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stolze I received a Facebook message from writer Greg Stolze today extolling his latest project. Stolze, probably best known for his work on role-playing games including Unknown Armies and NEMESIS, has taken to writing reader-funded fiction using the Kickstarter fund-raising website.

Prior to short stories, Stolze also wrote some role-playing games using this method of funding, which he terms “the Ransom Model.”

At the fund-raising site of his latest effort, “Two Things She Does With Her Body,” Stolze has posted a video of himself explaining the idea, as well as links to the PDFs of the two previous stories that Stolze successfully funded this way, “These People Mean Nothing to Each Other” and “Regret, With Math,” which are now freely readable by all. (Another story funding attempt was unsuccessful.)

Stolze’s goal is to raise $300 for his 3,000-word short story by April 25th. He asks individual would-be readers to pledge at least $1, “the cost of a pack of gum. (Well, okay, the cost of a pack of high end gum, the kind with all natural ingredients.)” Donors will also receive a podcast of Stolze reading the story. At the time of this writing, $39 has been pledged.

The “Ransom Model” is a very similar technique to the “Storyteller’s Bowl” method I’ve mentioned here before, which Sharon Lee and Steve Miller used for their Fledgling and Saltation novels and Dave Freer used for Save the Dragons.

I hadn’t heard of it being used for short stories before, but it might very well work even better for those than for novels, since there is less chance of the writer getting preoccupied and not finishing the work (Diane Duane’s readers are still waiting for her to finish her Storyteller’s Bowl-funded novel, The Big Meow).

 
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