Mark Terry

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

What I've Been Reading

November 29, 2011
Here's the last 10 books I've read.

1. Bag of Bones by Stephen King. One of my favorite novels, I re-read it every couple years. Conveniently, I read it before the mini-series is aired on A&E in early December starring Pierce Brosnan. He wouldn't have been my first choice - certainly not an obvious choice - but he's got the acting chops. I'll be curious to see how faithful they are to the book. Hope they don't screw things up too much.

2. City of Ruins by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Science fiction. This is a sequel to Diving Into The Wreck. The main character, Boss, is an archaeologist/space diver/ship wreckage expert. It takes place way, way, way, way in the future. In the first book Boss discovers an ancient ship that seems to have somewhat active stealth technology. In City of Ruins, she's formed a company and team that actively looks for the technology, and they think there are indications of it on a planet whose major city periodically suffers geological disturbances. Oh boy, was she right, and although the pace is slow (to say the least), the story slowly unveils a fascinating look at the stealth technology and how little they actually understood the past. If there's a theme to these books - there are probably many - it's how history gets distorted over time.

3. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by JK Rowling. I'm re-reading the series this year and this second novel is still my least favorite of the seven. Still, an engrossing read.

4. The Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan. Riordan continues his Percy Jackson series, or at least, his second series featuring the Olympians. Percy wasn't in the first book of the second series, but he is in this one, although he has amnesia through much of it. It may be one of the best books he's written, period. A hell of a lot of fun. Hilarious with tons of action and engaging characters. Probably one of the most enjoyable books I've read this year.

5. Shock Wave by John Sandford. A Virgil Flowers novel. In this case, someone attempts to kill the CEO of a retail chain store in Grand Rapids, Michigan using a bomb, then related bombings occur on a building site in Minnesota. Although people outside of the midwest will think WalMart, the headquarters of Meijer is in Grand Rapids. Anyway, I liked this one quite a bit. Lots of twists and turns and Virgil is a great character.

6. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by JK Rowling. The third in the series. One of my favorite movies as well, although I think the movie perhaps improves on the book. This, to me, is the book where the series really gets going, where you start to see the grand arc of the whole series.

7. Turn Right at Machu Picchu: Rediscovering the Lost City One Step At A Time by Mark Adams. I already wrote about this, and had a nice email exchange with the author. A wonderful nonfiction book, highly recommended.

8. Cold Vengeance by Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child. I wrote about this as well, but I enjoyed it. I think I've enjoyed thinking about it after I read it more than I enjoyed actually reading it. Some memorable things in it, even if while I was reading it I was sometimes frustrated.

9. V is for Vengeance by Sue Grafton. It will take me some time to make up my mind about this novel, I think. I still count I is for Innocent as being one of the best mystery novels written, and in general, I'm a fan of Grafton. That said, readers change, and I have since I started reading this series about twenty-some years ago. I prefer a bit more tension and action and pace in my novels now than Grafton puts in her books. Nonetheless, there's much that's memorable about this book and I certainly liked it better than U is for Undertow.

10. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by JK Rowling. What struck me repeatedly while reading this novel was how great a job the scriptwriter, Steve Kloves, did of rearranging events, summarizing things, and chopping and shifting dialogue. Although I think the story is wonderful, I think Rowling might have benefited from some editing, particularly toward the end when she starts doing some Morrie the Explainer things (she does this a lot) so it makes sense - Dumbledore's interrogation of Bartie Crouch under veritaserum goes on forever. It's so complicated I have no problem understanding why Kloves et al decided to simplify the plot.

But she does a great job of setting up the next book's political issues with Cornelius Fudge at the end. I think it's too bad, actually, that they didn't manage to fit in the scene on the train at the end somewhere. To refresh your memory, as they are riding the train home, Harry, Ron & Hermione are talking when Malfoy, Crabbe & Goyle come in and start taunting them. When they start in on Cedric, the three of them - and Fred and George who were out in the train car hallway - simultaneously hit the three of them with multiple jinxes. Fred or George looks at the unconscious three, asks who did one jinx, then notes that it apparently didn't mix with the one he threw, because Crabbe or Goyle appeared to be growing tentacles. A very enjoyable read.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

A Little Help From My Friends

November 22, 2011
Something interesting has been going on with my Derek Stillwater novels. In any given month THE DEVIL'S PITCHFORK and THE SERPENT'S KISS, the 1st two, which I have released as e-books myself, sell somewhere between 10 and 20 e-copies total. This month, to-date, THE DEVIL'S PITCHFORK has sold 97 and THE SERPENT'S KISS has sold somewhere in the 80s. I'm not sure why the sudden jump (but I'm grateful). It might have to do with DIRE STRAITS, the Derek Stillwater novella I serialized here on my website. It might have to do with some mentions on a couple friends' Facebook pages recently.

