Glynis Scrivens asked six writers which writing how-to books they thought most influenced their short story writing, and she included their responses in "The Best Books for short stories," published in Writers' Forum #162.
I discussed How to Write and Sell Confessions by Susan C. Feldhake and Confession Writers' Handbook by Florence K. Palmer and Marguerite McClain. Without the jumpstart these two books gave me, I might never have become a confession writer.
Monday, March 16, 2015
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
7
I received my 7th acceptance of the year this morning, this time for a reprint written by one of my pseudonyms.
Monday, March 09, 2015
Published: "Beneath Still Waters"
My short mystery "Beneath Still Waters" appears in the just-published anthology And All Our Yesterdays (Darkhouse Books).
Learn more at Amazon.
Learn more at Amazon.
Sunday, March 01, 2015
Published
My story "Flyboy" appears in the recently released anthology Best Gay Romance 2015 (Cleis Press).
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Monday, February 23, 2015
Published 3x
My stories "Cum Bumps," "Backdoorman," and "A Cock & Bull Story" appear in The Mammoth Book of Uniform Erotica (Robinson/Running Press). The the official release date apparently is next month, my copies arrived today.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Friday, February 20, 2015
6
I received my 6th acceptance of the year a few days ago, but I forgot to post the news at the time.
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Published: "Quarryville, Texas"

My erotic private eye story "Quarryville, Texas" appears in the just-published anthology The Private Eye Writers of America Presents: 50 Shades of Grey Fedora.
Learn more here.
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Monday, February 09, 2015
Three
I finished and submitted my third short story of the year this evening. This one's a 5,400-word Father's Day story I started writing on February 20, 2012.
Wednesday, February 04, 2015
Published 2x
My story "Love Lost and Love Gained" appears in the March True Story, and my story "Turning Trash into Treasure" appears in the March True Confessions.
Monday, February 02, 2015
The best thing I wrote today
I was replying to a letter from a Professional Writing student at my alma mater, and I wrapped up my many words of advice with:
No one will ever hand you a writing career. You have to earn it one word at a time.
No one will ever hand you a writing career. You have to earn it one word at a time.
Sunday, February 01, 2015
Two
I finished writing and submitted my second story of the year. This one's a 1,700-word Mother's Day story.
Monday, January 19, 2015
One
I finished and submitted my first short story of the year this evening. This one's a 2,100-word Mother's Day story I started writing February 8, 2013.
Reviewed: "Mutable Memories"
My story "Mutable Memories" is one of many mentioned in Lloyd A. Meeker's review of the anthology Men of the Manor at the website Out in Print. He says:
"The most chilling, however, was Michael Bracken’s tale of a butler’s calculated theft and blackmail, Mutable Memories."Read the entire review here.
Sunday, January 18, 2015
2014 in review
42 acceptances (vs. 40 in 2013).
21 rejections (vs. 8 in 2013).
36 short stories published (vs. 45 in 2013), 1 article/essay published (vs. 0 in 2013).
I completed 53 short stories (vs. 40 in 2013).
I completed (to final draft) 198,000 words of short fiction (vs. 142,500 in 2013).
21 rejections (vs. 8 in 2013).
36 short stories published (vs. 45 in 2013), 1 article/essay published (vs. 0 in 2013).
I completed 53 short stories (vs. 40 in 2013).
I completed (to final draft) 198,000 words of short fiction (vs. 142,500 in 2013).
That's an average story length of 3,735 words (vs. an average of 3,563); the shortest story was 300 words; the longest was 10,000 words.
I completed and submitted an average of 1.02 short stories each week (vs. an average of .77 each week in 2013).
(I only track completed short fiction word counts, not words written for incomplete projects, nor words written for other forms of writing.)
Observations:
My productivity increased last year while my rejections increased and my sales decreased. There are at least two reasons for this:
1) I wrote a handful of stories just for me rather than for specific markets. Though I have already found homes for a few of them, these stories tend to be difficult to place because they don't clearly fit the needs of existing markets with which I am already familiar. They tend to collect rejections while I work my way through potential markets.
