Alexandre Dumas photograph

Alexandre Dumas

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Gender Male
Death153 years ago
Date of birth July 24,1802
Zodiac sign Leo
Born Villers-Cotterets
France
Date of died December 5,1870
DiedSeine-Maritime
France
NationalityFrench
Job Playwright
Novelist
Children Colette Dumas
Alexandre Dumas
Micaëlla-Clélie-Josepha-Élisabeth Cordier
Marie-Alexandrine Dumas
Henry Bauer
Jeannine d'Hauterive
Jeanine Dumas
Parents Alexandre Dumas
Thomas-Alexandre Dumas
Marie-Louise Élisabeth Labouret
Marie-Laure-Catherine Labay
BuriedPanthéon, Paris, France
Grandchildren Jeanine Dumas
Colette Dumas
Jeannine d'Hauterive
Gérard Bauër
Downwards The Count Of Monte Cristo
PlaysLa Dame aux Camélias
Spouse Henriette Régnier de La Brière
Ida Ferrier
Siblings Marie-Alexandrine Dumas
Louise-Alexandrine Dumas
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID404622

La Reine Margot
The Vicomte of Bragelonne: Ten Years Later
Les quarante- cinq
La Dame de Monsoreau
The Queen's Necklace
The Two Dianas
Le Chevalier de Maison-Rouge
The Countess de Charny
The Corsican Brothers
The Complete Celebrated Crimes, V1
Joseph Balsamo
The Conspirators
The history of a nutcracker
Ange Pitou
The Knight of Sainte-Hermine
Le prince des voleurs
The Companions of Jehu
The Wolf Leader
The Works of Dumas
Les Blancs et les Bleus
La guerre des femmes
Captain Paul
My memoirs
Les Mohicans de Paris
The regent's daughter
La Marquise de Brinvilliers
Olympe de Cleves
Le grand dictionnaire de cuisine
Georges
Le page du duc de Savoie
Captain Pamphile
Voyage au Caucase
Mil y Un Fantasmas
Ascanio
The Pale Lady (Fantasy and Horror Classics)
La Sanfelice
D'Artagnan
La femme au collier de velours
Le Bagnard de l'opéra
Le corricolo
Le trou de l'enfer
Le Chateau d'Eppstein
The Last Vendée: Or, The She-wolves of Machecoul
Le Speronare
Le masque de fer
From Paris to Cadiz
The page of the Duke of Savoy
The Son of Clemenceau
Camille, Le Demi-monde, The Lady with the Camellias
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Three Musketeers
Twenty Years After
The Black Tulip
Black
Black, the story of a dog
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Alexandre Dumas Life story


Alexandre Dumas, also known as Alexandre Dumas père, was a French novelist and playwright. His works have been translated into many languages and he is one of the most widely read French authors.

'Digital newsletters really humanise you to your readers'

Nov 13,2022 9:40 pm

By Jill Martin WrennBusiness reporter

Author Elle Griffin says she would definitely turn down a book deal if she was ever offered one.

" I'd never accept one… traditional book publishing is full of bad math, and Even Worse marketing, " says the 37-year-old writer of gothic novels.

Last Year , instead of releasing her First Book , called Obscurity, as physical copies in High Street bookstores, or as a Kindle version to download, she started to self-publish chapters as email instalments.

Using online publishing platform Substack, the new chapters were emailed out every week or two to Ms Griffin's subscribers.

She already had More Than 3,000 non-paying followers before she started to release The Book , as she had for A Number of years been writing articles on numerous topics.

But by The End of The First 12 Months of her novel's serialisation her subscriber numbers had More Than doubled, thanks to recommendations from readers and other Substack account holders.

Based in Salt Lake City , Utah, Ms Griffin now has 6,843 subscribers, and, crucially, 301 paying ones.

They are charged from $10 (£8. 60) a month, or $50 per annum, and Ms Griffin says in The First year she earned nearly $18,000.

With many of us, writing coach Nancy Erickson says it makes sense for novelists like Ms Griffin to Focus On offering readers direct digital access to their work.

" What you really want to do is meet your audience wherever they're already engaged, " says Ms Erickson, who is based in St Louis, Missouri. She adds that digital engagement " helps authors build their brands, as well as finding other revenue generating activities".

Jane Ostler is executive Vice President of global thought leadership at brand consulting company Kantar. She sees online serialisation as an effective form of Digital Marketing , a way for new writers to get themselves better known. " I think there is a lot of potential here for a new writer, " she says.

While prolific Nottingham-based author Kristina Adams hasn't serialised any of her 16 self-published novels and three non-fiction titles, she has been sending free weekly digital newsletters about literature and life to subscribers since 2014. This Was two years before the now 32-year-old released her First Book .

She continues to send these emails out to More Than 2,500 people via a service called MailerLite. They include stories about things referenced in her books, talks about her dog Millie, and promotion of upcoming releases.

" Digital newsletters in particular, I think More Than Social Media , really humanise you to your readers, " says Ms Adams, who writes romance titles under her full name, and Ghost Stories as Kc Adams . " It gives you a much closer connection.

" And sending out the newsletters really makes a different to sales. Every Time I sent one out I get an up-turn in sales.

" You can think that you are sending out far too many, but in most cases only about a fifth of people will open each email. So while you think you are shouting and demanding attention, most subscribers wouldn't see it that way. "

Back in Salt Lake City , Ms Griffin is now serialising her second novel. She says she was inspired to release her book in instalments by 19Th Century French writer Alexandre Dumas .

Like her, he wrote Gothic Fiction , and his well-known novel The Count of Monte Cristo was serialised in a Parisian weekly newspaper in the 1840S .

is a series exploring how technological innovation is set to shape the new emerging economic landscape.

As Is The Norm for Substack, people can read the chapters of Ms Griffin's novels for free via her page on the app and website.

However, paying subscribers get extra benefits, such as The Ability to read Ms Griffin's commentaries, post their own thoughts, chat with other subscribers, and even write and publish their own essays.

Ms Griffin says all this feedback is very helpful.

" Recently, two readers mentioned that they wished my chapters were longer, so I started making them longer, " she says. " I love being able to respond in real-time. "

Ms Griffin adds that she had researched self-publishing her books in digital form via Amazon, but that her subscription model is far more lucrative.

She explains the maths. " Say I sold 1,000 books on Amazon, then I'd make $1,000, maybe more, maybe $5,000.

" But if I - instead of just selling it - Adopted a subscription model, and charged readers $8 or $9 a month, then from the same 1,000 fans, I could presumably make $100,000 in salary. "

She adds that with a traditional book deal she'd be Even Worse off financially, as she'd likely only get a royalty rate of around 15% of revenues.

In addition to the subscription payments, Ms Griffin's followers can pay to buy and download the digital artwork that she designs for each chapter.

" I think The Beauty of it [serialisation] is you can start grassroots, and start from the bottom, " she says. " I'm not Stephen King , I'm just barely getting started. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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