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Craft Chat A 6 figure deal-to be paid over 6 years-

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Pamela Jo

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Author Eithne Shortall started her writing career as a newspaper journalist. Her first novel, Love in Row 27, became a bestseller when it was published in 2017, and her second book, Grace After Henry, was shortlisted for the Irish Book Awards and won Best Page Turner at the UK Big Book Awards. The 37-year-old’s latest novel, The Lodgers, has just appeared in bookshops. Shortall lives in Dublin with her partner and two young children
What did you learn about money while growing up?

The satisfaction of earning my own money. I wasn’t allowed to get a proper part-time job until I was finished school but I was allowed to babysit. So I did my best to build up a babysitting empire. That funded my teen shopping until I had done my Leaving Certificate and started working as a waitress – which remains the job I think I was best at.

You reportedly signed a six-figure deal with a US publisher for your second book and your debut novel was optioned for a TV series. What’s been your most lucrative gig?

That stuff sounds great in a headline but when you break it down, it’s a little less exciting.

A two-book deal is paid out in stages over three or four years. If most people added up their salary over a three-year period, it would amount to six figures.



That said, it’s still a rare privilege to be able to make a living from writing and I am very grateful. In term of effort in for income out, the most lucrative gig is having a book translated: they pay you for the foreign language rights but you’ve already written the book.

When my debut was published, the UK advance was modest but I got six times as much for the German translation of it.

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"If most people added up their salary over a three-year period, it would amount to six figures."

Really?

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In London maybe. In Mayfair probably. Not here in rural or semi-rural Scotland.
You're right. Scotland as a whole is nearer GBP35k, and rural areas are likely to be less.

My point wasn't to say that there's nowhere in the UK where the median salary is less than GBP34k a year, rather that more than 50% of the UK as a whole would meet the criteria, so making 6-figures over 3 years is not rare.
 
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