Ghostwriting, editing, Art and fanfiction commission post.
Hello everyone.
Me and @aisheux found ourselves in what could be described as rock bottom situation: me plagued by mental and physical health problems (anxiety disorder, possible development of stomach cancer, anemia, hormonal troubles, and bone problems) and Aisha in need of financial aid for university necessities, extreme poverty, health issues and an abusive household that chips away at her mental health every day.
In order for us to support ourselves, we decided to open shared commissions: Aisha does art (check her commission post) and as for me, I'll handle what the title of the post tells: writing.
Kindly read carefully before sending a DM:
— How It works:
Check my works to form what kind of an idea/concept you want me to do, pick what you like as long it's in my boundaries below (or here, free request rules apply to paid ones as well; the difference being that paid works are quicker to make and caters for anything you have in mind.) Then fill out the form below and message me via Tumblr DMS or ask for my discord. Communication via E-mail is preferable as well.
— What Can I offer:
For fanfiction:
Reader insert (All genders).
Reader insert (of you specifically, with all what you want to be included about yourself).
Video games: Resident Evil, Final Fantasy7 (or the series in general), Devil May Cry, Doki Doki Literature Club, Silent Hill, Assassin's Creed.
TV shows: Hannibal (All media).
Any other fandom or media as long as I'm provided info on source material.
For ghostwriting/editing:
Anything that doesn't go against my rules.
I have to be provided the general idea of the plot.
Style:
One-shot.
Drabble.
Short prose.
Multi-chapter.
Light novel.
Short story.
Novella.
Novel.
Poetry.
Articles.
Blog posts.
Analysis.
Headcanons.
Genres:
Yandere/Dark content/Horror/Thriller/Crime.
Fluff/comfort/romance.
Gothic.
Angst/Hurt.
Science fiction.
Magical Realism.
Realistic literature.
Fantasy.
Epistolary.
Drama.
Psychological.
etc... I'm up for discussion for any other genres I haven't mentioned!
— Prices:
$0.05 per word (Both fanfiction and ghostwriting).
So:
100 words = $5.
500 words = $25.
1k words = $50.
And so on.
The first draft will be sent to you to make sure it's in the line of what you requested, in case if there's an edit you want to be done, it'll cost according to the length of commission.
When the first draft is sent and you wish for editing a certain element, there's only three edits available per piece, each will cost $1.
For editing/proofreading, it'll be $0.04 per word.
As for role-playing, It'll be $40 per hour (on discord, Instagram...etc).
Extra services can be teaching English/or Arabic, creative writing, translation (Arabic to English or vice versa). Send a DM to inquire more.
Payment is via ko-fi/PayPal.
— Special offers:
For first time purchasing 10,000+ words you'll get a 10% discount!
— Rules:
The complete rule list (applies to both original fiction and fanfiction).
— Samples from my works as example:
— Form:
Username:
E-mail.
Commission concept.
Word count.
Message me here or send an email to: [email protected] to negotiate on the concept. I'm non-judgmental and willing to handle anything!
TOS:
You may not post/share/upload etc. any of my works without permission. Credit must always be given (in the exception of ghostwriting of course. that can be discussed in private).
All communication regarding commissions should be kept private unless permitted.
I am very open to all suggestions but please understand that I may not wish to write certain things. If that is the case we can discuss alternatives.
No refunds under any circumstances.
I require 50% of payment upfront. The final piece will be sent after receiving the other half.
You'll have to be earnest in commissioning. If I notice that you're a scammer/showing signs of one, you'll be blocked.
Once the commission is finished it will not be rewritten or tweaked further, unless additional editing has been paid for as per the pricing above. Further editing/tweaking is limited, and may not always be permitted.
I reserve the right to refuse working on/sending a piece at any time. This would likely only happen in an extreme circumstance, and communication is always encouraged.
I hold the rights to all my works and can revoke given permissions at any time.
It is your responsibility to read these rules and keep up to date with any applicable changes.
Canon properties and such belong to their respective owners. As much as I dislike profiting off something I believe it's free right, I found no choice under current situation.
If any of these terms are violated then appropriate action will be taken. Please make sure to talk to me first if you have any issues.
Be respectful and polite and I'll treat you with the same. After all, I have weight on my shoulders outside this blog.
I strictly forbid sharing my work to AI.
And that's all! contact me if you're interested or feel free to ask anything on DMS or my ask box!
Commission form inspiration (due to my lack of etiquette on the matter).
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Image how much songs Louis could and did ghostwrite and we will never know. and that your fav lines in songs of other artists can actually be Louis' lines.
