How to be a starving writer while biting the hands that feed you.

Apex Publications, 2011, 172 pages
( You, too, can make a living writing for content mills, local weeklies, and term-papers-to-order services. )
Verdict: Starve Better is aimed at would-be writers and anyone who just likes reading about making a living as a writer. Also, anyone who likes to read a writer bagging on critique groups, slush piles, and the inflated distinction between literary and genre fiction. A short, quick read which I enjoyed quite a bit, and has more actual useful advice than you'll get in most "how to improve your writing" books.
My complete list of book reviews.

Apex Publications, 2011, 172 pages
Starve Better makes no promises of making you a bestselling author. It won't feed aspiring writers' dreams of fame and fortune. This book is about survival: how to generate ideas when you needed them yesterday, dialogue and plot on the quick, and what your manuscript is up against in the slush piles of the world. For non-fiction writers, Starve Better offers writing techniques such as how to get (relatively) high-paying assignments in second and third-tier magazines, how to react to your first commissioned assignment, and how to find gigs that pay NOW as the final notices pile up and the mice eat the last of the pasta in the cupboard.
Humor, essays, and some of the most widely read blog pieces from Nick Mamatas, author and editor of fiction that has caught the attention of speculative fiction's most prestigious awards, come together for the first time in a writers' guide that won't teach anyone how to get rich and famous... but it will impart the most valuable skill in the business: how to starve better.
( You, too, can make a living writing for content mills, local weeklies, and term-papers-to-order services. )
Verdict: Starve Better is aimed at would-be writers and anyone who just likes reading about making a living as a writer. Also, anyone who likes to read a writer bagging on critique groups, slush piles, and the inflated distinction between literary and genre fiction. A short, quick read which I enjoyed quite a bit, and has more actual useful advice than you'll get in most "how to improve your writing" books.
My complete list of book reviews.