Universal Acquires Rights to The Creed of Violence »
Posted By SisHowell 10 months, 1 week ago in Arts & EntertainmentStory, set in 1910, revolves around an estranged father and son trying to thwart an arms smuggling ring bringing weapons to Mexico. The novel caught fire among studios after the Natasha Kern Literary Agency submitted it to book publishers. Universal, which hasnâ??t yet assigned a producer, made an aggressive offer and took the book off the table.
“The Creed of Violence.” This is based on an unpublished novel written by Boston Teran. Natasha Kern Literary Agency submitted it to book publishers. Universal, which hasn’t yet assigned a producer, made an aggressive offer and took the book off the table.
Read Full Story at screenhead.com »
122 Views Share Story 1 Comment Report
RSS Join the Discussion
+ Add CommentComments So Far: 1 (view all)
-

SisHowell10 months, 1 week ago
This comment is below the standard viewing threshold View It ยป
Boston Teran... Who are You? Are you a Man? a Woman? A group of People?
Reply
"What's in a name? Is it a conventional marker, a social construction, a mere handle? Or does it mean something in and of itself and either stand for some quality within the person by acting as a sort of destiny or matrix?"
Could a name be all of the above at the same time it is none of the above while performing the simple duty of being the equivalent of a trademark.
What if a group of writers got together and created a single entity - an author who doesn`t exist, so to speak. And became successful as this one entity.
______________________
There is no Boston Teran - at least not in the literal sense.
"Who is Boston Teran? A man? A woman? Does it really matter?
Submit a Story
Advertisement

Add a Comment
Sign In With Your Propeller Account
Please keep your comments relevant to this story.
To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.