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The original draft of "Winners Take All" had the same themes as the final published book -- and the same origins a couple of years prior. But it was unpolished and, at times, too sharp, too biting. People I trusted who read it, including my editors, agreed with what I was arguing but felt the way I was arguing it would turn people away. A book needs to persuade. "You've got to find the love in it," one friend wisely told me.

So I did. And a different book resulted.

Now, for the first time, I'm sharing these outtakes. They didn't belong in the book. It was right to cut them. But they do belong to be in the world, I think. Quietly. Not published. Viewed in private. Seeing a deleted passage -- and only you will see it -- may cast the book in a different light, opening it to new interpretations.

Here, an unpublished excerpt from my reporting at the final Clinton Global Initiative. An edition of one, for the owner's eyes only.

NOTE: This unpublished excerpt remains the copyright of the author. Purchasing the collectible entitles you to view the document but not to publish or share it publicly. Some names and details have been altered.

"Winners Take All": Author's Cut collection image

A literary NFT drop -- secret manuscript outtakes, never-used cover art, and catchphrases -- from the writer Anand Giridharadas.

This is an experiment in applying NFTs to the literary world. Here is a collection of for-your-eyes-only deleted passages from the New York Times bestseller "Winners Take All" -- plus a cover art concept designed by the author but rejected, the original "Plutes gonna plute" template, the coined word "MarketWorld," and a March of Progress of the evolving title pages.

Many deleted passages were excised because they made the book less hearable. Now hear them on their own.

Can elements of a book that didn't belong in the book nonetheless live in the world, but in quiet? Can unused fragments of a work be witnessed without being published?

Proceeds from this experiment will fund future reporting projects, as well as original works by emerging writers to be published in The Ink newsletter and the collection of literary artifacts from other writers.

Category Art
Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token ID
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataCentralized
Creator Earnings
10%

Exclusive, for-your-eyes-only unpublished excerpt from "Winners Take All": The Clinton Global Initiative

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Exclusive, for-your-eyes-only unpublished excerpt from "Winners Take All": The Clinton Global Initiative

visibility
154 views
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Floor Difference
    Expiration
    From

The original draft of "Winners Take All" had the same themes as the final published book -- and the same origins a couple of years prior. But it was unpolished and, at times, too sharp, too biting. People I trusted who read it, including my editors, agreed with what I was arguing but felt the way I was arguing it would turn people away. A book needs to persuade. "You've got to find the love in it," one friend wisely told me.

So I did. And a different book resulted.

Now, for the first time, I'm sharing these outtakes. They didn't belong in the book. It was right to cut them. But they do belong to be in the world, I think. Quietly. Not published. Viewed in private. Seeing a deleted passage -- and only you will see it -- may cast the book in a different light, opening it to new interpretations.

Here, an unpublished excerpt from my reporting at the final Clinton Global Initiative. An edition of one, for the owner's eyes only.

NOTE: This unpublished excerpt remains the copyright of the author. Purchasing the collectible entitles you to view the document but not to publish or share it publicly. Some names and details have been altered.

"Winners Take All": Author's Cut collection image

A literary NFT drop -- secret manuscript outtakes, never-used cover art, and catchphrases -- from the writer Anand Giridharadas.

This is an experiment in applying NFTs to the literary world. Here is a collection of for-your-eyes-only deleted passages from the New York Times bestseller "Winners Take All" -- plus a cover art concept designed by the author but rejected, the original "Plutes gonna plute" template, the coined word "MarketWorld," and a March of Progress of the evolving title pages.

Many deleted passages were excised because they made the book less hearable. Now hear them on their own.

Can elements of a book that didn't belong in the book nonetheless live in the world, but in quiet? Can unused fragments of a work be witnessed without being published?

Proceeds from this experiment will fund future reporting projects, as well as original works by emerging writers to be published in The Ink newsletter and the collection of literary artifacts from other writers.

Category Art
Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token ID
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataCentralized
Creator Earnings
10%
keyboard_arrow_down
  • Sales
  • Transfers
Event
Price
From
To
Date