So. I want to see if I can push e-book sales of THE DEVIL'S PITCHFORK up to 200 copies by the end of this month. That's 8 or 9 days, 11 or 12 copies a day.

Only $2.99!

But I could use your help. Any mention you could give me on your blog or on Facebook or Twitter or wherever you hang out would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

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Friday, November 18, 2011

A Rant About Publishing By Someone else

November 18, 2011
This is fairly entertaining and, in many ways, deeply true. I'm not on board with this guy's ego, but, I'm on board with much of what he says, especially when he says that the publishing industry doesn't use technology well and is very slow. Don't in any way feel obligated to read this. He gives permission to reprint it, so I am, because I found it amusing and sad and true and educational pretty much all at the same time.

Cheers,
Mark


An Open Letter to Simon and Schuester CEO Carolyn Reidy

Hi Carolyn,
Sit down before you read this.
We’ve got to talk.
Look. This is going to piss you off. This is going to look like I’m causing problems.
I’m not causing problems. I’m just pointing out where problems already exist.
Your publishing company has treated me like a bitch over the last year. This is partially my fault, because I’ve let S&S treat me like a bitch. But it’s also your fault, because you nurture and work with artists, and artists really really really deserve to be taken good care of by their publishing house.
I’m not naturally an artist. I’m kind of sort of a businessman. That’s why I’ve finally got the nerve to write what I’ve been thinking for a year now -
Your company fundamentally mistreats its editors, writers, and all its staff. If you don’t change course, you’re fucked and out of business very soon.
I don’t say that as an artist. I say that as a businessman. Your company is stuck in the year 1850 or whatever, when ships came from England with books to sell to the New World.
Your company (and indeed, whole industry) is stuck in slavery-era thinking.
And it’s bad business.
So, we’ve got to have a chat.
The Backstory Starts in Southeast Asia
After you read this, I suspect you’ll be saying, “How the fuck did we get in this position? WHOSE FAULT IS THIS?!!”
So, for your convenience, and for the entertainment of the reading public, let’s go through how we got here.
On 23rd December 2010, your publishing house agreed to sign me with a $65,000 advance.
I’m under the impression that’s pretty good for a first-time author, especially one as raw in writing quality as I was. But I really hit it off with the signing editor, Matthew Benjamin, and my agent, Jim Levine.
(Sidenote: Guys, I’m really fucking sorry to put you in the position I just did. You guys are both great, and I’m going to explain that you’re great and that the industry as a whole is fucked in a moment. But sorry for the tidal wave this is about to unleash.)
This was good news. I’d been panicked a little, to tell you the truth… my chief project had been consulting on high technology for the hospitality industry. My partner, Yifei Zhang, was and is incredibly brilliant, one of the most talented people I know.
Yifei and I built out processes for hotels to increase occupancy and revenues, and he was going to come meet me in Southeast Asia once we were ready. He designed a beautiful site (reachadventurers.com) that was about half-finished, and we had various creative and brochures and things like that.
This was happening in parallel with Jim Levine selling the book to various publishers, including your house.
Now, I’ve always been tenacious. If something important has to be done, give it to me.
Thus, I started “commando’ing” my way into high end hotels by just showing up and insisting that something really important was happening. I met the Director of Sales and Marketing at Caravelle in Saigon (I totally embarrassed myself with a terrible pitch) and I met the General Manager at the Sheraton (who was really cool, and we talked for three hours and he referred me to their head office in Singapore along with useful information about the whole industry).
We weren’t selling yet, but we had enough money for six months. Yifei was ready to quit his job, and we’d work full-time, starting in Malaysia and then moving to Singapore.
Yifei gave notice, and… his boss recognized he was a genius, and offered to triple his pay to stay, along with letting him hire six people and run his own skunkworks mini-division.
That motherfucker. What a smart move.
Yifei asked. He felt guilty. I told him take the offer. Amazing opportunity. And he’d never made real money before.
