Most people assume fanfiction is a creature of the internet era, something that sprang to life alongside broadband and message boards. The reality is messier, older, and far more interesting than that. The instinct to take someone else’s characters and push them somewhere new has been with us for centuries, long before anyone had a username or an AO3 account.
What changed over time wasn’t the impulse itself, but the scale. The communities grew. The platforms shifted. The stigma, slowly but unmistakably, began to lift. Today, the line between fan-written stories and traditionally published novels has become genuinely blurry, and that blurriness is worth tracing from the beginning.
Before the Internet: A Tradition Older Than Anyone Admits
There are those who argue that some of the most celebrated works in Western literature were themselves a form of fan reimagining, including the Homeric epics, which drew on interpretive oral traditions, and Shakespeare’s plays, almost all of which were sourced from earlier writings. Dante’s Divine Comedy from 1320 can be read as a Bible-based fanfic in which he writes himself into the narrative, invents original characters like Beatrice, and features real historical figures as guides. These weren’t fringe hobby projects. They were the literature of their age.
Even Miguel Cervantes’ Don Quixote was followed by an unauthorized sequel before Cervantes could publish his own, written under the pen name Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda, who most likely holds the distinction of having the first confirmed fanfic pseudonym in literary history. In the 1920s, fans of Arthur Conan Doyle formed Sherlock Holmes societies in London and New York, debating the finer points of the stories and producing the Baker Street Journal, a hybrid publication somewhere between scholarly analysis and pure fandom enthusiasm.
Star Trek, Fanzines, and the Birth of Modern Fanfiction
The narrowing of focus toward stories built around pre-existing fictional worlds really took hold with the Star Trek franchise beginning in 1966. The show’s massive popularity and the tight community that formed around it had an enormous impact on the form we now recognize as fanfiction. Much of what we came to define as modern fanfiction emerged through that original Trek fandom, with dedicated viewers publishing fanzines sold at conventions and through mail order.
The term “slash” fanfiction received its name during this same period, based on the designation K/S used to alert readers that a story contained a romantic relationship between Kirk and Spock – a term that remains in use today. The fanzine culture grew into something celebrated at conventions, with fanfic analyzed as seriously as the show that inspired it. As zines evolved into internet forums, the practice only expanded further, with FanFiction.net launching in 1998 and giving writers a centralized home.
The Internet Changes Everything
The advent of the internet allowed fanfiction to reach a wider audience than had ever been possible before, starting with fan communities on AOL, CompuServe, and Usenet, before the nonprofit site Fanfiction.net came online in 1998 and allowed users to upload and archive works across many fandoms in a single place. The creation of Archive of Our Own happened in parallel with the rise of social media, and together those platforms had a profound effect on fandom’s growth, giving historically marginalized readers and writers new, genuinely public platforms to express themselves.
While fanfiction had existed in various forms since at least the 19th century, the rise of digital communication dramatically expanded its scope, and since the late 1990s, online communities have been indispensable to its creation and circulation, with major hubs including FanFiction.net, LiveJournal, Tumblr, Archive of Our Own, and Wattpad each serving a different niche. Wattpad, one of the leading fanfiction platforms, has grown to over 90 million monthly users.
From Fandom to Bookshelf: The Pull-to-Publish Pipeline
Some fan works get noticed by publishers who help authors rework them into original stories – a process known as “pull to publish.” It isn’t a new concept, but writers and publishers say it’s a growing area, and the stigma around transitioning from fan fiction to traditional publishing has been steadily lifting. The blockbuster series Fifty Shades of Grey notoriously started as racy fanfiction based on Twilight, and despite its humble beginnings, that famous example proved that fanfiction websites could serve as a launchpad for an already established readership, leading to several other authors crossing over into major mainstream success.
Ali Hazelwood’s 2021 novel The Love Hypothesis and Thea Guanzon’s 2023 book The Hurricane Wars were both originally Rey and Kylo Ren Star Wars fanfics that were pulled into traditional publishing. Sarah J. Maas, now synonymous with fantasy and BookTok, got her start writing Sailor Moon fanfiction, and her debut novel began as a Cinderella-inspired story she started writing at sixteen, which became one of the most popular stories on FictionPress before she took it down to develop it for traditional publication.
Harry Potter Fandom and the Next Wave of Published Authors
The devotion of Harry Potter’s fanbase led to the creation of sites like MuggleNet and FictionAlley, and some writers who cut their teeth there became successful YA novelists, including Cassandra Clare and Sarah Rees Brennan. The pattern continues into the present, with 2025 seeing the wide release of three books by popular Dramione Harry Potter fan fiction authors: Rose in Chains by Julie Soto, Alchemised by SenLinYu, and The Irresistible Urge to Fall for Your Enemy by Brigitte Knightley.
SenLinYu announced that the fanfiction Manacled would be removed from AO3 at the end of 2024, with the author repurposing it into an original novel called Alchemised, published by Penguin Random House. Brigitte Knightley, meanwhile, logged out of her AO3 account after finishing her fanfic and was unaware of its success for months, only to return and find thousands of messages from readers as well as literary agents and editors, leading to her debut novel The Irresistible Urge to Fall for Your Enemy, published in July 2025.
Why Fanfiction Produces Real Writers
One writer, Gillian Eliza West, after spending a year pitching novels to literary agents, turned to writing Harry Potter fanfiction on AO3, finding that the experience gave her both the writing inspiration and the confidence to eventually self-publish her own original romantasy novel. All over the internet, there is evidence that fanfiction actively helps writers become better, with many people starting to write fic when they are very young before moving on to original work they can later publish.
The sheer number of publicity pitches for books that originated as fanfiction has become increasingly common in the publishing industry. It was previously considered unthinkable to turn one’s fanfic into original work for traditional publication, let alone use those origins as a selling point. Now, it’s the norm. Many scholars are now beginning to examine fanfiction as a legitimate literary genre with its own conventions and expectations, much like any other published form of writing.
