I've been thinking about putting out a novel serially as I write it, maybe on a blog or something, mostly for my friends. It's primary purpose is to keep me disciplined as I write; an audience bugging you about where the next installment is can be a wonderful motivator, I imagine.
But I'm also worried about copyright protection and the Internet and all that, so I don't know if a blog is the best way to do it.
If the blog is open to anyone, then your novel would be considered already "published" by many houses and therefore they wouldn't be interested since the public already has it.
Or if your blog is private (members only who have to sign up and/or get your approval for access), anyone can easily snatch the text off it and then your work is out there beyond your control.
The internet has made traditional marketing of your work much more complex.
--Ted
John Scalzi serialized
Old Man's War on his website before it was picked up by TOR's senior editor. His book
Agent to the Stars, which was written before OMW, was released as shareware in 1999, then again as freeware in 2004. Subterranan Press put out a special edition of the book before TOR finally published it as a paperback last year.
Cory Doctorow, a proponent of creative commons/shareware, has also released his works online, for free. That's how I got his book
Little Brother.
Of course, there could be a downside. If your book doesn't get enough hits or downloads or whatever that could prognosticate doom for your book in stores, meaning it might not move. Now that's speculation on my part based on my own personal research into the publishing industry. But if someone is serious about publication then I suggest reading several of the literary agent blogs out there like Nathanal Brandsford--Literary Agent or Pimp My Novel, which is written by someone that works at a publishing house. These blogs are unabashedly truthful about the joys and perils of publishing.
And of course, there's also the advice of our board members who are published authors, who have contributed greatly to this discussion.
I tried my hand at writing a science-fiction novel in high school. I wrote a great deal of background material and a few chapters of what I imagined as a grand, multi-book space opera that I called
The Near Future. It now sits in a box in my parents garage back in San Diego.
For my graduate thesis in creative writing, I wrote a contemporary lit novel sans outline... well, that's not exactly true. I sketched out various scenes in my journal first, fiddled with several bare bones outlines, and generally jumped into the deep end, which is why there's a great deal of background exposition in the novel. It passed but I am less-than happy with it, but at least I finished it and learned several lessons from the experience. Now I'm pulling it apart, outlining on 3x5 cards so I can move the pieces around easily and see where things work better in the larger structure.
Fiction is damn hard work. Writing, in general, is damn hard work.