Nov. 30th, 2007

SFWA

Nov. 30th, 2007 09:16 am
michaeldthomas: (Default)
As all of you know, I’m an aspiring SF writer. As such, it is my goal to publish and then one day joining SFWA, The Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America (http://www.sfwa.org/). It is the professional organization of SF authors and has been around since 1965.

It is a problematic organization at the moment. SFWA has recently had some serious problems with determining its role in disputes over online copyright. There are also many things that it could be doing in other areas that it simply isn’t, such as promoting SF literature in general. From the outside, it seems like a dying organization lacking in funding or enthusiasm. It is an organization of “futurists” who have a web design that is over a decade old. They are a reactionary, conservative organization that seems obsessed about how the interweb is stealing their monies, a “problem” that arguably does not yet exist. Those in charge seem to be older authors who have a sporadic publishing history.

I’ve been reading the blogs of my generation of authors, and it seems that many are being driven away from SFWA. They are not joining, or they are simply letting their memberships expire. I find this very troubling. This organization should be growing and changing. If it loses the younger members, it will die without anything there to replace it.

I hope that my generation of authors reconsiders. Change must happen from within, and the only way to do that is to have younger, more dynamic voices in the organization. The change will not come overnight, but that is the best way to initiate it. I have seen this play out in my special children’s organizations. It is nearly impossible to start a successful new organization, and it is unnecessary to do so if one already exists.

So please, be patient and loud. Eventually, SFWA will evolve into a wonderful organization like the Romance Writers of America (http://www.rwanational.org/).
michaeldthomas: (Default)
I am done with Wizards of the Coast’s Dungeons & Dragons. This week, Scalzi pointed out the screw job that they are doing to SF authors for their revamped Dragon Magazine (http://scalzi.com/whatever/?p=159). The gist is that they are paying bare minimum for original short stories, and then they keep the copyright to the work in perpetuity. That is not cool.

I realize that this is their response to screwing up on writers’ royalties for their CD-Rom project of past Dragon issues, but this is ridiculous. If you want to do work-for-hire, then pay real rates. Otherwise, you are just going to be the official publisher of amateur Forgotten Realms fanfic. I’m pretty sure that this is not what the paying subscribers want to be reading.

Look, I understood why WoC made the move to 4th Edition. They were running out of interesting book ideas for third edition, and I’m sure that it was reflected in their sales. There just isn’t a world ready for the Complete Kobold or The Expanded Grappler. Unfortunately, I just don’t buy into 4th Edition as a consumer.

Much of 4th Edition seems to be predicated on paying for online services in addition to shelling out hundreds of dollars for books. Much of this online stuff is for Internet play. That’s a great idea in 2002, but ridiculous now. The technology they are planning on using is pathetic if compared to World of Warcraft. There simply is not a compelling reason for me or anybody else to move to the new system.

Overall, this seems like the last desperate gasps of a dying division of a major toy company (Hasbro). As a gaming consumer, I’m unimpressed. As an aspiring writer, I’m insulted. They will not be getting my money anymore, and I doubt that I’m alone in this. I would not be shocked if D&D is dead in four years.
michaeldthomas: (Default)
Today, Outpost Gallifrey (http://www.gallifreyone.com/) effectively ended. The home of Doctor Who Fandom for the last decade has become merely a portal to a diminished news page, links, the Forum, an archive, and the Gallifrey One Convention. It’s a bittersweet thing.

I salute Shaun Lyon and all of the hard work that he did for us during the wilderness years. I’m not sure how he did it, but he did a magnificent job. Over 27 million visitors since 1996 agree with me. Let’s see if those shippy, young whippersnappers can hold a candle to his legacy.

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