Anyways, Mr. Sanderson, your Warbreaker book isn't perfect. And I think I saw someone on Wikipedia that suggested to me that you are Mormon...
I'm not quite sure how these two points go together. In fact, I'm pretty sure that a person's religion doesn't really affect his ability to achieve written perfection, and I don't believe that I've ever seen Brandon lay claim to said perfection.
What I want to ask is Mr. Sanderson, is being a writer good income? Like can you estimate on average imcome per year for a writer as good as yoiurself? Is it livable?
Obviously you can make a living wage as an author of Brandon's capabilities. Since he's doing it. If writing didn't pay a living wage, there wouldn't be nearly so many books out there.
I don't know if I will read the second book of yours because of some reviews I read on Amazon regarding it. Is the third book any good, and if it is better than the second and first, does the second need to be read to understand the third?
I can't answer this one because a) I haven't seen the reviews on Amazon and b) I haven't read the unreleased book. I personally like Misborn 2 better than 1, but that's my own opinion. I'm sure that you'll be able to understand the third without reading the second, but it won't be as full an experience.
In addition, about your books and belivability. Some people have criticized Dan Brown books because they are far fetched and unbelivable. I am wondering if you understand the physical properties of elements such as metals. I may not be a professional chief, but I believe metals melt, not burn. And wouldn't ingesting metals, even pure, be bad for the body? And what about other metals? Is silver supposed to be atrium? What about platanium? Will there be more metals in third book? How about a rare nuclear fissure metal, that blows up Iran or something?
Not that it makes any difference to the stories, but metals do burn. Take a basic high school chemistry class, and you'll get to burn some copper and some aluminum to see the different color flames they create. Many flares are made with Magnesium because of its exceptionally bright flame. The different colors you see from fireworks are created by mixing metals into the explosive. However, the way Brandon uses the word, he isn't necessarily saying that they literally catch fire, rather they are consumed during the act of transferring their properties to the allomancer, as if they were being incinerated. I imagine that having metals in your belly catch fire would tend to discourage allomancy.