Philo B 93 said:Did the NDA not include the plot?The Porkchop Express said:Uh, that's kind of why I sign the NDA.Philo B 93 said:
Who are you ghostwriting for?
I gave you about 1% of the plot. Didn't think you could handle anything more complex.
Philo B 93 said:Did the NDA not include the plot?The Porkchop Express said:Uh, that's kind of why I sign the NDA.Philo B 93 said:
Who are you ghostwriting for?
The Porkchop Express said:Philo B 93 said:Did the NDA not include the plot?The Porkchop Express said:Uh, that's kind of why I sign the NDA.Philo B 93 said:
Who are you ghostwriting for?
I gave you about 1% of the plot. Didn't think you could handle anything more complex.
Cant go wrong with Explosions in the Sky. I've been cranking End for that last few weeks on my commute.heddleston said:
C@LAg said:
OP
As this is a paid project (for you) and you are asking us to help you do your job, we should be compensated for said requested suggestions.
what is the going rate for each of our suggestions?
A is A said:
OP - what direction you want to go in? You have 80% classic rock, 10% instrumental / atmospheric, 10% other.
Help us, help you!
Rocagnante said:The Porkchop Express said:Uh, that's kind of why I sign the NDA.Philo B 93 said:
Who are you ghostwriting for?
Is ghostwriting prevalent in sci-fi? I've never really thought about it or looked into it.
Eliminatus said:
I would challenge you to fit in a Gregorian Chant. The world would be a better place with more of those.
Here's a banger I sometimes have bumping chilling at red lights. The 30 second mark of this to about 1 minute may have promise.
Rocagnante said:
So say you were a ghostwriter of a book that went on to win a Hugo or a Nebula…would you receive any kind of recognition?
The Porkchop Express said:Rocagnante said:
So say you were a ghostwriter of a book that went on to win a Hugo or a Nebula…would you receive any kind of recognition?
Nope. My standard contract says that when I receive the final payment, I renounce all claims and rights to the book in perpetuity.
I will say that something that I wrote once ended up with the author on a cable TV talk show talking about the book, and it was really weird to watch it. Most times I don't give a second thought to stuff after it's out the door, but the author sent me the link and it was pretty surreal. Like a very small part of me was like, "Hey, you didn't write that, STFU!"Rocagnante said:The Porkchop Express said:Rocagnante said:
So say you were a ghostwriter of a book that went on to win a Hugo or a Nebula…would you receive any kind of recognition?
Nope. My standard contract says that when I receive the final payment, I renounce all claims and rights to the book in perpetuity.
That would be like the coolest thing ever that you could tell nobody about.
The first series that came to mind was The Expanse. I know James SA Corey is a pen name for two authors collaborating on the series, but I wonder if they had any help? And if so would they admit it?
I asked for a play list of people based on musical cues based on the minimal plot description. I told people that if I really liked their contribution, I'd try to work their user name into the book. There is no music in the book, at least I'm not planning on it.LMCane said:
so the book is also going to play music?
what's the actual objective here?
I write fiction and non-fiction books, probably about 80% non-fiction, as well as blog, articles, whitepapers, case studies, copy for websites, copy for marketing, copy for emails, speeches, and more.LMCane said:
as a non-fiction writer, it is such a scam that anyone can put down ideas from their brain as quickly as they can type and call it a book.
while Historians spend YEARS researching and compiling literally 600 footnotes from different archives, museums, university libraries around the world. It has cost me hundreds of dollars in fees to purchase the rights to publish battle maps, photos, art work.
(joking about a scam but you fiction writers have it easy!)
The Porkchop Express said:
About 40% of the way through the first deliverable section
Contributors who have found themselves added to the story so far include:
Spilner as a rival astronaut for Echoes
A spacecraft has taken the M83 designation for VP at Pierce and Pierce's suggestion of M83 Outro
Blake is the mission director for NIN - The Day the World Went Away
Noah is the on-call psychiatrist for Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata
Cornell and Thorpe as two missing astronauts as the user names aren't that conducive to a story.
I've liked several more but haven't worked them in yet. Will be wrapping up today.