So Yifei was out, and I didn’t want to run Reach by myself. I’m not sure what was coming up.
And then – two days later, Jim lets me know we’ve got agreement and I’m publishing with you guys!
Title: for contract – How to Make a Self-Made Man; but final title subject to mutual approval of Author and Publisher
Length: 50,000 – 60,000 words
Delivery: July 1, 1011
Advance: 65k
Territory: world rights, all languages
Payout:
1/3 on signing
1/3 on D&A
1/3 on first publication (which would probably be somewhere between January – June 2012) but no later than 12 months after Publisher’s acceptance of the manuscript
Staring At The Harbor
Our “due date” was July 1st. Cool! Let’s work fast, and bang this out of the park!
Carolyn, I was really excited to work with you guys.
Really, really excited.
I can’t even tell you how excited. Jim thought my first book wouldn’t be a good fit, so I was going to write a new one from scratch from the outline I was given.
No problem! You know Nietzsche wrote Zarathustra in only three sets of one day each of manic writing?
I’m cyclothymic too. Like Nieztsche and Byron and those guys. Albeit, much less talented; I’m just saying I got the same affliction.
What’s a cyclothymic? It appears that we feel emotions more strongly than other people, and cycle through them. I’m fucking awesome when I’m manic, I can rapidly invent, experiment, implement, advance science, build systems, recruit and hire people, and just massively do unhumanly large amounts of stuff. Cyclothymic mania is when the SPIRIT OF GOD is within you.
Most people wouldn’t get it. Couldn’t get it.
Anyways. It’s pretty fucking awesome when it’s going on. SPIRIT OF GOD WITHIN YOU. Imagine that, eh?
There’s just one problem.
I need to feed the mania to keep it going. If I can chain manic successes together, it grows and I can go through multiple year-long mania runs where I travel through 60+ countries, explore the world, do massive deals, get invited to stay in mansions and villas and go to top nightclubs and parties and whatever.
Jut one rub – it’s a Faustian Bargain – crashing is… well, “hell” is a cliche, so I can’t use that. I’ll try to explain.
The more structured my life is, the better people around me, and the more resources I’ve deployed intelligently, the less likely I crash. But when a convergence of bullshit strikes, then I crash hard and I’m fucking useless for a while. It’s a real bummer, I’ll tell ya. All you think about when crashed is drowning. I mean, literally drowning, I’ll stare the harbor in Hong Kong and think it’s be pleasant to be under the water. I have to just remind myself that when I’m uncrashed I’ll be glad I’m still alive, and someday I’ll probably be manic again, and then I can get back to serving humanity.
Anyways.
July 11th! Woohoo!
But then… your publishing house kind of drops the ball.
There’s some back and forth talk, but I didn’t a copy of the final contract to sign until 1st March 2011.
But fine, I signed quickly. Let’s get to work!
Never Have Only One Thing Going
Now Carolyn, I’ve got to explain something. When someone doesn’t do what they say, and you keep soldiering on, you’re letting them treat you like a bitch.
You guys had already dragged ass for more than three months after we had agreement in principle. Then we sign, and the contract calls for payment “Immediately.”
Now, how immediate is “Immediately”?
I’m sure it’s a settled question in American legal law, but I’m not going to bother researching it. I’m sure it’s not –
– wait! Let’s play a game!
Carolyn, how long do you think it took your publishing house to pay me your contractually obligated “immediate” payment?
C’mon, guess before I tell you.
C’mon, c’mon, c’mon! Guess!
Three hours? The same day? The next day?
The same week?
Carolyn, do you think your publishing house paid me the same month? We signed on the 1st of March. Do you think you paid in March?
Hmm. I bet you know where this is going.
And it’s not like we’ve got any surprises coming up. We had agreement in December of the previous year, and you already dragged ass.
You paid me on 18th April 2011, six and a half weeks after “immediate” payment was due.
Unfortunately, I just accepted this nonsense.
At that point, I had demonstrated that I was a bitch that would accept table scraps from your company, and I started subsequently being treated like a bitch.
The Downward Spiral Begins
So, I’m not entirely sure, but I think your company signed me because I have interesting ideas, and I know how to market them. The team at Simon and Schuester’s Touchstone division (who are great btw, sorry S&S Touchstone team for causing you a headache right now) – well, I was on the phone with THE WHOLE TEAM right away.