2) I attempted to crack new markets, and I put some effort into writing for markets to which I have not sold anything in several years and had not submitted anything to in quite some time. I had limited success with these efforts, though I collected some really nice personal rejections.
Friday, January 02, 2015
Published
Today's mail also brought good news: My story "Kiss of Life at Midnight" appears in the February True Confessions.
1
2015 began with depressing news: My first rejection of the year was waiting in my inbox when I logged on January 1.
Today's acceptance--my first of year--more than makes up for yesterday. This acceptance was for a mystery to be published in a small press anthology.
Today's acceptance--my first of year--more than makes up for yesterday. This acceptance was for a mystery to be published in a small press anthology.
Monday, December 22, 2014
41
I received my 41st acceptance of the year late this afternoon, surpassing last year's 40 acceptances with several days left in the year to nudge the total up another acceptance or two.
Published
My erotic crime fiction story "Mutable Memories" appears in the anthology Men of the Manor, which was published in October, though my copies didn't arrive until today.
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Reviewed
Lirtle reviews Men of the Manor at Prism Book Alliance and has this to say about "Mutable Memories," my contribution to the anthology:
This is raunchy and irreverent and I love it. Young men all around, behaving like the free sexual beings they’re fortunate enough to be able to express themselves as, thanks to the lives they lead. This is rife with straight-faced tongue-in-cheek humor. This definitely qualifies as more Downton Abbey erotica for your dining pleasure. Enjoy it. I know I did. This is another author of which I want to read more of his work. And the title, yeah, it fits. Nicely plotted short story.
4.25 starsRead the entire review here.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
40
I received my 40th acceptance of the year today, this time for a story I submitted to an anthology in May 2013.
Monday, December 15, 2014
Fifty-three
I finished and submitted my fifty-third short story of the year this evening. This one's a 4,600-word confession I started writing February 1, 2009. Until I picked it up again a few weeks ago, all I had written was the opening scene.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Interviewed
I'm interviewed today on the Boo Books blog about "Little Spring," my contribution to the anthology Haunted, which they released last month. Read the interview here: http://boobooks.net/boo-blog/.
Sunday, December 07, 2014
Fifty-two
I finished and submitted my fifty-second short story of the year this evening. This one's a 5,000-word private eye story.
Saturday, December 06, 2014
Published 3x
"My Quirky & Strange Son" appears in the January True Story, "The End of the Year" appears in the January True Confessions, and "High-Rise Hook-Up" appears in the just-published anthology Hired Hands.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Monday, November 17, 2014
Fifty-one
I finished and submitted my fifty-first short story of the year this evening. This one's a 3,300-word confession.
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Fifty
I completed and submitted my fiftieth short story of the year a few minutes ago. This one's a 10,000-word private eye story, the longest non-novel story I've completed since I began tracking word counts in 2009.
This one was written by invitation, but I have concerns about it. While I'm confident I've written a good story, I think it's a little left of the bull's eye upon rereading the submission guidelines. Luckily, there's time to write a new story if necessary.
So, fingers crossed and all that.
This one was written by invitation, but I have concerns about it. While I'm confident I've written a good story, I think it's a little left of the bull's eye upon rereading the submission guidelines. Luckily, there's time to write a new story if necessary.
So, fingers crossed and all that.
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Forty-Nine
I finished and submitted my forty-ninth short story of the year this evening. This one's a 4,600-word confession.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
The seeds of "Seed"
Today on Charlotte Howard's blog I have a guest post about the three elements that came together when I wrote "Seed," my contribution to the anthology Fifty Shades of Green. Following my post is an excerpt from the story. Read "The Seeds of 'Seed'" here.
Sunday, November 09, 2014
Forty-eight
I finished my forty-eighth short story of the year this evening, a 1,700-word Valentine's Day story.
Tuesday, November 04, 2014
Thursday, October 30, 2014
"Seed" excerpt
An excerpt of my story "Seed" accompanies "Dirty Hands, Dirty Minds," a guest post by the Fifty Shades of Green anthology publisher Sandra Knauf at Erotica for All. Read it here.
