BLOGS AND FICTION OR THE BLOGNOVEL
Any first time author who wants to get his novel published
should ask John Grisham about the process. He endured a
relatively modest 28 rejections before finding a publisher for
his first novel, A Time to Kill. Twenty-Eight rejections may not
seem like a lot but if you consider the time it takes to write a
query, send a manuscript and await a response from the publisher
or agent you can easily come to the conclusion that it is a
process that takes anywhere from one to six months in most cases
- for one rejection. If you multiply that by the number of
rejections the average first time writer must endure for his
first time novel then you will easily see why alternative
sources of publishing are always attractive. The most recent
alternative source of publishing is the blognovel.
The word "blognovel" is still relatively unknown to most people.
Though blog is a word that most everyone has heard at one point
or another "blognovel" is for the most part under the radar. It
is hard to say who it was that first coined the phrase but for
certain it was the Salon blognovel "Plan B
" by Diego Doval that gained
the most attention. It was shortly thereafter that a fair number
of blognovels started popping up. Ever since that time the idea
of the blog as a logical media for artistic expression has
gained momentum. The site Slashdot.org has archived some
particularly interesting debates
concerning this subject. Other interesting articles
on the emerging
form have occurred in many places as the form begins to be
embraced by a larger population of the artist community.
One other event that seemed to cement the concept of writing
novels in the form of a blog was the fact that the National
Novel Writing Month participants
chose the blog as their media of choice for the 50,000 word
novellas. You can see a list of the 2004 contest at the
organizations official blog .
The contest will be running again starting this November so the
posting of a whole new wave of blognovels is sure to hit the
internet community regardless of whether they read them or not.
For some fairly professional examples of what can be
accomplished with a blognovel see the following:
Simon of Space (Which was
recently picked for print by publisher Ephemera Bound.)
The Fifth Tomorrow (Nice
format though there are only 4 chapters posted of this effort by
first time author C.F. York .)
Le Spirale Fantastique (Very
professional effort by an author previously published in print)
Irrational Histories
(A somewhat regular serial style novel by up and coming author
David Moles )
American Invisible
(Fine effort by writer Hugh Madison.)
As you can see there are a wide variety of styles and genres,
which can be found in blognovel form. If you would like to
explore more existing works before trying your own you can find
a nice catalog of online fiction along with synopsis at
Interactivia.org
.
So what are the possibilities for this new media? Or more
importantly, can you get paid? YES. Blogger.com, which seems to
be the forum of choice for most blognovels posted a concise and
informative article
on what it
takes to go from cyberia to print along with a few success
stories.
If you have decided that the blognovel is for you, there are
detailed instructions
at
blogger.com on how to format and post a novel to a traditional
blog.