Okay, this kind of thing may be one future of published fiction. If I
were asked to participate, I think I'd do it.

Sent to you by Jonathan via Google Reader: Victoria Strauss -- Fourth
Fiction: (Yet) Another Literary Reality Show via Writer Beware Blogs!
by [email protected] (Victoria Strauss) on 6/30/09
Regular readers of this blog will know that I have a small obsession
with so-called literary reality shows. (Amazed that such things could
even exist? See this recent post for a recap.) To date, seven of these
suckers have surfaced. Five never got past the planning and
announcement stages. The jury's still out on the sixth (I'm not holding
my breath), and the seventh is still embryonic (not holding my breath
there either).

Now, however, there's a literary reality show that might actually go
all the way.

Fourth Night, a blog maintained by writer Constantine Markides, will
launch FourthFiction, "the first blog-based literary reality show," on
July 4. Twelve writers will write original novels, which they'll post
in tri-monthly installments, according to literary guidelines provided
by Mr. Markides. Readers will vote to eliminate one contestant per
round. On December 4, the single survivor of all twelve rounds will be
announced. What does he or she win? Well, maybe nothing, apart from the
sense of achievement in having completed a novel in five months. But
maybe a small-press publishing contract. Mr. Markides says that he
approached several small presses at BEA to discuss the possibility of
funding limited publication of the winner's novel. (Writer Beware-ly
caveat: some small publishers are no prize, and a number of really bad
ones were at BEA. I hope Mr. Markides has thoroughly checked them out.)

The writers are anonymous--and some, apparently, have never written
fiction before. They'll be Twittering at will during the month of July,
as a way of warming up and letting readers get to know their styles.
The contest proper will begin on August 4.

In my opinion, this is really the only way a literary reality show is
possible. The writing process simply is not interesting to observe (nor
are writers--or if they are, it's generally not because of their
writing), nor is it easy to come up with telegenic challenges involving
authoring ("Writers, give us 5,000 words on love and death while
sitting at a sticky table in a noisy Starbucks with a latte that isn't
hot enough, using only one hand! You've got two hours--now go!").
Attempting a televised literary reality show is a recipe for failure
(as Tony Cowell, Simon Cowell's brother seems to have discovered) or
ridiculousness (as demonstrated by announced plans for The Ultimate
Author, in which contestants were to vie hotly for supremacy in such
vital authorial areas as spelling and arranging a room attractively for
a book club gathering). By putting all the emphasis on the writing, and
cutting image and identity out of the picture entirely, Fourth Night
has come up with a literary reality show concept that actually seems
workable.

You can participate, or just observe, by subscribing to free email
updates or Fourth Fiction's RSS feed.
Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to Writer Beware Blogs! using Google Reader
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favorite sites

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