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Pulp fiction in the digital age

By Raymond Zhou | China Daily | Updated: 2013-07-13 08:27

Pulp fiction in the digital age

Pulp fiction in the digital age

Online books have spawned a few good writers and paved the way for the migration to digital media. But beneath the democratic smiley face lies the price that both creators and consumers have to pay.

Shortly before midnight on June 16, Sollong updated his online novel, adding a new chapter. A few hours later he was dead. His friends say he worked himself to death.

Sollong, whose Chinese handle means Snowfall for Ten Years, was a professional scribe who worked exclusively on web fiction. Only the management at Qidian.com, where he was a contracted writer, knows his real name and even they need to consult a database to find it. You see, Qidian claims to have 1.6 million contracted novelists, which translates to a huge army of mostly youngsters hunched over computers and churning out mountains of words for quick consumption.

Pulp fiction in the digital age

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