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NcomN.com Seeks to Connect Online Authors and Readers NcomN is pleased to work with authors and publishers in helping end users better understand more about the book. NcomN has released a standard questionaire for authors to fill out. This questionaire is designed to help the end user understand why the author of the book wrote the book as well as the reader can get from reading the book. La Verkin, UT (PRWEB) September 30, 2006 -- Today, NcomN.com (http://www.ncomn.com) announced the launching of a new section on their recently developed website. NcomN.com, which is a social networking website dedicated to providing a unique experience via forums and personal profiles, is now offering a page devoted solely to Arts and Literature (http://www.ncomn.com/dir/Arts/Literature/Titles). This new feature will focus on both authors of books and those who read them. It will also attempt to connect these readers and authors.
Roger Lichfield, founder of NcomN.com, hopes that the new Arts and Literature (http://www.ncomn.com/dir/Arts/Literature/Titles) section will continue the site's trend of allowing people of common interests to communicate. In this case, Lichfield adds, people who have read certain books will be able to "post their feedback of books as well as find users who have read the same book." Lichfield believes that this is in keeping with NcomN.com's goal of creating an online community in which its members are categorized according to their personal profiles, likes, and interests.
Lichfield also sees an online need for lesser-known authors to display their work. NcomN.com's Arts and Literature (http://www.ncomn.com/dir/Arts/Literature/Titles) page will, according to Lichfield, be a setting in which "those who have written books are encouraged to seek immediate feedback from readers who might be interested in what they have written." Users who read books by certain authors will be able to contact those authors. Lichfield anticipates that this ability to connect readers and authors will make NcomN.com's Arts and Literature page very appealing to both sides.
NcomN.com's Arts and Literature (http://www.ncomn.com/dir/Arts/Literature/Titles) section also highlights a questionaire, consisting of several "interview-like questions" for authors. It is Lichfield's belief that this questionaire will allow the section to become "an online book signing, of sorts." Lichfield explains: "On our site an author would answer the questionaire, users would then comment or add the book to their profile (blog), and then the author could correspond with them."
As with all of the other categories on NcomN.com, Lichfield is hopeful that this feature will ensure that the relatively new site "will be a reflection of the people who use it." Lichfield hopes the communication offered on NcomN.com's Arts and Literature (http://www.ncomn.com/dir/Arts/Literature/Titles) page will "bridge the gap between authors and readers in helping readers understand more about the book so that they may want to read it." He notes that when certain books receive public acknowledgment, sales of those books tend to increase. Lichfield believes that as NcomN.com continues to grow in popularity, its Arts and Literature section can "have the same effect for our users and authors."
For information: http://www.ncomn.com Phone: 435-669-9195
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