You guys were serious and ultra-professional in December. And you were excited with me. Particularly my marketing savvy – the Touchstone team commented that I was extremely prepared (and they were impressed with that), clearly I understood marketing very well (and they were impressed with that), and they thought I had a chance at being “the next Tim Ferriss” (!!!!). (Sidenote: I think Tim Ferriss is much better at marketing than me.)
So yeah, you guys wanted my writing and marketing ability.
But now, shit’s about to get ugly.
Subject: Has there ever been a moneyback guarantee on a print book?
I had an idea that might be interesting. Moneyback guarantees are pretty thoroughly proven to increase conversions and sales online. What if we printed this on the first or second page of the paper book?
This Book Rocks Your World, or It’s Free
To the best of my knowledge, this has never been done before.
I think this book contains excellent insight and guidance in it. The whole thing is tested and has been effective with a variety of people. But if you buy it, try the ideas, and they’re not worth what you paid, I’ll buy your copy from you. Go to:
http://www.selfmadebook.com/guarantee
And there’s instructions on how to sell me your copy of the book. I’m leaving this offer open for all of 2012.
I’m confident that I can serve you with this writing. If I can’t, you’re not out any money. So, read on and enjoy. Thank you.
Your loyal strategist,
Sebastian Marshall
On the terms and conditions of the guarantee, we specify that they’ve got to read some of the book, that it applies for only 2012, and then we set up a way that isn’t a headache to deal with it. (Maybe they submit proof of purchase and proof of donation to a library or something? Screwing around with return inventory is a nightmare, probably much cheaper just to let them keep it) In the guarantee T&C, we also specify that it only applies if the store they ordered from doesn’t offer their own guarantee first.
I think this could spur an increase in buying definitely, but more importantly I think it could be a really nice angle for the media and for people to talk about.
Could we try to do something like this? I think this could be really a boon for our marketing and PR.
Sebastian
I don’t know Carolyn. Maybe it’s a bad idea. But it is an idea, and it got no play from you guys.
Okay, whatever. At least you spent some time implementing the three hour long design brief I wrote for the cover, giving specific recommendations and historical comps?
Alas, no. When I got the cover, they totally ignored everything about my audience, my goals, my notes I gave you guys, and whatever else. I re-wrote notes, and they were ignored. So much for “meaningful consultation”!
I’d list more, but it’s all the same sort of thing. Suffice to say, I kept coming with ideas that might or might not work, and getting back nothing or less than nothing in return.
But The Worst Part…
…is that I kept being given pseudo-deadlines, meeting them, and then whoever would be on vacation and wouldn’t reply for a couple months. I burned fucking hard in Tokyo to meet my deadlines, BRUTALLY working on nothing else to get some stuff to Matthew…
…and then he’s on vacation, and didn’t tell me. On the supposed very important deadline day.
So I kind of crashed. Hard.
I was pretty invested in this emotionally, and I’m usually able to will things to work. But here? It’s not happening. I’m being blown around in the wind, and I can’t figure it out.
It’s Not The Editor’s Fault. It’s Your Fault.
It’s not Matthew’s fault. Matthew’s fantastic, he pushes me, he’s very intelligent and well read, and I like him a lot. (Sidenote: Sorry for doing this, Matthew.)
Here’s the thing – it’s the year 2011, and you guys lack basic technology calendaring. Your editors don’t work with your marketers. There’s no rudimentary project management system in place. There’s no consistency or fairness or transparency in the author’s contract process. You guys don’t keep your own promises.
It’s not Matthew’s fault. Matthew’s overworked, underpaid, and I imagine he’s somewhat frustrated with your company’s bullshit as well. In fact, I think everyone is frustrated with your whole industry’s bullshit, which is why traditional publishing is dying.
You need better tech.
You need to pay your people better, equip them better, give them better tools and resources, and kill as much of the bureaucracy and paperwork they do. Matthew spends all his damn time dealing with internal bullshit, doesn’t work hands-on with marketing people very often (your marketers and editors don’t work together Carolyn! Do you know how fucking stupid that is in 2011?!!), and his authors wind up pissed off and disrespected.
I’m not much of an artist, really.
