For those who can not get enough of The Vampire Diaries s dream of Further installments of Gossip Girl , Amazon.com ( AMZN) May have the answer: fan fiction. The company’s Kindle Worlds e-book venture has licensed the rights to These two soapy teen drama series, as well as another called Pretty Little Liars , and is inviting amateur writers to developmental novels and short stories inspired by the characters and back stories of the original works.
Amazon is trying to tap into one of publishing’s hottest trends. Fanfic websites, as they’re known, include millions of aficionado-penned stories, many dating back well over a decade. One site, FanFiction.net, offers nearly 650,000 stories about Harry Potter alone. Once a niche genre, Such sites have Gained commercial legitimacy since the Fifty Shades of Grey series, Which sold more than 70 million copies in print, audio, and digitally from March to December 2012. The bondage-romance series, Which Began as Twilight fan fiction, was a bright spot for the publishing industry last year amid slowing growth of trade e-book sales. (Sales grew 44 percent in 2012 but more than DOUBLED in 2011, According To Book Stats, Which tracks U.S. publishers.) “The hope is That it could be very big,” says Les Morgenstein, president of the Warner Bros. Television Group division Alloy Entertainment, Which owns rights to The Vampire Diaries , Gossip Girl , and Pretty Little Liars .
Atfan fiction sites, writers submit stories for free to avoid running afoul of copyright laws. Amazon seeks permission from the original works’ owners and splits any profits from its fanfic with them and the amateur writers. The writer gets 35 percent of retail sales from a book-length story, and the originator is likely to get 35 percent, leaving Amazon with 30 percent, estimates Peter Hildick-Smith, founder of market researcher Codex Group. By comparison, the writer of an e-book sold by a traditional publishing house’s 25 percent of the retail price, while ink-and-paper authors get 10 percent to 15 percent, Hildick-Smith says.
Besides boosting overall e-book sales, fan fiction helps Amazon associate itself with popular books, movies, TV shows, and videogames That spin off branded clothes, toys, and other goods That are core products, visit the retail site. “If you are Amazon, any way you can get more of someone’s time, you can profit more,” says Jeremy Greenfield, the editorial director of news site Digital Book World.
class=”inline_image right”> Bryan Schutmaat for Bloomberg Businessweek
Much of Kindle Worlds’ success will Depend on Whether Amazon can line up licensed fan fiction based on a Wider array of pop culture icons, Whose owners might worry about cheapening Their creations. Scholastic (SCHL) , a publisher of the Harry Potter and Hunger Games series, Declined to comment. Bloomsbury, Potter ‘s U.K. publisher, did not respond. Fanfic authors accustomed to writing whatever They want overpriced May be turned off by Amazon’s prohibitions on pornography or the introduction of characters from different series; Tyrion Lannister can not just drop in on Gossip Girl . And there’s the question of how willing readers will ask to pay for stories from up-and-coming writers. To get things rolling, Amazon has commissioned 50 fanfic books from Established authors. Romantic suspense writer Colleen Thompson, the author of roughly 20 books, wrote a 36,000-word Amazon-co mmissioned Pretty Little Liars novella. “I think there’s a huge audience out there for fan fiction,” she says, Adding That She plans to write another fan fiction story on spec.
Amazon will roll out fan fiction for other popular book series, perhaps alongwith TV shows, movies, and video games, in the coming months, says Kindle Worlds publisher Philip Patrick, who is overpriced Amazon’s director of business development. “The types of worlds will broaden,” he says. “This is a major initiative for us. It’s a big deal, and we are working to make it Successful. “If he succeeds, look for Barnes & Noble (BKS) and Apple (AAPL) to follow Amazon into fanfic sales, says Digital Book World’s Greenfield.
The bottom line: Kindle Worlds is looking to cash in on fan fiction by licensing popular brands. They’re paying authors 35 percent royalties.
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