Saturday, January 31, 2009
Screeching halt?
If this story works the way I want it to, it'll represent something new for me. If not, it'll still be a pretty good story.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Bad blog habits
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
What writers talk about
Beginning writers talk about the process--where they get their ideas, how many times they revise, what time of day they write, and so on.
Established and moderately successful writers talk about the business--who's buying, what they're paying, and so on.
Well-established writers talk about everything except writing.
Monday, January 26, 2009
Thank you
Some of you commented here while others e-mailed me directly, but no matter how you contacted me: Thank you.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
The downside of increased productivity
All three rejections came from a group of magazines I've been selling to on a fairly regular basis since 1993. They've changed their editorial focus and are seeking a different type of fiction than what I've been selling to them all these years.
Bleh!
I haven't anything in progress that would fit their new requirements, and I haven't decided yet if I even want to write the type of fiction they're now seeking. That's a decision for another day.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Day twenty-two, story twelve
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Seeking an attention span
Today's amusing copyediting error
To the deck? Sure. To the floor? Maybe? To the ground? No.
Interesting note: "Ground," in nautical terms, means "the bottom of a body of water." So, if these two fell to the "ground," they most likely were drowning. Moaning and drowning.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Rejected
So that's one sale and one rejection so far this year, putting me two acceptances behind my goal of a one-per-week average.
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Still day seventeen, story eleven
Published
Day seventeen, story ten
*It's a romance, so it ends with an H.E.A. Of course. But with an 800-word story, those last few lines have to be just right.
Friday, January 16, 2009
Day sixteen, story nine
Earlier this evening I finished and submitted my ninth story of the year, a 6,200-word confession that I began writing in April of 2008. I've worked on it sporadically since then and had about half of it written before I picked it up again a few days ago.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
1
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Day thirteen, story eight
Monday, January 12, 2009
Published
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Here's my damn epiphany
"If I were writing a story based on the recent events in my life, this would be the point where my protagonist has an epiphany--that character-altering moment when he vows to be a better person and save the world from injustice. So where's my damn epiphany?"
Here's my damn epiphany:
I used to take writing for granted. I never had writers block (which is a lazy writer's excuse for not writing) and I could write almost anywhere under almost any conditions. Then I spent 3.5 months essentially NOT writing. My head was empty. Now I'm writing again and I don't take it for granted. I'm overflowing with story ideas and things I want to write about. I'm even having trouble sleeping because I have so many stories zipping through my head. But take it for granted when I've learned how easily it can disappear? Not now.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Day ten, story seven
Friday, January 09, 2009
Day nine, story six
I proofread/edited it this morning. After correcting a few typos and adding a few words, it'll be ready to submit.
I don't expect a prompt response, however, because this is just about the worst time of year to submit a Christmas story...
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Day seven, story five
The final draft clocks in at 4,300 words. Like three of the four previous stories, this one was started pre-surgery. Unlike the other stories, all I had written was the first 200 or so words. Finishing it was a much bigger challenge than finishing any of the others.
"Sin, Suffer, Cash the Checks"
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
Every day for a year
If I produced that many words for publication during any given year I would generate--give or take a few--365 short stories.
Imagine writing a short story a day, every day, for 365 days.
Now imagine finding markets for them. Real markets. Paying markets.
The markets are there. I already write for some of them. I've often had two stories in the same issue of a magazine, and have occasionally had three stories in the same issue, but to place 365 short stories in a year would mean filling some publications cover-to-cover several months in a row.
Now that's a challenge.
Published
Monday, January 05, 2009
14 hours and then I drop
And I finished another short story. This is another I had started pre-surgery, about a missing husband. I'd written the set-up, but I didn't know why he was missing or where he'd gone. Yesterday I figured it out. I had somewhere between 1,000 and 1,200 words written before I picked the manuscript up yesterday, and the final draft clocks it at 2,600 words.
I also revised three short-shorts that I had written several years ago, cutting words to make them appropriate for a different market.
I e-mailed the new story to an editor a few minutes ago; the three revised stories go in the mail tomorrow.
Sunday, January 04, 2009
Another day, another short story
One cannot edit for several hours straight without going nuts so I also worked on a new short story. The final draft is printing now and will go into the mail tomorrow.
It's a bit of crime fiction that I began shortly after my surgery, about a hitman forced into retirement by a quadruple bypass who has a zipper tattooed over the ten-inch scar on his chest. I wrote the first 900 words back in September and set it aside. At that point writing was as difficult as wrestling mountain lions and I had no idea where the story was going. Yesterday I "knew" what needed to happen and the final draft clocks in at 2,700 words.
And today I have much more editing to do if I'm to meet tomorrow's deadline.
Friday, January 02, 2009
2008 in review
52 acceptances
28 rejections
30 ms. published
My gross income from freelancing decreased 29.17%. Much of the decrease is the result of a key client ending my independent contractor status by putting me on payroll as a part-time employee. Income from all sources was up 4.93%.*
Income from
Advertising & Public Relations: down 63.90% (see above)
Editing: up 2.18%
Fiction (not books/novels): down 11.73%
Non-fiction (not books): down 96.97%
Royalties (from all books): down 69.40%
Seminars/teaching: down 69.40%
Last January, when I summed up 2007, I had a lot to say. This year, not so much. This year was what it was, and I'm just damned lucky to be here to sum it up.
___
*Updated 1/15/09.
Another new story
Thursday, January 01, 2009
Slow start
On the other hand, I did just finish a new short story, and it'll go into the mail tomorrow.
It's a story I started pre-surgery. I had written the first 1,800 words or so and had made notes about possible directions the story could go from there, along with a note about how it might end. I wrote the last half of the story Tuesday and Wednesday and did a final edit/proofread this afternoon. The final draft clocks in at 3,500 words and the last half only vaguely resembles the notes I'd made.
That makes two stories finished since Christmas.














