by Janis Patterson
Oh, I thought I was so smart. I
would self-publish my backlist (which I did) and make a lot of money (no so
much and nowhere near what I’m worth) and be in charge of my own destiny (talk
about being a dreamer!). The idea of being head of my own publishing company
was irresistible. I would choose covers, I would have the final say over my
editors, I would control my publicity and advertising (at least to the extent
of my budget). I would…
And all that came true, plus a lot
more I didn’t anticipate, in spite of having been in the business community one
way and another since I was very, very young.
Running a publishing house – even a teeny-tiny
one-person, one-author house – is very different from running a lemonade stand.
You just can’t take what money comes in and blithely put it in your pocket,
darn it! Like it or not, we one-woman-show publishers are pretty much subject
to the same rules and regs as the Big 5.
We all – or we should – take all the
deductions for business-related expenses that we can, whether as author or as
publisher. One benefit is that a clever author can make almost everything a
deduction. For years when The Husband and I have taken a trip of some duration (not
just a weekend) I come home, write three chapters and a synopsis set in
wherever it was we went and send it off to some publisher or another. Thereby our
trip becomes a research trip even if the book doesn’t sell. The only bad thing
about this is that some of these books – which I never really intended to write
– actually sold, so I had to finish the things. Unintended consequences.
Being a publisher is in a way just
more of the same. Cover artists and editors and PR people are all legitimate
tax deductions, but it gets complicated. Do you send them 1099s? What if they’re
out of the country? Well, that depends on a lot of things, some of which my
accountant and I are still wrangling about. I haven’t had to worry about
capital gains yet – little enough capital and no gains to speak of – but that
will come. Should I create an LLC or incorporate? It was about here that my
accountant started to babble, so we will leave that for another time when the
monies are sufficient enough that I feel they could justify such a discussion.
Though it sounds odd to say, thank
goodness this year I didn’t earn enough as an author/publisher to have to worry
about such things, but as I write more and more books and – hopefully – sell more
and more books, these problems will become something with which I will have to
deal.
Sigh.
Why do things have to be so complicated?
And so extortionate? In a country developed by and made great by entrepreneurism
and free enterprise, you would think that the government would be encouraging
people to work and start businesses and keep the engine of the economy
expanding instead of nit-picking and taxing and penalizing the system to death.
It just doesn’t make sense. The unintended consequences of such freedom-hating anti-capitalism
attitudes are almost too horrifying to contemplate.
My father once said that no matter
how carefully we choose our actions, no matter which path we take, we can never
be sure of the outcome because there will always be unintended consequences.
How right he was!
6 comments:
I know exactly what you mean. It's not always easy being an author, especially one that's self-published!
I made a living as a free-lance writer for many years, and have been writing and selling fiction for over 25 years. I have started one publishing house and one anthology series with other writers. I know what it means to be an independent writer, publisher, contractor. It's tough and it costs money.
But I have no complaint about taxes. I know what i'm paying for--the roads I drive on, the reliability of electricity, among other utilities, the legal system that allows me to tell someone at the door that no, they can't have my property.
It is very easy to start a business in this country and hold on to it. I'm willing to pay for that.
Good for you! I've just never wanted to be theone who did it all.
I have to agree with Susan Oleksiw about taxes. I'd like to pay more and get the roads and bridges fixed!
I've done some self-publishing, but I have busted my heinie to be published traditionally, also, so I didn't have to keep doing those things. Not my cuppa! More power to you!
I'm traveling pretty much the same road as you, and I have to agree with everything you said.
Ain't life grand?
Marja McGraw
Well said, Janis. After ten publishers over the years I decided to publish my out of print books, then my new releases. I love the freedom it offers, and consider taxes just another expense of doing business.
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