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Pre-order Haunted
Haunted, a limited-edition hardcover anthology containing my story "Little Spring," is available for pre-order at http://boobooks.net/bookshop/haunted-pre-order/. The anthology is being published by Boo Books in England--official release date November 12--and I don't know if shipment to addresses outside the U.K. is an option.
Published 3x
My story "Under the Tree" appears in the December True Confessions and my stories "The Feast of Faith" and "Dad's Sexy Main Squeeze" appear in the December True Story.
Sunday, October 26, 2014
37
I received my 37th acceptance of the year a few minutes ago. This one's for a 6,300-word confession.
Friday, October 24, 2014
Unexpected consequences
One unexpected consequence of using a new email program on a new computer after my old computer became unreliable is that I have unsubscribed from many email lists.
On the G5 I had established various rules that moved certain newsletters to one inbox and email from certain sources to another inbox and so on. Over several years, I had created dozens of rules to filter and sort my incoming email. Some of those emails I had either stopped reading or only scanned on a sporadic basis.
Because I have not yet established any rules to filter and sort incoming emails, I have realized how many non-spam but also non-essential emails I'd been receiving. Now, as I receive each daily, weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, and sporadic email from all the mailing lists I had joined, I examine each one closely to determine why I subscribed (or if someone else subscribed me, the dirty rat!) and if being only the mailing list still holds value. Alas, many of them no longer do. So, I've unsubscribed from more than a dozen mailing lists during the past week and suspect there are several more unsubscriptions to come.
Eliminating unnecessary email means I should have fewer distractions when I'm at the computer. With luck, that will translate into increased productivity.
We'll see.
On the G5 I had established various rules that moved certain newsletters to one inbox and email from certain sources to another inbox and so on. Over several years, I had created dozens of rules to filter and sort my incoming email. Some of those emails I had either stopped reading or only scanned on a sporadic basis.
Because I have not yet established any rules to filter and sort incoming emails, I have realized how many non-spam but also non-essential emails I'd been receiving. Now, as I receive each daily, weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, and sporadic email from all the mailing lists I had joined, I examine each one closely to determine why I subscribed (or if someone else subscribed me, the dirty rat!) and if being only the mailing list still holds value. Alas, many of them no longer do. So, I've unsubscribed from more than a dozen mailing lists during the past week and suspect there are several more unsubscriptions to come.
Eliminating unnecessary email means I should have fewer distractions when I'm at the computer. With luck, that will translate into increased productivity.
We'll see.
Forty-seven
I finished and submitted my forty-seventh short story of the year this morning. This one's a 2,000-word confession.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Forty-six
I finished and submitted my forty-sixth short story of the year a few minutes ago, a 5,200-word confession. On Columbus Day, using notes from February 2011, I wrote the bulk of the story. My computer bit the big one the following day, and only yesterday was I able to begin writing again. I completed the full draft yesterday evening and this afternoon gave it a final edit before submitting it.
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Forty-five
I finished and submitted my forty-fifth story of the year a few minutes ago. This one's a 3,100-word confession that I had completed before the computer debacle and had only to do a final proofreading pass before sending it along.
The end of life as I know it
Two Fridays ago, my primary computer--a Macintosh G5 that has been a true workhouse ever since I purchased it in May 2005--died. It failed to boot up. I knew I would some day need to upgrade and had purchased an iMac last December with the intent of slowly porting everything over to the new computer. Of course, I'd transferred very little to the iMac.
I took the G5 to Best Buy where a member of the Geek Squad found nothing wrong. My computer booted up every time he tried. He suggested a thorough cleaning--I live in a house with cats and dogs and the inside of the G5 was a dusty, hairy mess--which I did with two cans of compressed air once I returned home.
The G5 worked fine all weekend--a three day weekend, and Columbus Day turned out to be one of my best writing days in several months--but refused to boot up again Tuesday morning.
