nikolai
First Post
takyris said:I'm tempted. Although the fact that they're giving people a full year to crank out 90,000 words is a bit odd.
I don't think this is that odd. It works out at c. 2,000 words a week, which is pretty good going for someone who's not a full time writer. And a book a year is also the going rate of production for many of the big name fantasy authors.
There's two other interesting sites anyone who is going to go for the open call should look at. The General Book Submission FAQ and the Novel Submission Guidelines. The first gives "what they look for in a submission". The second mentions exact details of what they want in the cover letter and the ideal formatting of the writing sample.
takyris said:It's odd that they don't talk at all about payment or anything. I mean, with a media tie-in, I'm not expecting discussions about royalties, but "Hey, this is worth $xxxx" would be nice.
I suppose that comes once the winning proposal is chosen. I suppose they want to keep things simple for the moment, and not swamp everyone in un-needed details. But it looks like the author will likely get royalties.
The novels in each of the shared-world book lines are written on a work-for-hire basis. This means that Wizards of the Coast contracts with authors to write the books on a royalty (or in some instances flat-fee) basis and retains all rights to the characters, settings, and stories we publish in these lines.
http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=books/main/submissions
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