On archiving papers

Friday, July 25th, 2014 10:54 am
rolanni: (view from space by rainbow graphics)
[personal profile] rolanni

A couple people in different conversations over the last few days brought up the idea of archiving our papers.  There was mention that this course could even produce a "tax deduction."  In the interests of not throwing out the baby with the bathwater, I contacted Lynne Thomas, the archivist at Northern Illinois University, who has been actively attending science fiction conventions and pitching the benefits of archiving papers for a few years now.  She is also, <fe>in what I imagine is her abundant spare time</fe> helping SFWA gather up its various papers and sort them into a rational archive.

Lynne sent me a bunch of links explaining archives, and why you should, and what you should, as well as a list of libraries with large-ish SF collections.  Those links are reproduced below, for those who have an interest.

I want to address this notion of the "tax deduction," since it keeps rearing its hoary head.  The US Post Office long ago decreed that authors mailing manuscripts to, say, their publishers, could only insure the package for the cost of the paper.  The words, ruled the USPS, were worthless.  So, even if your publisher purchased the novel you were now putting in the mail for $20,000 up-front; if the package was lost, you stood to collect the price of a ream of paper, i.e. the "real property."

The IRS, not surprisingly, agrees with its sister government organization, and they have ruled, for the purpose of "tax deductions" that only the cost of the real materials may be deducted.  The priceless words are, in a word, exactly priceless.  If you donate a published book to the collection, then you may deduct the cover price, because a book is "real property."

Also, most libraries do not have the funds to help authors mail their archival materials.  So if you have a dump truck load of, say, typescripts, you're going to have to bear the expense of getting them to the archive of your choice.  The postage is probably tax deductible, as a business expense -- PLEASE NOTE that this is me, talking through my hat.  Check with your accountant.  Always check with your accountant about stuff like this.

All that being said, I've talked the situation over with Steve and we are throwing this mountain of typescripts away.

Here are those links I promised:

Information on the SFWA Collection at NIU

What sorts of materials to archive, how to archive, and all kinds of other good information regarding authors' papers

A list of libraries that host significant SF collections

SF Archival Collections Wiki

Date: 2014-07-25 06:49 pm (UTC)
djonn: Self-portrait, May 2025 (Default)
From: [personal profile] djonn
I can definitely see the daunting aspects of archival donations involving a large body of material, and clearly you've made the choice that's right for you.

As to the matter of tax deductions, I think it's worth amplifying the key point I gleaned from Ms. Thomas' article: the rules for the creators of the material involved are evidently different than those that would apply in the larger collectors' or academic marketplace. (Or at least, such was the case in 2011, when the piece was written. One would hope that the lobbying efforts Ms. Thomas mentions are continuing to move forward, because that is, to my mind, patently unfair.) I had not previously realized this, and it clearly does make a difference in the calculus.

Date: 2014-07-25 07:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rolanni.livejournal.com
I'm remembering a time, 'waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay long ago. . .around the time when we were going to move to Maine, or maybe a little before that, so. . .1989ish? . . .that Steve and I donated the working papers for Agent of Change, and maybe the working papers for Conflict of Honors, to the University of Maryland's Science Fiction Research Collection. We did, in fact, receive a "valuation letter" from the curator, and that letter was the basis of a Very Nice tax deduction. So it used to exist. I don't remember when it got taken away. . .somewhere, I think, around the time where the tax folks were trying to force creative types to assign costs to every project, and to account every project within a year, which was. . .just crazy talk.

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