Stephen King Pulls Plug on E-Serial

Published: 30 November 2000 y., Thursday
Horror writer Stephen King is taking a break from his online serial novel, The Plant, so he can focus on other, perhaps more lucrative, projects (www.stephenking.com). Stephen King’s online serial novel is taking a break — and a monster the author has seldom faced may bear part of the blame. King says on his Web site that he needs to take a break to focus on other projects. According to a published report, those projects may have a better chance of paying the bills than the serial, titled The Plant. The story got off to a strong start when an estimated 150,000 users downloaded the first part in July. But readership has declined to about 40,000 for the latest installment, according to the New York Times. King’s spokesman said the author did not learn of the declining numbers until after he decided to shelve the project, according to the Times. Making matters worse, payments are down. Readers are able to download the chapters and pay only if they like it — with King promising to keep writing as long as the checks, $1 or $2 a chapter, keep coming in. King has been something of an online publishing pioneer. Prior to The Plant, King set the standard with the online-only release of his novella, Riding the Bullet. Some 500,000 copies of the work were sold, although many were given away by online booksellers in promotions.
Šaltinis: abcnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

For Sale: the Berlin Wall

Twenty years after it fell, Volker Pawlowski still has fond memories of the Berlin Wall. That's because he continues to make make money from it, by selling chunks to tourists more »

Slovene-Croat Eurovision bid

Thanks to a daring combination of Croat Martina Majerle's disco vocals and classical strings of Slovenia's Quatrissimo, the band is hoping to hit a new note with judges. more »

Chinese book doctor treats patients

Most of his "patients" are over 1,000 years old and cannot speak. Sixty-year-old Chinese Du Weisheng can only communicate with them by reading their symptoms. more »

Tokyo gadget culture gets boost

The bizarre festival in Tokyo is the response of the electronics sector of the city trying to drum up some business as the economic down turn keeps shoppers away. more »

A sculpture of M. Abakanowicz is going to be unveiled in Europos Parkas

On 29 April 2009, at 4 p.m., the opening of a new sculpture Conjuror created by one of the most prominent contemporary artists Magdalena Abakanowicz will take place in Europos Parkas. more »

Cannes: Tarantino up for prize

Twenty films will compete for the coveted Palme d'Or at this year's Cannes film festival. more »

Stirring music on a glass harp

A Polish music duo plays their classical tunes on a fragile instrument. A set of fine wine glasses make up the harp on which Anna and Arkadiusz Szafraniec from the city of Gdansk run their fingertips. more »

Corpse show shut down

In Europe people have grown used to exhibitions like this where the human body is preserved and laid open in all its complexity. Many are fascinated but now human rights group have become enraged. more »

Slumdog kid for sale

Indian police in Mumbai are probing accusations that the father of "Slumdog Millionaire" star Rubina Ali tried to sell her. more »

YouTube orchestra plays in NY

Thousands of people competed in an online competition to join the YouTube Symphony orchestra, but only 96 will get to perform at New York's Carnegie Hall. more »