When I talk to friends about the idea of writing my American novel "live" on the Internet, their response ranges from "A-mazing!" to an adamant, "I'll never read a book on a computer."
I live surrounded by books. I still welcome my daily Boston Globe. I watch the rising tide of red ink threatening to engulf the presses and look back to a time when I was a young reporter in a hectic city newsroom. Never could I have imagined a day when the very existence of newspapers would be moot, not the yellow rags but the great gray ladies of the world.
In less than two decades, the Digital Revolution spurred by the Internet has radically altered the way we communicate in private and in public. Twenty years ago, social networks like Gather, My Space and Facebook where millions of people interact daily did not exist. The idea of a single article generating 10,000 "letters to the editor"was inconceivable, yet we saw this in the last election with comments racked up on some Huffington Post headliners.
Startling as these changes are, Robert Coover suggests we're in the "silent movie" era of the Digital Age - the early stages of a transition as fundamental as going from writing on parchment scrolls with reed pens to inking text-blocks. An advance that spanned a century and a half, during which medieval copyists existed alongside printers of "good cheap" books.
It's this idea of transition - lightning fast, by comparison, given the exponential growth of the Web's reach and application - that underscores my interest in picking up the new web writing tools.
The innovative communities at if:book, Grand Text Auto, MIT Communications Forum and other sites I visit regularly represent the vanguard of change. I'm intrigued by such digital works as Gamer Theory, In Search of Lost Tim, 253, and the squawk of networked fiction on the lines of A Million Penguins.
I love these edgy explorations of digital literacy but I see my friends rolling their eyes and shaking their heads. Baby boomers mostly, they're the same folks who stood in line for the newest James Michener saga with multilayered facets of entertainment and education.
This is where I see potential for transitional works like A Novel of America. I've intentionally kept the portal simple with a linear framework highlighting techniques Michener and I employed as seen in my web archives for Covenant and Brazil.
A key difference lies in the wealth of interactive material: blogged working notes, research links, maps, images, books I'm reading. As the work takes shape, I will share plot lines and draft manuscript, all open to comments which I will moderate.
A Novel of America is not a networked book but a writer's invitation to explore a world as new to me as most of the readers I hope to reach.

A Novel of America by Errol Lincoln Uys
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Comments: 26
Nancy,
So did I--until I received a Kindle for a gift. As I've written in my post, now you would have to pry it out of my cold, dead fingers.
My wife and I qualify for the "larger print need." Kindle 2 will also read to you. The voices (either male or female--reader's choice) soiund a bit like R2D2 but are understandable and can be slowed down or speeded up. The Kindle 2 is a fantastic device.
I must say though, I am not a baby boomer, but I am still not a fan of digital reading replacing actual books. Nothing can replace the feel of the words in my hand of good authors like yourself.
Gwen,
You may, like me, change your mind once you experience the Kindle 2. However, I agree that certain genres can never be replaced and, if anything, I believe there will be great improvements in traditional books as a result. When I was a wee one, I spent hours reading and looking at the beautiful illustrations in my great grandfather's 19th century collection.
I just wanted to stop by since I am finally going through what is now listed as under 5,200 pieces of gather new mail that is sitting in my inbox on here.
With that mentioned I just came across either a mailing from you yourself, or someone else brought this piece to my attention. You or they felt that your creation should be shared with the gather community, which I am very glad that it was passed on to me to view. So I wanted to say Thank you for taking the time out of your busy day to publish it here on gather for us to all view. :o)
As well before I leave you I wanted to wish you a Happy New Year... in 2009 :o)
Traditionally, books get written and sold for money, either in-print or electronically. Is there some way you're trying to get paid for your work as well?
I hope that you will share this Article in Artistic Minds®. I know all of the Members will love this!