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Amazon Kindle Worlds: here we go again
New Amazon program, Kindle Worlds, will allow fanfiction for specific properties to be published on the Kindle.
Hey, everyone remember FanLib? Yeah, me too. Obviously Kindle Worlds is not quite like that, but it has the same whiff of "come be officially sanctioned!" about it, and hence I cast it similar glances askance.
I don't have much to say about it yet. Fortunately, other people do.
John Scalzi looks at the contract and finds it not particularly favorable toward authors. He also speculates what it might mean for authors who write tie-in books on a contract basis -- ie. does this spell the end of the tie-in as we know it?
Chuck Wendig, who runs the writing blog Terrible Minds, also brings up the tie-in issue with some musings on what this means for 'canon' in those universes.
From the fandom perspective, a few thoughts from The Mary Sue.
More, I am sure, to come.
Edit: this post by
unjapanologist is highly recommended.
Hey, everyone remember FanLib? Yeah, me too. Obviously Kindle Worlds is not quite like that, but it has the same whiff of "come be officially sanctioned!" about it, and hence I cast it similar glances askance.
I don't have much to say about it yet. Fortunately, other people do.
John Scalzi looks at the contract and finds it not particularly favorable toward authors. He also speculates what it might mean for authors who write tie-in books on a contract basis -- ie. does this spell the end of the tie-in as we know it?
Chuck Wendig, who runs the writing blog Terrible Minds, also brings up the tie-in issue with some musings on what this means for 'canon' in those universes.
From the fandom perspective, a few thoughts from The Mary Sue.
More, I am sure, to come.
Edit: this post by
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Yeah, that's the biggest concern from my perspective, too. Does this mean that media properties that sign on to Kindle Worlds suddenly see free fanfic as a competitive threat? Or do they continue to let the "gray market" slide?
But I can understand why your concern is less visceral than the Tumblr buy-out. For one thing, if there are impacts on wider fandom from this, they'll take a lot longer to manifest. Also, just on a personal level, I highly doubt that any of the media properties I write for are likely to ever sign on with a program like this. Maybe, *maybe* the Marvel universe, but even that strikes me as a stretch.