I haven't read any of Tobias Buckell's fiction, but I was vaguely familiar with him, and I read lots of books about writing by writers, hoping to be a writer, so I backed this on Kickstarter and read it over a few weeks on my phone when the first draft arrived.
This is a more personal book than a lot of writers' advice books. Buckell doesn't cover ground covered adequately in a hundred other books, like the basics of plotting, characterization, proofreading, etc. In that way, this book was refreshing for not being repetitive, and although Buckell is a science fiction author, very little of his advice and commentary is specific to a genre.
He talks a lot about growing up in the Caribbean, being a young kid with writing dreams and not much money, even making his way to Clarion literally without lunch money. How his career has gone, from the usual writer-with-day-job to the moment he was laid off and decided to make the big move to full-time writing, supplementing his income with freelance gigs.
He's been successful, but not blazingly successful - he has made a living, but he's not a Big Name, and he's pretty honest about how this has gotten him down a time or two, knowing that for every passionate fan, he has a hundred readers who consider him "just okay." He's never made the big money that will let him stop worrying about when the next royalty check will come in, but he tackles this head-on with advice for wannabe writers about treating their writing like the business it is.
It's All Just a Draft is more a book about being a writer than a book about writing. So for me, it was interesting but not terribly useful. I've resigned myself to never being a pro writer - even if I get published, I won't be giving up my day job. Barring wildly improbable wild success, the life of a full-time writer/freelancer is not in the cards for me. So I read this book much like a memoir, seeing a glimpse of a life I might have had if I'd taken a different path. For someone who wants to know how to "break in," or how to get that draft written in the first place, Buckell does talk about writing speed, about time management, about agents and submissions and how much writers actually get paid (first-time book advances, deals for series, royalties, etc.) He's gathered a lot of data from fellow writers, so it's nice to see actual dollar figures. (You probably won't be surprised that for most writers, the numbers are not impressive. There are a tiny handful of JK Rowlings and GRR Martins in the world, and the rest are happy to get a $10K advance for a book that will take most of a year to write.) There are other interesting tidbits, like fantasy being generally more lucrative than science fiction.
This was a worthwhile read, but mostly because I like reading about writers. The draft I had suffered from quite a few typos, but this book was essentially self-published. Buckell talks about that, too - the shift in the industry from a time when self-publishing was only for the delusional and the hopeless, to the rise of Amazon and ebooks. But the story isn't more optimistic there, since for every self-publishing success story, you have thousands of ebooks that don't get a single review, or sale. Buckell is trade published, but he's also taken advantage of Patreon and Kickstarter, which are increasingly popular for authors who are not Big Names, but have built up an audience. Buckell is precautionary here too, noting how few of his loyal fans actually converted to paid subscribers when it was time to put their money where their mouths were. There are no easy riches in publishing.
Now, I should probably read one of his novels.