Posts by Date

December 2009
M T W T F S S
« Nov   Jan »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  
« Previous Post Next Post »
 

Moody Tweets Up a Storm

Posted by Erin Brown in publishing social media trends on December 9, 2009

moody

On November 30 Electric Literature (about which I posted earlier in the month) launched a bold experiment with author Rick Moody, using Twitter to publish his latest short story in “microserial” fashion. It was Moody’s idea to write a story expressly for Twitter, and the task of writing a narrative that could be transmitted 140 characters at a time turned out to be quite challenging. “I became obsessed with the idea of creating for that character clock,” he told The Brooklyn Ink.

moody

The resulting story, “Some Contemporary Characters,” took Moody five months to write and was tweeted in 10-minute intervals over three days, for a total of 153 tweets.

The project ran into some unforeseen difficulty, however, as the story was being simultaneously tweeted from about 20 other sources (who were invited by Electric Literature to participate), including Vroman’s and other bookstores. Anyone who was following more than one of these Twitter feeds received an onslaught of identical tweets. Also problematic was the decision by many sources to inject the story installments into their regular ongoing twitter stream, so that the story was constantly being interrupted by extraneous tweets.

The annoyance caused by these logistical oversights brought on quite a firestorm of criticism, especially from inside the book world. Vroman’s abandoned its broadcast of the story midway through, while the Melville House blog called the microserial adventure a “fiasco.”

moody

But Electric Literature remains unapologetic. As cofounder Scott Lindenbaum told Media Bistro’s Morning Media Menu, the magazine gained more than 10,000 new readers during the 3-day storytelling—an increase of more than 300 percent. Also, positive comments on Twitter outweighed the negative ones by a ratio of 10 to 1. For his own part, according to Lindenbaum, Moody was a bit awed by the potential of Twitter to reach such a wide readership instantaneously.

Will the magazine publish narrative fiction on Twitter again? Absolutely.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • email

Related posts:

  1. Only in Japan: The Twitter Novel
  2. Twitter and the New Art of Self-Promotion

      

Categories: publishing, social media, trends | No Comments »

Comments