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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Gian Calvi, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. How To Find 1,000 True Fans For Your Novel

Looking for readers? 

It's hard to support yourself as a writer, and the Internet is swamping the world with content. How do you find fans in an over-populated literary universe?

Recently web guru Kevin Kelly proposed a new model for achieving artistic success in the Age of the Internets. As he outlines in  “1,000 True Fans,” a novelist just needs to find a thousand dedicated readers ("True Fans") who will each spend at least  $100 a year on your books/t-shirts/audiobooks/readings.

That idea made me really excited at first--a way for all sorts of starving writers to support themselves and keep writing. Niche writers, fan fiction, science fiction, and obscure poets could all survive and books would never die.

I'm still inspired, but the excellent (check out Agent to the Stars if you don't believe me) novelist John Scalzi has a little bit of reality for aspiring writers. It's not that easy to end up in Happy Happy True Fan Land, and it took Scalzi ten years to make it all work. Just read this essay:

"I became a strong-selling author (”Strong selling” = six figure total units sold in 2007) in a literary genre well-known for its fandom. Which is to say that before I could lay an arguable claim to having 1,000 “true” fans, I needed to create an overall audience of at least tens of thousands of readers/fans."

 

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2. Books at Bedtime: Night and Day

Here are two books for sharing which take children on a good-night (and good morning) journey all around the world. They both celebrate differences in customs and lifestyles, and emphasise what we all share as members of the human race…
thenightsoftheworld.jpg
The first, for very young children, is The Nights of the World by Corinne Albaut and illustrated by Amo, which focuses on five children from different parts of the world, who all sleep in different kinds of beds. When the magic sliding window is opened, readers can see what their days are like too, and although their activities may be different, they all laugh and enjoy playing games – then close the shutter again, and they all are quiet and go to sleep!

allinaday.jpgThe second is All in a Day by Mitsumasa Anno in an amazing collaboration with nine other well-known artists from all around the world: (more…)

2 Comments on Books at Bedtime: Night and Day, last added: 8/1/2007
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