Sentences with phrase «fic writers»

Providing a bounty of inspiration for fan fic writers and geekdom - inclined artists, Horizon Zero Dawn is proof positive of what can happen when a stuck - in - its - ways dev team takes a step back, reignites its love for the medium and finds its mojo.
At first blush, I don't think fan fic writers who participate in this program are giving up any rights that licensed tie - in writers have.
Oddly, since participating fan fic writers are paid royalties, they have the potential to make more than the licensed novelists make from work - for - hire.
Once you've got a bunch of credits, you can self - publish your own anthology (or do it jointly with some other flash - fic writers) People will know the stories have been vetted, so they're much more likely to buy.
Fan - fic writers (who have been writing this material anyway and may now find both money and recognition for their work)
Thanks Jenn — and I will try harder to bring more lit fic writers on — I will be talking to Orna Ross soon and her books are regularly in the UK Top 100 lit fic.
In essence, they're letting fan - fic writers (amateurs who write such stories for fun) make money off their work.
I think many romance writers would rather have other romance / women's fic writers critique them because so many others don't get the genre at all and will steer them wrong.
Jim isn't the only stealth spec - fic writer succeeding.
Worse yet, we bet anything that somewhere, some desperate fan fic writer is working on some sort of Miyamoto X Bowser relationship fic.

Not exact matches

A place for literary fiction readers and writers to engage in an open dialogue concerning the state of literature today, book recommendations, discussions, notes on the craft, and all things that make lit fic what it is and what it means to us as individuals.
FanFiction.net has a long history of complying immediately and without question to any rights holder's C&D, and if Alloy issues C&D s to them for these properties, it would likely result in the deletion of all GG, PLL, and TVD fan fic currently posted on FFn, regardless of whether those writers want to pull or not.
I'm not a lyrical writer, though, which is also typical of literary fiction; ultimately I chose lit fic because it was the best, if imperfect, fit.
Most of those claiming success (i.e. a living wage) are writers of soft - porn or vampire fic for YA, plus a few scifi zombie type stuff as well, as I say.
Then, of course, we had the usual submissions challenges — writers not reading guidelines or submitting work that was well - written but didn't conform to the flavor of weird spec - fic that we were looking for (for some reason, many authors wanted to write about Noah despite clear guidelines to avoid it).
In many ways, Kindle Worlds looks like you get the worst of both worlds — lose the community and feedback and audience and the chance to write exactly what you want without oversight or marketing concerns that you have when you write fanfic, but totally lose rights to your work (so you don't even have the grey - area maybe - fair - use - maybe - not rights of a fanfic writer right now) and get far, far less money than you would trying to sell original works or public domain fic.
Honestly, the more reactions I see the more I think that those fanfic writers who want to make money by writing are already trying — by writing original fic alongside it, or sometimes by filing the serial numbers off their fanworks, or by writing fanfic of public domain works.
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