With a little help...
Updated: 2014-07-30 07:34
By Liu Zhihua (China Daily)
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Fromright: Ke Bing, Yang Qian and Sheng Jia at a promotional event for their book in Beijing. |
Crowdfunding makes it easier for would-be authors to raise money and get their books published. That's getting many more writers into print, Liu Zhihua discovers.
However, Li is not famous enough to attract publishers, and he can't afford to pay for the publishing by himself.
Last month, Li turned to a crowdfunding website to raise funds to publish his works.
He's not alone.
Although there are no official statistics on how many bids for publishing are on such websites around the country, or exactly how many millions of yuan have been pledged to those programs, there are more than 120 book-publishing programs on Zhongchou.com, among the country's popular crowdfunding platforms, with goals from 500 yuan ($81) to 1 million yuan.
"Crowdfunding for books is a relatively new concept in China, but it's gaining a lot of popularity in a very short time," says Li Yaohui, senior executive at Zhongchou.com.
The idea is simple: Potential readers can finance a book directly, in exchange for various value-added services at various pledge levels, such as signed books, meeting or even dining with the author, and getting access to important events related to the book, Li says.
Chen Liang, a young mother in Beijing, has spent months rewriting Flowers in the Mirror, a 300,000-word ancient-Chinese-language myth novel, into plain modern Mandarin for her own child. She recently decided to publish the book so that more children will be able to enjoy the inspiring ancient tale.
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