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Oxfordbookstore“Come December 2005, the young and talented writers will be invited to join eAuthor contest by Oxfordbookstore.com. They are the fiction writers whose works have never been published as printed books. This time around, they will get an opportunity to have their works displayed on the internet after the online talent search competition.” – The Financial Express in India.

The TeleRead take: This apparently isn’t the first year the contest has been held. Rules appear here. At any rate, it’s a great idea for bookstore–well worthy of imitation by large and small bookstores alike. In an era when many local bookstores are worried about being Amazon away, this could be an excellent way to connect with young Net users. What’s interesting is that the number of people seriously reading books has declined, but the number of would-be writers has actually skyrocketed.

Here’s one suggestion for Oxford Bookstore.com and others trying this. Don’t just post the writers’ books online–also think about using cheap print-on-demand techniques to make them available in print to reach a wider audience. That’s assuming that the writers have completed their books, and that the quality is satisfactory. I do notice that the rules invite submission of first chapters, so I’m not sure if entire books will be available in every case.

I’ll conclude with a reservation and two suggestions. As TeleRead book reviewer Sadi Ranson-Polizotti makes clear in an essay I’ll post today, writing for the computer screen isn’t necessarily the same as writing for printed page. Maybe print-on-demand versions could use longer paragraphs than the e-books.

And the second suggestion? if the contest is international, Oxfordbookstore.com should say so — and likewise if it’s limited only to people in India.

 
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