wotwiki

Interview #666: Alloy of Law Signing Report - Green Hoodie Mistborn, Entry #9

Question

I don’t know if this question will come out right…is there a difference between being an author that works for Tor and an author that Tor works for?

Brandon Sanderson

Yes. Most authors, you’ll find, are actually independent businesspeople who license their books to a publisher for various languages, and so I don’t actually work for Tor. Now, Tor and I get along really well, and they’ve done very well by me, but I’ve also done very well by them, and so we have a very good working relationship. But actually I, as a businessperson, license them the books, and that means that I control all the characters, they can’t insert or change anything without my approval—they can’t even change commas without my approval—and that’s the way it goes for most people. Now, everything outside the cover I have is theirs, their packaging, so that’s why authors don’t get a lot of say in cover and things, because the marketing copy on the cover, the picture and stuff, that’s the publisher’s. They license the works. So, there is a difference. There are some authors who will do a work-for-hire sort of thing, like I did with the Wheel of Time. I work for Harriet on the Wheel of Time. I am employed by her. It’s a very good contract—I mean, she was very awesome to me—but at the end of the day, I am an employee working for her, a contractor working for her, and in that case, it’s a different sort of business relationship.

Contributing

If you are viewing this on github.io, you can see that this site is open source. Please do not try to improve this page. It is auto-generated by a python script. If you have suggestions for improvements, please start a discussion on the github repo or the Discord.