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First cell phone blogging, now cell phone novels.
A trend which started in Japan about 10 years ago called keitai shousetsu (or cell phone stories) has spread like wild fire in the Asian region thanks to ease of accessibility to technology and advanced features in multimedia phones.
Where ten years ago you actually had to grab a pen and paper, now you can just type it all up on a cell phone, post to your website and your readers can download the novel by installment.
CNN even did a story on the phenomenon back in February this year.
Yukiko Nishimura, a Linguist at Toyo Gakuen University in Japan has heralded this trend as a new genre, defending this genre as literature ,¨Some critics argue that mobile phone novels are not literature.. I think they are¨, she says.
Nishimura even held a few lectures to prove it at the 4 day conference that started June 19 on Computers and Writing backed by the University Writing Program at UC Davis.
Interesting topic but are the novels any good?
Usually they are just about teenagers falling in love¨, says Aya Tanaka, a spokesperson for Goma book publishing house who have adapted many a cell phone novel into paperback, “But it is kind of like popular comics, it is what the teenagers want to read, and for the publishers, it is quite a big market and it does sell.”
Sell they do, what with cell phone author Yume-Hotaru´s (pen name meaning “Dreaming Firefly” in Japanese) hit the top selling books list across the board in Tokyo bookstores with their popular cell phone novel ¨First experience¨, about two orinary Japanese teenagers coming of age story. Although it is still a billion yen industry, critics say the trend is now cooling:
¨Last year few mobile novels appeared on best-seller lists while new stories published online have lost their characteristic edginess, said Chiaki Ishihara, Literature expert and cell phone story researcher at Waseda University in Tokyo.
Ishihara even predicts that in a few years time it will be just another trend that had its used by date.
What are your thoughts?
Check it out for yourself
Japanese cell phone novel site:
http://company.maho.jp/novel/index.html
If you want to give it a try..
http://www.mbmgl.com/services.php
This is a guest post by Whitts
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Well Japanese’s cell phone screen are really big and the phones are 10x better than cell phones found elsewhere in the world. Since Japanese people do everything with their cell phones, it’s a lot more convenient to read and write on them. Plus, what better things to do on those long hours of train commutes than to read from your cell phone?
As much as I like books, I don’t want to look at a cell phone screen anymore than I have to to text and make calls.


saranghaesuju on Dec 29, 2011 11:00pm
saranghaesuju on Feb 04, 2012 08:00pm
saranghaesuju on Dec 31, 2011 11:00pm
paperbunnies on Jan 10, 2012 12:00pm
chocolatecream on Jan 08, 2012 08:00pm
chocolatecream on Jan 09, 2012 09:00pm
chocolatecream on Jan 12, 2012 09:00pm
Syndicator on Jan 13, 2012 09:24pm
chocolatecream on Jan 19, 2012 09:00pm
SarangAnnyeo on Jan 07, 2012 06:00pm
From what I understand, the cell phones and language make a major difference in the flow and appearance of the language on the Asian cell phones. As a writer and avid reader, I like the idea that I can read and write from a cell if I choose. More options, more freedom, more freedom of expression.
This Asian phenomenon is also working on gaining a foothold in the Americas. Last year I won the Grand Prize for a cell phone novel entitled 13 to Life: A Werewolf’s Tale through Textnovel.com . I won an agency contract and landed a multi-book deal with St. Martin’s Press. The first two novels in the series will be released in 2010.
This year Dorchester Publishing (known for their romances) joined with Textnovel for “America’s Next Best Celler.” The contest runs until November and a winner will be published in 2010 by Dorchester.
Things are definitely starting to catch the imagination of aspiring authors here now, too.