Categories
Arts

A selection of local authors’ fall releases

As the weather starts to turn cool, now is a good time to find a book to curl up with on those chilly, overcast days. Local author releases this season offer a wide array of subjects from which to choose, such as history, fiction, psychology and memoir. Here are some highlights:

Lisa Jakub, Not Just Me: Anxiety, Depression, and Learning to Embrace Your Weird

Jakub, whose first book, You Look Like That Girl, recounted her adventures in Hollywood as a child actor and her decision to leave that life, explores mental health in her sophomore effort—part memoir, part research journey. Yet she writes with an irreverence and levity that creates a comfortable space for exploring weighty subjects.

“I wanted to write the book that I most needed when my anxiety and depression was at its worst,” she says. “I wanted to explore my experience with mental wellness, offer a space for other people to share their stories and look at the science and research behind these issues.” The title arises from the fact that “We think no one else feels like this and we need to go it alone. And that’s just not true,” she says.

Donna M. Lucey Sargent’s Women: Four Lives Behind the Canvas

In this biography of the late 19th century, Lucey details the lives of Elsie Palmer, Lucia Fairchild, Elizabeth Chanler and Isabella Stewart Gardner—all painted by American portraitist John Singer Sargent. “I’ve always loved the Gilded Age,” Lucey says, “that giddy era of excess and opulence that spawned the most wonderfully eccentric characters.” While writing her last book, Archie and Amélie, she stumbled upon the story of Chanler, Archie’s sister. After she learned that Chanler had been a subject of one of Sargent’s portraits, she “began to wonder about the lives of other women he’d painted,” and a book revealed itself.

Jan Karon, To Be Where You Are: A Mitford Novel (September 19)

The 14th novel in Karon’s beloved Mitford Years series follows the Kavanagh family through an identity crisis caused by retirement, a financial challenge for a newly married couple, a death and a birth. The recurring cast of characters will be familiar to faithful fans of the series. Karon, who won the Library of Virginia’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015, told the Charlotte Observer this spring that she began writing the series to “give readers a safe place to go.”

Sharon Harrigan Playing with Dynamite: A Memoir (October 1)

Harrigan’s life has been haunted by the absence of a father who blew off one of his hands with dynamite before she was born and died in a suspicious accident when she was 7. In this memoir, Harrigan chronicles her two-year search for answers to questions surrounding her father’s death—a journey that takes her from Virginia to Paris to Michigan. “My father’s death was the defining event of my life, and his mysterious accident haunted me,” she says. “He went hunting for a deer and a deer killed him? That never made sense.” In the process of seeking the truth about her father, Harrigan instead learns about her mother.

Categories
News

Writer tax: County is all business in targeting freelancers

In an area crawling with writers, it’s a well-known fact: Unless you’re a John Grisham or Jan Karon, the odds of being able to pay the rent by writing are pretty low. Nonetheless, that hasn’t deterred Albemarle County from requiring a $50 business occupational professional license—and collecting it for the past five years, with interest and penalties.

A slew of local writers, among other Virginia Department of Taxation Schedule C filers, were recently hit with notices that they need the license if they earned more than $5,000—and if they make more than $100K, they have to pay a percentage of gross receipts.

National Book Award winner Kathy Erskine was one of those taxed. “The shocking thing was to learn I need a business license to be a writer,” she says. “It’s not intuitive for writers and artists to know they’re a business.”

Erskine received plenty of publicity when she won the National Book Award for Mockingbird in 2010, “so it’s not like I’m hiding,” she says.

She had to pay back taxes for five years—plus interest and penalties. And because she had an unusually good year after winning the award, she had to pay a percentage of her gross receipts. “Not net,” says Erskine, which meant she couldn’t take off her expenses for travel or advertising.

Erskine also learned she had to have a home business license, which requires a $27 one-time fee.

“I never would have guessed—it’s so crazy—that when I’m sitting at my kitchen table writing, I would need a license,” she says.

Vampirina Ballerina author Anne Marie Pace also was dinged by the county. “I don’t have a problem with taxes in general because they go to roads and schools and things I value,” she says. “It seems a little odd to me that it seems to be coming out of the blue.”

That’s because Albemarle’s finance department has hired two full-time business-tax auditors, according to director Betty Burrell, and the notices are the result of the auditors “fulfilling their job responsibilities” and following something called the audit work plan.

Burrell points to county code, which has a lengthy listing of business purveyors who must have licenses, and although writers don’t show up on the list, they’re still defined as a “business service,” explains Burrell in an e-mail.

[Disclosure: In the course of reporting this story, this reporter also found a notice in her mailbox, presumably sparked from making $6,971 from freelance writing while unemployed in 2014.]

At press time, the county had not responded to questions about its decision to collect license fees from five years back, except for this in an e-mail from the county attorney’s office: The authority to collect taxes and fees is outlined in county code. “Thus, Finance is administering tax collection, not making ‘decisions’ to collect.”

Nor had Albemarle shed light on whether anyone who isn’t a W-2 salaried employee is expected to have a business license, how much it expects to collect from the combing of Schedule Cs and how much the new auditors are getting paid.

“I think they shouldn’t charge five years back,” says Pace. She says she didn’t have the money in her business budget and had to use personal funds to pay the $250 tax bill.

“It’s an unpredictable income,” she says. “I can work and not make money. I got a $4.77 royalty statement the other day.”

Charlottesville, too, requires a $35 business license for anyone making less than $50,000. However, it doesn’t actively seek out an artist who made $200 and filed a Schedule C on her taxes, according to Commissioner of Revenue Todd Divers.

“The juice has got to be worth the squeeze,” says Divers. “I don’t know how much it’s worth with our workload. We do check Schedule Cs occasionally.”

Good news for buskers in the city: They are not required to have a license. “If they’re taking donations,” says Divers, “they’re not charging. They’d be playing anyway.”

Not everyone taxes its creative folk. In Ireland, the first 50,000 euros writers, composers and artists make is exempt.

Local writer Janis Jaquith says she didn’t make enough to be on the county’s hit list, and calls the tax regressive. “It doesn’t seem fair when the little guy has to pay more,” she says.

“If you want to be a freelance writer, it’s like taking a vow of poverty,” she adds.

“This is the county squeezing the lemon tight,” says Neil Williamson with the Free Enterprise Forum. “I understand they’re looking for money everywhere.”

Williamson thinks taxing based on gross receipts is “stupid” and the business occupational professional license should be eliminated.

Says Williamson, “This is what business-friendly looks like in Albemarle County.”

Correction 11/3/16: The caption omitted the word “home” in the type of business license Kathy Erskine obtained for a one-time $27 fee.