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Encyclopedia > The Plant

The Plant is a fiction novel published in 2000 by Stephen King.


Stephen King wrote a few parts of a story by the same name and sent out as chapbooks to his friends instead of Christmas cards in 1982, 1983, and 1985. Only three instalments were produced by Philtrum Press before the story was shelved, and the original editions are hotly sought-after collector's items today.


Now King has picked up The Plant again and started to publish it as an electronic serial. The first part (matching the 1982 story) was put on his own web site (http://www.stephenking.com/) for anyone to download. He also said that he wanted everyone that downloaded the story to pay him $1 either before or after reading it.


The idea was that if enough people paid up, more parts would be published in the same way. The limit was set at 75% of payers versus downloaders. The rate of paying customers decreased over time, but at least the first parts were over the set limit. As of mid-2001, six parts have been published (making up the first somewhat self-contained part of the novel). King has said that there will be more, but that some other projects will be finished first.


The story tells of a person working as editor on a paperback publishing house. One day he gets a manuscript from what seems like a crackpot. It's about magic, but it also contains photographs that seem very real. He writes a rejection slip about the book, but on grounds of the photographs, he also notifies the police where the author lives. This enrages the author who sends a mysterious plant to the editor's office.


The story is told in epistolarly format, consisting entirely of letters, memos, and so on.


For more, read: Stephen King (Publishing of 'The Plant')


See also: internet commerce, Internet publishing.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Welcome to the PLANTS Database | USDA PLANTS (225 words)
The PLANTS Database provides standardized information about the vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and lichens of the U.S. and its territories.
Automated plant keys for selected U.S. plant groups are available for use and testing on-line or by downloading the application.
We are modernizing PLANTS to fit the new USDA Web standard, which is part of a broader USDA initiative called Web Site Development and Maintenance.
Patents Guidance, Tools & Manuals (4506 words)
A plant patent is granted by the Government to an inventor (or the inventor's heirs or assigns) who has invented or discovered and asexually reproduced a distinct and new variety of plant, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state.
That the plant is not a plant which is excluded by statute, where the part of the plant used for asexual reproduction is not a tuber food part, as with potato or Jerusalem artichoke.
The inventor of a plant must have discovered or identified the novel plant, and must have asexually reproduced the plant and observed the clones so produced for a sufficient amount of time to have concluded that the clones are identical to the parent plant in all characteristics.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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