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To blog, or not to blog, that is the publishing question

Posted in movies, publishing, stephenie meyer, twilight, twilight saga, writing by Administrator on the August 21st, 2009



I’ve been reading Midnight Sun on Stephenie Meyer’s website http://stepheniemeyer.com

It’s Twilight from Edward’s point of view.

Apparently someone leaked the first 264 pages of the book on the internet before Meyer finished the novel.

Because of that leak, rumor has it that she has put the rest of the book on hold for now and is working on other projects.

I’m wondering how they could turn Midnight Sun into a movie considering that it is basically the same story as Twilight just from a different perspective. Could that be part of Meyer’s motivation to drop the project? Are the producers of the Twilight movies encouraging her not to waste her time on a remake?

I’m also wondering if Meyer has considered continuing the book Midnight Sun as a blog, since part of it is already on the web. She could charge a subscription fee for readers to follow the blog –that way she won’t be losing money by posting it- and still sell the print version when it is completed. She probably wouldn’t even need to post new pages every day to keep the readers hooked.

I have a feeling that is the future of publishing: Authors posting novels as they write them on pay-to-read sites. It not only gets the material into the hands of the reader quicker it also increases the number of potential readers exponentially.

Publishing companies could reap the benefits too by providing the subscription sites and editors to clean up the author’s work before the stories are actually posted. Publishing companies could provide security services and encryption methods that would prevent the readers from simply copying the story and re-posting it for free.

Posting books to subscription sites, as the author writes them, could also be a good way for new authors to get their foot into the door of the publishing world. New authors could post the first few chapters for free and build up their fan base. Readers only need to subscribe to books and authors they like.

It’s a win-win situation. We’ve all spent our hard earned, shrinking dollars on books we never finished because they had shiny covers but the insides weren’t quite as lustrous. It’s green. And most importantly it’s instantaneous.

Let’s face it we already live in an IMing, blogging, texting, tweeting, real time world. Why shouldn’t we be reading the next best-seller that way?