But let’s play pretend. I’ll be a pretend artist. You too, Carolyn. Pretend you’re an artist.
You’re kind of up and down, which is a common temperament for art-making people, especially weird-paradigm-shifting-art-making-people. You’re really excited, since you’ve dreamed for forever of getting published.
All you do is work on the project, highly motivated.
They keep jerking you around and treating you like a bitch.
You’re kind of afraid of them, because the contract you signed gives them all the power and you none.
(Sidenote, Carolyn: Fix that. Less draconian contracts will make it easier to build the goodwill and collaboration necessary to make art. The Sword of Damocles hanging over the writer’s head doesn’t help. Really, I promise it doesn’t help. Trust me on this if you can’t understand me.)
So, do you think you can make great art in those working conditions? Where you’re being mistreated, not cared for, ignored, lied to, and having your “great marketing ideas” just fall into dust?
C’mon now. And mind you, I’m a hell of a lot less sensitive than most artists; I’m not even an artist, really.
This is 100% not the editor’s fault, who is great. Jim apologized to me. He said, “Sebastian, I’m sorry, it’s just how the industry works… I’m sorry, I wish I could say more, but it’s how it operates!”
Carolyn, that’s a fucking problem. It’s 2011, you’re running a sinking ship, and it’s “just how it operates.”
Matthew’s not a problem.
Jim’s not a problem.
Your designer (who is good – I bet he’d have done good work if he ever saw my design brief) is not the problem.
I don’t think I’m the problem.
Maybe I’m just a problem, and should be really grateful you were maybe going to publish me, and should just accept that I have to play by your rules, be ignored, be lied to (yes, lied, Carolyn – when you said you’re going to do something and sign your name to it, and don’t do it, we call that lying), and otherwise just be jerked around?
But I don’t think I’m the problem.
I don’t even think you’re the problem, really. Maybe it was rude of me to call you out personally. It’s not your fault, you took over the ship in 2008 and you’re trying to keep it on course in a disinterested corporate conglomerate that’s all about P&L and various draconian bureaucratic bullshit.
I think the system is the problem, it’s broken, and should be fixed.
Not Afraid Any More
Carolyn, I’m sorry for calling you out. I hope I didn’t ruin your Wednesday too badly.
I’m not here to make you feel bad. I wanted you to see it from my perspective.
See, I stuck with you because I was afraid.
I was scared.
Not love.
Fear.
I thought I needed you as recently as ten days ago.
Ten days ago, a catalystic process happened. I’m back on the insane upward trajectory I was on a couple years ago. I just signed a business contract that pays me $40,000 to $700,000 in 3 months based on performance. It’s 54 times the highest 30 consecutive days net profit, on high dollar products – the equivalent of 4.5x annualized. If you plug some numbers in, it comes out pretty big pretty quickly. I’m willpowering a business to exist that didn’t before, just hired seven top-notch people at top of market pay plus fantastic benefits, and I’m arming them to the teeth with a top designer, a market researcher, tons of resources, and all sorts of great things.
And you know what? It’s not even all that expensive!
I’m building so fast with so little money… it’s amazing what you can do when everyone is in sync with no politics, no bullshit, everyone committed, and pure love and support.
Anyway, taking this position put me over capacity. From now until February, I’m at 180% to 240% of my maximum possible capacity at the current rates, obligations, coordination, and resources I have.
So you know what? I just told everyone in my life that they’ve got to do better to stay in my life. Not just be more professional or work harder or coordinate better.
But really do better, on a philosophical level.
I called out one guy who has always been difficult that I worked for. Whenever I had a great idea for him that would make his business run better, he’d drag ass on implementing it, make me explain myself 10,000 times, I’d have to press him and he’d complain about the littlest expense or commitment.
And this, despite the fact that I’ve made him tens of thousands of dollars!
So I told yesterday, “Hey! You don’t appreciate me enough! Every time I have a good idea for you, you get pessimistic and stupid and whine. STOP IT AND BE MORE GRATEFUL THAT I’M MAKING YOU MONEY.”
He starts to say, “Well, I’ve got to be carefu–”
And I say, “No you don’t! How much money have I made you?”
And he says, “A lot.”
