Stories told jointly by several authors, either as a play, a novel (regardless whether as a teamwork effort throughout or with each author contributing, e.g., one or more specific chapters) or as a series of interconnected short stories.
(Please note: Only jointly-created AND -published works, please. No sequels or spinoffs by different authors, nor works created/completed by one author using the scraps left behind by another upon their death.)
(Please note: Only jointly-created AND -published works, please. No sequels or spinoffs by different authors, nor works created/completed by one author using the scraps left behind by another upon their death.)
87 books ·
22 voters ·
list created January 10th, 2012
by Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (votes) .
Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large)
546 books
365 friends
365 friends
Bettie
15676 books
19 friends
19 friends
Susanna - Censored by GoodReads
3386 books
851 friends
851 friends
Jan
1316 books
82 friends
82 friends
Thom
6022 books
294 friends
294 friends
Phillip
5191 books
139 friends
139 friends
Nellyna
1666 books
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Noemí
553 books
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Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large)
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Jan 10, 2012 02:36PM
Thank you, superfast one!!
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I know a couple of works that were written with audience participation, does that count? The author is still the author, but the audience was very much responsable for how the plots evolved.
Jan wrote: "I know a couple of works that were written with audience participation, does that count? The author is still the author, but the audience was very much responsable for how the plots evolved."Yes, that's OK -- in fact, there's already one book on the list that was created in a similar fashion; namely, Caverns, which was the product of a creative writing class taught by Ken Kesey at the University of Oregon (the "author name," in reverse, reads "Novel U.O.").
Allright, added them :) I was part of the audience for all of these, so I'm pretty biased, but I thought it was awesome :)Edit: I added a short explanation to each vote.
Jan wrote: "Allright, added them :) I was part of the audience for all of these, so I'm pretty biased, but I thought it was awesome :)Edit: I added a short explanation to each vote."
Wow, cool! You should also add them to this list: http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/69...
Jan wrote: "Hahaha. Maybe I will :)Edit: OH GOD, YOU KNOW/MET JARED DIAMOND?
That's sooooo coool."
Through absolutely no merit of my own, though!! He's a friend of my mom's -- they met in England, years ago. (As a consequence, he's fond of reminding me that as time goes by, he's one of the few remaining people who have known me as long as my parents have.) Needless to say, I admire him tremendously ... he's far and away the most broad-minded, -educated and -talented person I've ever met!
O god. I've met quite a couple of famous artists and authors (in Europe though) thanks to my father, but none are people whose work I personally am a fan of. Jared Diamond is all kinds of awesomesauce :)
Jan wrote: "O god. I've met quite a couple of famous artists and authors (in Europe though) thanks to my father, but none are people whose work I personally am a fan of. Jared Diamond is all kinds of awesome..."He is indeed (but would be the first to vigorously dispute it)!
Prism was jointly written by Aliza and Faye Kellerman; I can find the book listed under each name but not both.
Thanks to both of you! This reminds me -- aren't there also a few books jointly written by Faye and Jonathan Kellerman?
Themis-Athena wrote: "Thanks to both of you! This reminds me -- aren't there also a few books jointly written by Faye and Jonathan Kellerman?"I have two listed here, Themes, but only one has the two names. Apparently this is an under-edited cache of books. The collaboration greatly improves the product, for Faye has passionate ideas but not the writing skills of husband Jonathan.
Ah -- yes, I see.Isn't it interesting how this format particularly seems to lend itself to mysteries, thrillers and romance, btw? (As well as spoofs thereof ...)
I was thinking it mostly serves well for action heavy works. Not the explosion + car-chases + more explosions kind of action per se (although that's a possibility), but stories where a lot of stuff happens.
I think Jan is right -- wherever the focus is more on plot than on character development, it's likely going to be easier for several authors to work together ...
Yes -- though it's also bound to be a bit of an effort to keep the various clues and red herrings sorted, at least if the book isn't written as a collaboration from first to last page but rather as a "true" round-robin, i.e., with each chapter being contributed by a different author. Case in point: the Detection Club's The Floating Admiral (the original mystery round-robin, for all I know), as well as Yeats Is Dead!: A Mystery by 15 Irish Writers, a more recent spoof on the format. Dorothy Sayers, in her introduction to The Floating Admiral, describes at great length how they were on the one hand all having great fun turning on its head the upshot of the chapter written immediately before everybody's own, while at the same time it was also turning out more and more complicated not to make a complete hash of the storyline. (The book's final chapter, not coincidentally, is entitled "Sorting Out the Mess" ...)
Themis-Athena wrote: "Yes -- though it's also bound to be a bit of an effort to keep the various clues and red herrings sorted, at least if the book isn't written as a collaboration from first to last page but rather as..."Seriously, you guys, check out Naked Came the Manatee, one of the better efforts at the round-robin, IMHO.









