And then there were six. . . .
Rejection #38 – From F&SF: a 7-day “no hold” from JJA.
Rejection #38 – From F&SF: a 7-day “no hold” from JJA.
A 6-day personal rejection from Shimmer. This is a story that’s made the rounds a bit, and I’m not as happy with it as I once was. I think I might set it aside for a while and then give it a rewrite before it goes anywhere else.
Back down to 7 stories in circulation, at: WotF, Realms of Fantasy, Interzone, Futurismic, Tin House, Cemetery Dance, and F&SF.
Sub #46 – my first submission to Shimmer.
Rej #35 – from Lone Star Stories (24-hours)
Rej #36 – 3 days from Chizine…but the story got bounced not on its merits but because I made a mistake on the simultaneous submissions policy — starting on June 1 (the day I sent the submission) they switched over to contest-mode…and during the contest they DON’T take simultaneous submissions. So they pretty much looked at the cover-email and bounced the story back :( I felt bad for not paying closer attention, but the editor was very nice about it.
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Want to help promising new writers develop their gift? Dying to make a tax-deductible charitable donation? Always wanted a signed/personalized copy of one of my stories?
Well, now you’re in luck. I will be participating in a write-a-thon this summer, to raise money for Clarion West. What does that mean, exactly? Glad you asked!
The details:
Between June 17th and July 27th, I will write the first SIX chapters of my new SF novel. That’s one chapter per week.*
Before I do all that writing, I need to collect pledges. To sweeten the deal, I’ll throw in a signed copy …
Stories away! Submissions:
Sub #44 – to Lone Star Stories, my 4th sub there.
Sub #45 – to F&SF, my 10th sub there.
But also…stories bounce back:
Rej #34 – From Fantasy Magazine (33 days)
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Nine submissions out at the moment. Nine! Yay!
I’m one of eight finalists for the 2nd Quarter (March 31st deadline) Writers of the Future competition. The story (can’t say which one, as judging is anonymous) was my sixth submission to the contest. Previously I had 4 stories that were quarter-finalists, and two that didn’t even make it that far.
The list of finalists is posted on the WotF blog: http://wotfblog.galaxypress.com/2007/06/writer-finalists-announced.html
Yay! Now I have to try to be patient while I wait the six-ish weeks it takes for them to judge the 8 finalist stories and pick the winners…
Submissions to Chizine (Sub #42) and Cemetery Dance (Sub #43). Haven’t subbed to either market before (most of my stuff isn’t dark enough), but it’s cool that they take simultaneous subs.
This gets me up to 8 stories in circulation, and I’ve got a few more that are close to being ready to go out. Maybe I’ll be able to get up to 10 stories out and about sometime in the near future…
Rejection #33 – a 29-day rejection from Fantasy & Science Fiction. This was my 9th submission to F&SF, and was the first to make it up to Gordon. I’m relatively good about the reject, since at least it made it past JJA.
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In more cheerful news, I’ve finished the lighthearted action story that I’ve been working on. It ended up being 6000 words, not the just under 5,000 that I was expecting, but I’m feeling pretty good about it. If nothing else, it counts toward being productive.
I’m making slow and steady progress on my latest WIP…averaging maybe 700 words or so a day. It’s at 4000 words now, and has about a scene and a half left on it, I think. It’s a bit longer than I originally envisioned, but I think I can keep it under 5k (or trim it back down to 5k once it’s finished). This particular project is an attempt on my part to stretch as a writer and do something a bit different — it’s a lighthearted action story involving dragons. So far it seems to be going pretty well, at …
Yesterday I went to a one-day Hugo House workshop with Karen Joy Fowler. The focus of the workshop was how to create characters and convey those characters in your writing. Karen was wonderful — very friendly and also a good teacher. A few tidbits:
When you have to come up with a character, use a character from a children’s book as a starting point. Characters in children’s books are distilled down and simplified.
Another good source of inspiration for characters is bits of conversation you hear. Often you get only a small piece of the conversation, but it can be …