I say, “Yeah. At least 20 grand you wouldn’t have. So STOP BEING A BITCH WHEN I WANT TO MAKE YOU MONEY. AND BE MORE GRATEFUL.”
And he starts to dislike that, and I say it again, but louder. And then he offers me equity in his company worth something like $180,000 to $360,000 if I implement all the ideas he’d been demurring on.
Jesus. Where was all this when I was being nice?
Most Artists Aren’t Businessmen, And Thus…
…you know, Carolyn, or whoever, I’d like you to treat me better, appreciate me more, and use my talent so we’re all very successful.
But that won’t be enough.
Most artists aren’t businessmen. So they’ll stay afraid, desperate, clinging to your company like a life-raft in a sea of obscurity and toil.
But your raft has holes in it. It’s sinking.
It’s sad.
It’s really, really sad.
Artists expect to do art with you, and they instead get bullshit.
We can’t work like this.
I don’t know. Maybe other people can take being disrespected by a gigantic corporate clusterfuck, but you’re missing like 90% of my talent.
Matthew wrote me. The last batch of my writing is apparently up to snuff. Quite good, even!
I’m almost done.
But you know what? The book isn’t right. It’s like, 20% mine, 20% Matthew’s, 10% Jim’s, and 50% corporate clusterfuck.
I could put my head down and just grind, get it done at 4AM before I go to work, and whatever.
But you know what? You’re now the people in my life who treat me the worst.
I mean, you’ve really treated me like dogshit. And I stuck around because I was afraid.
Who am I? Well, fundamentally I’m just some dude. If I’m saying anything that doesn’t make sense or doesn’t jibe with your experience, and the publishing industry is actually doing awesome, then go ahead and write me off and go back to your process.
But okay. You already know your industry isn’t healthy. So you should very carefully evaluate how reality-based I am before making any decisions. Does what I’m saying make sense?
You’ve got a couple options:
Option 1: If you still want to publish me, I’ve got to know that things are going to get better.
Yes, you’ve got to do better by me. Clearly.
But not just me. Everyone you work with, everyone’s whose lives you touch.
You need to do some sort of audit of all of S&S looking for stressful bureaucracy, unfriendly things for editors, lack of modern collaboration and technology, and unfriendly hostile terms to authors.
At a BARE MINIMUM, you establish basic project management, basic calendaring, drastically simplify the standard S&S contract, and provide plenty of paid time for knowledge share between different branches of the company so that editors and marketers work more intimately together and get in sync. Then start treating your editors like GOLD, kill their stupid bureaucracy requirements and let them run more freely.
That’s the bare minimum.
I have other suggestions. I think you should get together with the other publishers and lobby Congress to let you automatically turn all paper books into digital form and pay a 3x higher royalty to any author who doesn’t opt out of the deal.
I think you really ought to speed up. It’s not so hard. Modern businesses run fast, there’s people who know how to make that happen. Three months from agreement in principle to contract, followed by a six week breaching-of-contract delay? Not okay. Amazon’s publishing wing doesn’t make mistakes like that.
Oh, and you really need some new angles on marketing and distribution. You guys don’t get my generation at all. You need to let your bright authors try crazy things. You’re in a hits-based business, stop being so damn conservative. You need more big winners, which requires letting abstract creative thinkers try weird crazy stuff.
Option 2: Cancel My Ass, And Do Whatever Bad Things You Can To Me
I wouldn’t blame you after this stunt I just pulled!
Look, I’m sure you’re all unhappy with me. I’m not saying pleasant things.
But here’s my basic message:
*Your industry is fucking slow
*Your industry disrespects authors
*Your industry under-equips and disrespects editors
*Your industry is lacking basic modern technology
*Your industry uses draconian contracts with artists which destroy goodwill
*Your industry is conservative about trying new things despite being in a deathspiral (this is the most confusing one to me)
*Your industry doesn’t foster a good enough collaboration among basic functions like editing and marketing
*Everyone knows this, and thinks it’s okay “because that’s how publishing is”…
*…but it’s not okay, and we all know that deep down…
*…so, do something about it before it’s too late.
Respectfully Yours,
Sebastian Marshall

Anyone is welcome to republish this in full or in part, anywhere, without asking for permission. Have fun.