Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
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Composite novel/online serial. Does it work?
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Eli, I think it depends entirely on your marketing skills. Once you have a half-decent story (and name no names, but in a few notable cases, even if you don't!) then the greatest remaining problem is coming to public attention.And there, I have no advice to offer - I have failed too badly to dare offer anything!
Remember, Amazon will carry your work, but not market it unless/until it is doing so well that you don't need their help anyway. Sites like this are good in theory - but you need a substantial presence and a bit of luck as well if you are depending on Goodreads and/or BestFantasyBooks. Twitter and Facebook claim to be the answers to Life the Universe and Everything - but building and maintaining a presence is a LOT of work (and some of the sites that claim to do this for you are just after the fees, they don't actually do very much!)
I was trying to read a serialized novel that was released once a month. The author didn't send me reminders, release on the same dates each month, nor finish the novel, so it was a failure. I'm not sure I'd buy into another unless the stories each stood alone. Releasing on the same day & sending reminders would be a big help.
Jim wrote: "I was trying to read a serialized novel that was released once a month. The author didn't send me reminders, release on the same dates each month, nor finish the novel, so it was a failure. I'm n..."The idea is that each part will be a fairly self-contained short story, with a general thread running through the whole thing.
I think anything can work, if your audience manages to hear about it and it's well written. It certainly sounds like an interesting idea.
Absolutely it can work. There are several success stories of authors doing this. But fame and fortune aside, if you've got a story to tell, by all means tell it. Especially if it's burning a hole in your brain and keeping you up at night! But be sure that it's well edited. Nothing kills an author's chances more than lots of spelling and grammar mistakes.
G.R. wrote: "But be sure that it's well edited. Nothing kills an author's chances more than lots of spelling and grammar mistakes. "Yes, that is a concern of mine. I do have a good proof-reader but I'm already paying him to look at my fantasy manuscripts.
Maybe, MAYBE I've advanced enough that I can manage it on my own with such shorter stories...
Just as an observation from a reader: it seems to me there may be more to writing a serialized story than people expect. While Howey's Wool maybe the SF poster child for serialized novel success, I've seen a couple of well-regarded, established authors stumble trying to serialize a story. It seems to impose yet another constraint on how a story gets told.


The idea is to write ten short stories, each one about a different character during a different year of a ten-year space war of succession. I'm thinking 15-20.000 words for each one, and releasing them cheap on Amazon, maybe one a month.
Hopefully this will scratch my itch, raise my online profile a bit and entertain people.
I am new to the English-language online market. Does this seem like something that would work?
I would very much appreciate any advice, stories of this being attempted and/or opinions. :-)