I had backed up all my writing files as soon as the computer booted up Friday evening but had not backed up anything I had done during the three-day weekend. I had also never backed up all the other files on the G5, which ranged from my accounting software to editing projects for clients to personal photos. I knew then that I had no choice but to port everything over to the iMac if I could ever bring the G5 back to life.
Many hours of sleuthing on the web led me to several possible reasons for my G5's demise and potential solutions to resurrecting it. I brought it back to life--several times, much like using a defibrillator on a heart patient--and have copied from it all, or nearly all, of my important files.
Unfortunately, I have also been forced to upgrade software because what I was using was so old that it would not, or was unlikely to, run on the iMac.
So, in addition to the unplanned expense of purchasing new software, I've also consumed a great deal of time installing, configuring, and attempting to learn how to operate it.
This could have been an absolute disaster. As it is, it's mostly a serious irritation. I have not written anything since last Monday and I've done only a negligible amount of work for one of my key editing clients during this ordeal, which means I'll have to work extra-hard to catch up once I have all my software in order.
The biggest unresolved irritation is that I have found no way to port the contact list from my old email software to my new email software. So, it could be quite some time before I rebuild that list. I may have to wait until people contact me so that I can add them to the list and, thus, continue whatever level of communication we'd had before.
I'm certain there are many lessons to be learned here, especially about the value of regular system backups--an external drive for backing up the iMac is the next purchase on my list--but I'm too close to the action right now to know what they all are.
And maybe soon I can return to work, secure in the knowledge that I've weathered a storm.
I took the G5 to Best Buy where a member of the Geek Squad found nothing wrong. My computer booted up every time he tried. He suggested a thorough cleaning--I live in a house with cats and dogs and the inside of the G5 was a dusty, hairy mess--which I did with two cans of compressed air once I returned home.
The G5 worked fine all weekend--a three day weekend, and Columbus Day turned out to be one of my best writing days in several months--but refused to boot up again Tuesday morning.
I had backed up all my writing files as soon as the computer booted up Friday evening but had not backed up anything I had done during the three-day weekend. I had also never backed up all the other files on the G5, which ranged from my accounting software to editing projects for clients to personal photos. I knew then that I had no choice but to port everything over to the iMac if I could ever bring the G5 back to life.
Many hours of sleuthing on the web led me to several possible reasons for my G5's demise and potential solutions to resurrecting it. I brought it back to life--several times, much like using a defibrillator on a heart patient--and have copied from it all, or nearly all, of my important files.
Unfortunately, I have also been forced to upgrade software because what I was using was so old that it would not, or was unlikely to, run on the iMac.
So, in addition to the unplanned expense of purchasing new software, I've also consumed a great deal of time installing, configuring, and attempting to learn how to operate it.
This could have been an absolute disaster. As it is, it's mostly a serious irritation. I have not written anything since last Monday and I've done only a negligible amount of work for one of my key editing clients during this ordeal, which means I'll have to work extra-hard to catch up once I have all my software in order.
The biggest unresolved irritation is that I have found no way to port the contact list from my old email software to my new email software. So, it could be quite some time before I rebuild that list. I may have to wait until people contact me so that I can add them to the list and, thus, continue whatever level of communication we'd had before.
I'm certain there are many lessons to be learned here, especially about the value of regular system backups--an external drive for backing up the iMac is the next purchase on my list--but I'm too close to the action right now to know what they all are.
And maybe soon I can return to work, secure in the knowledge that I've weathered a storm.
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Forty-Four
I finished and submitted my forty-fourth story of the year. This one's a 3,000-word confession.
Monday, October 06, 2014
Thursday, October 02, 2014
Wednesday, October 01, 2014
When writing takes a left turn
I write short fiction in many genres, and I often know before I commit the first word to the page in which genre a new story will fit. On the few occasions when I don't know before I begin writing, I know before I've completed the first page. Every so often, though, a story takes a left turn on me.
I often write just enough of a story--a few hundred to a few thousand words--to know where a story is headed, and then set it aside if it is seasonally inappropriate or if there is no market for it. An example would be the setting aside of a Christmas story in January, when it is far too soon to submit, in favor of working on an April Fool's Day story or a Mother's Day story.
