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Input On A Unique Concept For Books

Isn't there a name for having different people write successive piecemeal story continuations to make an eventual total story? Can't put my fringer on it, but someone will know.
But good luck anyway! :)
 
Peder,

That's not what this is. The backers aren't writing the novel. I am. What I am doing is giving them options on which way the story could go. The option with the most votes is the way I write the story. So they have input but ultimately I'm still the one writing the book.
 
Kickstarter is an interesting concept itself. As for your book, the idea of the backer voting is okay unless they don't like your "plot angles".
 
Peder,

That's not what this is. The backers aren't writing the novel. I am. What I am doing is giving them options on which way the story could go. The option with the most votes is the way I write the story. So they have input but ultimately I'm still the one writing the book.

Story by committee, yuck.
 
Honestly, I'm not sure the idea is all that unique. The concept of having readers play "Choose your own adventure" with a book or TV series as it's written has been tried quite a few times before. The reason you haven't heard of it is probably because it turns out very few people are interested in stories like that; you want a story to surprise you, to do something you wouldn't have thought of yourself. I'm thinking it might work if it's a famous author, where people already have faith in them as storytellers ("Wow, I get to tell Stephen King what to write!"), and there have been cases where writers have done things like give contest winners a cameo in their novels. But an unknown writer asking people for money for a novel he will write if they tell him what to write? I honestly don't know who'd be interested in that.
 
Sounds interesting but like beer good said, you'd need someone marketable to do it in order for it to be successful.
 
But an unknown writer asking people for money for a novel he will write if they tell him what to write? I honestly don't know who'd be interested in that.

Tagging along on BeerGood's thought, I don't quite see a benefit for non-cash contributors of ideas. So far it sounds like everything flows to you -- cash, free thoughts, possible royalties, fame, who knows what. What flows in the other direction, back from you, to make it worthwhile for participants?
 
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