Hi! I've never really done this before so apologies if I fumble a bit. I'm Lex (lexbiini on AO3) and I just graduated uni for creative writing. However, entry level employment opportunities in this field are... scarce (both for writing and copy editing). I am doing a ton of unpaid work rn and love every second of it, but unfortunately work experience doesn't really pay the bills by itself.
This is why I'm opening writing and editing/beta reading commissions!
SLOTS OPEN: Writing - 3 | Editing - 3
I will open six comm slots at a time for WRITING and EDITING
For writing:
Three slots at a time
One-shots only
$5 / 100 words
I'll write for any fandoms I've written for before (check my AO3 or my writing blog), as well as The Magnus Archives/Protocol, Good Omens, Heartstopper, all TAZ campaigns, Red Valley, Steven Universe, The Owl House, or mostly any other fandom you've seen me be insane about on this blog before
I am also willing to ghostwrite (being very loose with the term)/write short(...ish) pieces about your OCs! If you have the time and energy to come infodump at me about the blorbos from your brain, I am willing to listen and write about them!
I'll write most things (fluff, angst, character death, hurt/comfort, AU), but hard don'ts are NSFW, adult/minor or incest ships and excessive gore. I also reserve the right to just say no if a particular commission makes me uncomfortable.
Please DM me to reserve a slot and discuss your commission!
For editing and beta reading:
Three slots at a time
$2 / page (approx. 400 words counting with Times New Roman 12pt 1.5 space bc yes I am That Guy)
After 2,000 words $1 / page (So $10 for the first 2k and $1/page after that)
For editing and beta reading, fandom is less restrictive. Given, the less I know a fandom, the less characterization/story comments I can provide, but I will basically copy edit anything for spelling, grammar, syntax, story structure and formatting (I have a lot of fiction and nonfiction workshop experience!)
Again, please DM me to reserve a slot!
Payment through Ko-fi (and if you just wanna leave a little tip for the stuff i make you can also do that there<3)
If you have any further questions about comms, feel free to dm me!
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Hi there, I'm Riley! I'm a disabled writer and I'm currently in a very tight patch financially at the moment, so I'm opening up some emergency commissions half off while I struggle to get back on my feet. I can write for OCs and canon pairings, as well as ghostwrite and help with VTuber Lore + Development!
I'd greatly appreciate it if you could at least boost this for me and spread the word; I wholeheartedly would value any small measure of support! Additionally, if you happen to be interested, please feel free to reach out to me on any of the aforementioned platforms via DMs!
Transactions will currently only be done through Ko-fi! Please visit my carrd as well to view my portfolio and my general TOS.
Ko-fi Commissions Open! Click to see Orion's commission menu.
AI vs. Ghostwriting: This Debate Gets Weird Once You Look at How Publishing Actually Works
Prometheus.exe — a public service announcement for people who think every book is written by a lone genius in a cabin.
1. Publishing didn’t start with AI — it started with brands, house names, and writing teams.
A lot of online discourse treats AI as the first big threat to “authorship.”
But publishing has been flexible about authorship for decades — sometimes openly (credited co-authors), sometimes quietly (ghostwriters and house names), and sometimes through estates continuing a brand after a writer dies.
A few high-profile examples:
James Patterson
Patterson’s model is collaboration in plain sight: he’s known for providing detailed outlines and working with credited co-authors who draft substantial portions, with Patterson editing and shaping the final manuscript. It’s not a secret ghostwriting scheme — it’s a production system readers mostly accept.
Tom Clancy
The Clancy name functions as a franchise: later titles used “Tom Clancy with…” credits, and after his death the Ryanverse has continued with other authors writing under the brand. That’s not a scandal; it’s an established business model.
Clive Cussler
Cussler also moved into prolific, credited co-authoring across multiple series, including collaborations with his son and other writers.
V.C. Andrews
This one is especially straightforward: after Andrews died, her estate hired Andrew Neiderman to continue publishing novels under her name. It’s essentially a long-running continuation-writing arrangement.
Point being: AI didn’t invent the idea of “the name on the cover” being bigger than one person at a keyboard. That ship sailed a long time ago.
2. Let’s talk about the books you grew up with — because nostalgia was often built by teams.
Here’s where the “purity of the craft” discourse tends to wobble, because a lot of beloved kids’ and YA publishing was industrial by design.
Sweet Valley High / Sweet Valley Twins
Francine Pascal created the franchise and oversaw it, but the series is widely documented as relying on teams of ghostwriters.
The Baby-Sitters Club
Ann M. Martin wrote the early core, and later entries were written by ghostwriters to keep the series running at scale.
