After forever changing book-selling, Amazon is now embarked on a
wide-ranging venture that seeks to alter the book-publishing end of the
business. Company officials see it as an experiment where they can
tinker with new ways to connect authors and readers.
For more than a decade, Hugh Howey wrestled with writing about the horrors of Sept. 11, 2001.
Before Howey became the best-selling author of “Wool,” he worked as a boat captain aboard a ship docked in the shadows of the World Trade Center towers as two planes flew into them. Even as he began to make a living as an author, the idea of writing about the tragedy vexed him.
And then Amazon.com opened a creative door for him. The book-publishing unit at the online retail giant created an imprint devoted to fan fiction, Kindle Worlds, last May. Fan fiction is often dismissed as mediocre writing by wannabe authors.
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For more than a decade, Hugh Howey wrestled with writing about the horrors of Sept. 11, 2001.
Before Howey became the best-selling author of “Wool,” he worked as a boat captain aboard a ship docked in the shadows of the World Trade Center towers as two planes flew into them. Even as he began to make a living as an author, the idea of writing about the tragedy vexed him.
And then Amazon.com opened a creative door for him. The book-publishing unit at the online retail giant created an imprint devoted to fan fiction, Kindle Worlds, last May. Fan fiction is often dismissed as mediocre writing by wannabe authors.
Read More
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