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Twitter Novels: Not Big Success Stories Yet

Written by Sarah Perez / September 2, 2008 11:01 AM / 6 Comments

In Japan, mobile phone novels called "keitai shousetus" have become so successful that they accounted for half of the ten best-selling novels in 2007. Here in the Western world several would-be novelists are attempting to use Twitter to create the same phenomenon.

Some of the novels tweeted so far have been interesting and engaging, but others, sadly, appear to be abandoned. Will micro-format fiction ever take off here as it did in Japan?

Twitter Novels

Smallplaces - a Twitter novel written by news media editor/novelist N.L. Belardes.

Slice - A novel put out by Penguin Books was the story of a girl and her parents and was delivered by serialized LiveJournal and Twitter postings. (our coverage)

Novelsin3lines - From Félix Fénéon, these tweets are the "poems and novels and novels he never otherwise wrote."

GoodCaptain - The completed novel "The Good Captain," was a story by Jay Bushman and was based on "Benito Cereno" by Herman Melville.

Mrichtel - Matthew Richtel, NY Times reporter, is experimenting with Twitter as a place to write a real-time thriller. His is about a man who wakes up with amnesia and has a haunting feeling he is a murderer.

3MIAB - UK T-Shirt shop conceptTshirts started twittering a novel called "Three Men in a Boat," but seemed to have given up a year ago.

140novel - A Twitter novel created by Molly Wood, Tom Merritt, and Jason Howell of CNET's Buzz Out Loud podcast alongside Leo Laporte, who suggested the idea when he was guest on their show one day. (Read the whole thing here).

DailyLit - This online book club site which lets you read books via email or RSS recently added Twitter reading groups, too. Now you can read the following novels via Twitter and more will become available when these are completed. 

Unfortunately, they seem to have missed the concept of the Twitter novel altogether and are using Twitter to link to their web site instead:

Twittories - a collaborative effort where anyone can contribute to a Twitter novel that only runs for 140 entries. An author can only submit one entry per "twittory." Read the first Twittory here

Quillpill - Write your own Twitter novel! Quillpill novels aren't actually on Twitter itself, but use the app's Twitter-like 140-character-like system. You're encouraged to write and read novels from your call phone and they offer both a mobile and iPhone version.(our coverage)

Big in Japan Doesn't Mean Big Everywhere

Some of these efforts have been fun to follow, like 140novel and the latest "Twiller" from Matt Richtel, but could it be that they already have appeal because of the well-known personas of the authors? In Japan, the cell phone novels are making stars out of unlikely authors - like high school girls, for example, who were writing the short fiction in between their classes. Would a Twitter novel written by an unknown have the same appeal here? So far, we don't have a true winner yet. Perhaps this is one trend that doesn't translate?


Comments

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  1. We started PlurkBook in plurk and so far has got 131 responses.

    More info.

    Posted by: hombrelobo | September 2, 2008 8:51 AM



  2. You may have missed the obvious issue here: continuity. It's a little difficult to create something that 'falls off' and doesn't have access long enough to sustain something like a novel.

    There's also the issue of backwards...

    Posted by: Paula Thornton | September 2, 2008 8:57 AM



  3. Looks like Japan is always first in technology related things.

    Posted by: Tom At The Home Business Archive | September 2, 2008 9:10 AM



  4. There is a typo in the article: according to my dictionary it should be "shousetsu" and not "shousetus"

    Posted by: Heimetli | September 2, 2008 10:24 AM



  5. Full disclosure: I'm one of the Quillpill cofounders.

    Paula, Quillpill addresses the continuity and post order issues quite specifically, making the stories much easier to read, even if the author has completed their story.

    Heimetli is correct, I believe. Keitai shousetsu.

    Thanks for the mention Sarah!

    Posted by: Elissa Rose | September 2, 2008 2:52 PM



  6. i know of this tool called Octales that is like a Twitter-like storytelling game that allows people to build stories, such as novels.

    But back to the topic of success stories, would you really favor reading and following lines based on tweets? I wouldn't mind just reading the real book.

    Posted by: Macel Legaspi | September 3, 2008 10:10 AM



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