Animorphs
K.A. Applegate has described an outline-driven process where many later books were ghostwritten based on her story plans.
Goosebumps (important nuance)
The safest, most accurate claim is this: the Give Yourself Goosebumps spin-off is documented as having multiple ghostwriters. Don’t claim the entire original Goosebumps run was ghostwritten — that’s not the clean evidence.
Nancy Drew / Hardy Boys
The Stratemeyer Syndicate is the blueprint for house-name publishing: “Carolyn Keene” and “Franklin W. Dixon” are pseudonyms used across many writers.
So when people react like AI is the first time “writing” got industrialized… it’s worth remembering a lot of childhood reading was already produced using a system that looks a lot like modern content production: outline → draft → editorial smoothing → brand consistency.
3. What AI changes isn’t the existence of collaborative writing — it’s the price of it.
Ghostwriters (and co-author teams doing ghostwriter-like work) supply labour the market has always needed:
drafting at speed
maintaining continuity
writing in a house voice
hitting deadlines
producing series output reliably
AI doesn’t introduce the concept.
It introduces a new cost structure.
A ghostwriter is a person with invoices.
AI is a tool without them.
That’s why the conversation is so emotionally charged: part of the reaction is genuinely about craft, but a lot of it is also about labour and market value.
“But ghostwriters are human. AI isn’t.”
True — and that’s the most important difference. Ghostwriting is still human labour, with human judgement, accountability, and (ideally) fair compensation. But notice what that argument concedes: the industry already accepts outsourced writing in principle. The real fight isn’t “outsourcing bad” — it’s “outsourcing to a machine feels different.” That’s a valid emotional reaction, but it doesn’t magically restore some lost age of pure authorship. It just shifts the question to the one people actually avoid: where do we draw the line between acceptable assistance and unacceptable replacement — and who gets to set that line: readers, authors, publishers, or the market?
Most readers don’t buy a book to audit the workflow — they buy it to be entertained.
So if most readers aren’t auditing the workflow, what actually changes when AI enters the pipeline?
Not the existence of collaboration. Not the fact that publishing already treats authorship as flexible.
What changes is the economics: AI can do the cheap, fast first-pass labour that a lot of low-end ghostwriting has historically supplied. That doesn’t mean “ghostwriters are finished.” It means the market will start sorting work into two buckets:
tasks that can be automated (drafting, templated prose, boilerplate scenes, quick revisions), and
tasks that still require a human (interviews, judgement, voice extraction, ethics, high-stakes editing).
Which brings us to the real question:
4. Will AI replace ghostwriters? In some parts of the market, yes. In others, not really.
Bottom-tier ghostwriting is vulnerable first — the cheap, fast, template-driven market. AI can produce a workable first pass quickly, and for many low-cost clients that’s “good enough.”
Mid-tier work shifts toward human shaping — interviewing, structure, voice consistency, developmental work, and edits.
High-end ghostwriting remains human-heavy — especially memoirs, legacy nonfiction, and projects where trust, judgement, ethics, and voice extraction matter.
So the realistic future isn’t “ghostwriters vanish.”
It’s “the job changes,” with more emphasis on high-skill editorial and narrative work.
5. The point isn’t that authorship is meaningless. It’s that the industry has always been pragmatic about it.
Some readers care deeply about “who wrote this,” and that’s valid.
But it’s also true that publishing has long treated authorship as a mix of art and production.
AI isn’t replacing a golden age of purity.
It’s stepping into a system that already normalized collaboration, house brands, and invisible labour — and it’s going to push that reality into the open.
Sources / Further reading
Gotham Ghostwriters — “AI and the Writing Profession” (full survey report PDF)
https://gothamghostwriters.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/AI-Writer-Survey.pdf
Josh Bernoff — “How ghostwriters use AI (and why they’re less threatened by it)” (analysis of the survey, ghostwriter-specific breakdown)
https://bernoff.com/blog/how-ghostwriters-use-ai-and-why-theyre-less-threatened-by-it
Publishers Weekly — “New Report Examines Writers’ Attitudes toward AI” (industry/trade coverage of the same research)
https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/digital/copyright/article/99019-new-report-examines-writers-attitudes-toward-ai.html
Amazon KDP — Content Guidelines (official rule: disclose AI-generated content to Amazon when publishing)
https://kdp.amazon.com/help/topic/G200672390
ASJA (American Society of Journalists and Authors) — “AI is changing ghostwriting” (industry org write-up referencing survey findings)
https://www.asja.org/top-takeaways-from-2025-gathering-of-the-ghosts/