Monthly Serial Novel Magazines? 30
DeeryQueen asks: "I enjoy reading both regular/text novels and Japanese graphic novels (manga), but while there are a few magazines serializing manga (a few hundred pages each month, consisting of a chapter each from many different graphic novels) with which I am familiar (such as Shonen Jump and Shojo Beat), I don't know where to start looking for US magazines which serialize text novels using this formula. I read all genres. Any recommendations?"
Something I've considered doing... (Score:1)
Time Travel (Score:2)
Here's my favorite... (Score:3, Funny)
Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:3, Insightful)
You could always just take a regular novel, slice it up, put each chapter in an envelope, and get a friend to mail them to you one at a time.
Seriously, this just isn't done much anymore. I know one example -- Dave Eggers was publishing a serial novel on Salon.com [salon.com] (subscription or sommething probably required)... it got up to episode 35 and kind of stopped (was that the end? I don't know) last summer. I'm guessing they abandoned the idea... and frankly, I wasn't reading it anymore, anyway. Serial novels are a form that seems very hard to do well -- the author doesn't get a chance to *revise* when he's painted himself into a corner, plotwise, or when he realizes he's running out of good material; he just has to keep on going, ignoring the inconsistencies and poor story arc and so on.
I'd say you're better off with a good book. Or... you could do some digging in a good library (ask the reference librarian for help) in finding what you want in old magazines; one of those old serials packed with spies and women on railroad tracks, with a cliff-hanger at the end of every segment could be fun to read.
Re:Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:2)
How about a good book and then he just reads one chapter a month...tear the book to pieces and send the chapters to a relative with instructions on when to send it back to you (along with a SASE).
Re:Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:2)
You could always just take a regular novel, slice it up, put each chapter in an envelope, and get a friend to mail them to you one at a time.
Your ability to repeat exactly what was said in the post you're replying to is amazing. How insightful! How original! Do you also DJ?
Re:Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:2)
Re:Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:2)
You bet!!!
He's one hella DOPE MC!
Re:Are you sure you want what you're asking for? (Score:2)
Let's see, Google tells me that most of his novels were sold in 20 parts, with the last one being double-sized.
Readers Digest (Score:2)
Re:Readers Digest (Score:2)
I appears that I mistakenly thought that the Reader's Digest was a collection of popular books in brief summary form. It is actually just an ordinary magazine. I looked through three issues. There was nothing more about books than Life, People, or even Playboy. They had home maintenance sections, celebrity gossip se
Re:Readers Digest (Score:2)
Analog sci-fi mag (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Analog sci-fi mag (Score:2)
Second the motion on Analog. Their speculative fiction is fun to read, and their science articles are often very interesting, written as it is for an audience of people looking for developments in science which will change the world in perhaps unexpected ways.
Parent's right. (Score:1)
Useful (?) Reply Follows (Score:2, Informative)
There is a Fantasy magazine in the same format, but the name escapes me.
Re:Useful (?) Reply Follows (Score:2)
A lot of these, including the venerable and ancient Analog, are published by Dell Magazines. You may be able to find a root listing of sorts if you go though Dell. I subscribe to Analog and I consistently see ads within the magazine for Ellery Queen, Asimov's, etc.
Even better than the content in Analog and magazines like it is the
Re:Useful (?) Reply Follows (Score:1)
Re:Useful (?) Reply Follows (Score:1)
Analog and Asimov's also have a great ebook subscription option (I got mine at fictionwise.com). Of course, it has no ads, but it also has no illustrations
It's much cheaper for international subscribers, and when I subscribed the paper version, they took months to arrive. Now I get them within a few minutes of release, and read them on my palmtop.
Much easier to archive, too. I've been reading both Analog and Asimov for about 14 years, and that can take up a lot of shelf space...
BTW, the June Asimov
How about this (Score:2)
Novel Idea (Score:2)
Factsheet5 (Score:2)
exists for ebook scifi anyway (Score:2)
Funnily enough, I don't use that part of their service, but do buy complete books from them a lot. They offer pretty much any format you could want (lit, txt, html, palm, etc.). Wish they co
Granta (Score:2)
http://www.granta.com/ [granta.com]
m.
Serialized e-books by email (Score:2)
Alternative (Score:1)
Next, use a split command to make your e-book into 4 KiB chunks. On Unix/Linux this is simple enough, do #man split# for details. On Windows there is a bunch of splitting applications left over from the days when files needed to be 1.44 MB for floppy d