tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8661117100748148070.post6349399178102603221..comments2024-02-20T15:12:28.660-08:00Comments on A Time-Travelling Apocalypse: The Past Future of Publishing.Graham Clementshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06430135062211828206noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8661117100748148070.post-84584237237310583942013-05-17T01:00:28.543-07:002013-05-17T01:00:28.543-07:00Haha you wish Graham.. though very well could be! ...Haha you wish Graham.. though very well could be! (re.4)<br /><br />Love Number 1... lol.<br /><br />It's a frightening thought in all seriousness. There's already a veritable ocean of crap out there. Who knows how things will be archived in decades to come. Perhaps the bestseller novelist will be a thing of the past, with every writer on earth having the same possiblity's as the next guy. Only the classics will stand out.<br /><br />50 Shades of Hungry Twilight, a classic. Truly terrifying.<br /><br />Maybe literature reached its peak some decades ago....Anthony J. Langfordhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02027216695415849158noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8661117100748148070.post-35820022409061067902013-05-17T00:17:51.993-07:002013-05-17T00:17:51.993-07:00Very true. Back-listed novels are going to become ...Very true. Back-listed novels are going to become more accessible, at the same time as more & more new books are e-published. Mind-boggling, really. greenspacehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17836369141802772172noreply@blogger.com