the library without any guilt.
Checking out library books in the U.S. helps me in two ways: I get a royalty from the book itself, and my publisher can have access to solid circulation numbers to let them know what demand looks like.
Checking out library books in the UK helps me out even more, as the UK has a snazzy royalty that happens each time you check out a book.
But more importantly, checking out books from your local library keeps the library alive. Public libraries need those circulation numbers to continue funding, and I can’t stress how strongly I believe that libraries are a crucial way to make stories and education available to everyone. If you can’t afford a book, check one out — such an act means that you’re helping lots of readers who can’t afford books, not just yourself.
urs,
Stiefvater
Books didn’t make me wallow in darkness, darkness made me wallow in books.
Jackson Pearce
Book Geek Quote #757
(via j-k-reading)
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Is Looking for a Librarian
weekend plans 📚 (📷: @mywhisperedcolors)
In response to the proposed elimination of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, American Library Association President Julie Todaro said the Trump Administration is using the wrong math when it comes to libraries. The nation’s more than 120,000 public, school, academic and special libraries are visited more than 1.4 billion times a year by hundreds of millions of Americans across the country, Todaro said. More than 80 major corporations and trade associations called libraries “critical national infrastructure” in a letter to U.S. senators. “To those who say that the nation cannot afford federal library funding, the American Library Association, American businesses and millions of Americans say emphatically we cannot afford to be without it,” she said.
Trump Budget Draws Reaction from Inside, Outside Congress, George Nelson
Use ALA’s Legislative Action Center today to ask your Senators to sign both the LSTA and IAL letters and show their support for federal library funding. Many Members of Congress will only sign such a letter if their constituents ask them to, so it’s up to you to help save LSTA and IAL from elimination or significant cuts.
Five minutes of your time could help preserve over $210 million in library funding at risk.
We have a little time left to call! As of this morning, 34 senators have signed the LSTA letter and 31 have signed IAL.
(via libraryadvocates)
(via http://bit.ly/2gKmGBv)
I have read this and now I have to go find more by Nalo!
I have read this, SF crossed with fantasy, modern space faring versus 18th century traditionalism, power mad versus a resistance fighter. Recommended! (Available through Smashwords so far)