When I return to work on the set-aside stories, I can usually pick up where I left off and finish them as originally intended, and that was my intent with a story I recently finished.
I had written the first 1,500 words of a confession about a woman who discovers that her deceased father had a long-term relationship with a woman who wasn't her mother, and my intent was to have the first-person narrator learn that she had a half-sister that she'd never known.
When I resumed work on the partially written story, I realized the narrator's father's secret was much deeper and darker than an affair and a second child. As I continued writing, my confession became a mystery, and, by the time I finished a complete draft, I had a great story poorly told.
I had to work my way through the initial draft to ensure that all of the clues fell into place properly, that the confession style of the first third was rewritten to conform to the mystery style of the last two-thirds, and I had to research some historical information to ensure that what I claimed happened in the story either did or, at least, could have happened when I said it did.
The finished story doesn't much resemble its confession rootstock, but it does retain two key elements of confession: The story is written in first-person by a female narrator.
The story is now sitting in the electronic slush pile of a mystery magazine, and I'm eager to learn if my letting the story take a left turn was a trip worth taking.
I often write just enough of a story--a few hundred to a few thousand words--to know where a story is headed, and then set it aside if it is seasonally inappropriate or if there is no market for it. An example would be the setting aside of a Christmas story in January, when it is far too soon to submit, in favor of working on an April Fool's Day story or a Mother's Day story.
When I return to work on the set-aside stories, I can usually pick up where I left off and finish them as originally intended, and that was my intent with a story I recently finished.
I had written the first 1,500 words of a confession about a woman who discovers that her deceased father had a long-term relationship with a woman who wasn't her mother, and my intent was to have the first-person narrator learn that she had a half-sister that she'd never known.
When I resumed work on the partially written story, I realized the narrator's father's secret was much deeper and darker than an affair and a second child. As I continued writing, my confession became a mystery, and, by the time I finished a complete draft, I had a great story poorly told.
I had to work my way through the initial draft to ensure that all of the clues fell into place properly, that the confession style of the first third was rewritten to conform to the mystery style of the last two-thirds, and I had to research some historical information to ensure that what I claimed happened in the story either did or, at least, could have happened when I said it did.
The finished story doesn't much resemble its confession rootstock, but it does retain two key elements of confession: The story is written in first-person by a female narrator.
The story is now sitting in the electronic slush pile of a mystery magazine, and I'm eager to learn if my letting the story take a left turn was a trip worth taking.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Forty-three
I finished and submitted my forty-third short story of the year this afternoon. This one's a 4,100-word mystery.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Wednesday, September 03, 2014
Published
My erotic romance "Homecoming" appears in the anthology Rookies. Though the anthology was released in July, my copies didn't arrive until this afternoon.
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
Published 4x
Today's mail brought two anthologies and a magazine, all containing my stories.
"Dancehall Cowboy" and "The Hoarder at Halloween" appear in the October True Confessions.
My erotic romance "Soaring" appears in the anthology Active Duty.
And my erotic gardening story "Seed," mentioned earlier when it was released as a stand-alone story for Kindle, appears in the anthology Fifty Shades of Green.
"Dancehall Cowboy" and "The Hoarder at Halloween" appear in the October True Confessions.
My erotic romance "Soaring" appears in the anthology Active Duty.
And my erotic gardening story "Seed," mentioned earlier when it was released as a stand-alone story for Kindle, appears in the anthology Fifty Shades of Green.
Friday, August 29, 2014
Forty-one
I finished and submitted my forty-first short story of the year, a 2,700-word confession I started writing in July 2005.
Monday, August 25, 2014
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Essay
I completed and submitted a short essay today. I don't count and track these the way I do short stories, but I think it's my second of the year.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Forty
I finished and submitted my fortieth short story of the year this evening, a 3,800-word confession.
Last year I was not as productive as I strive to be, only producing forty short stories the entire year. With this story I have matched last year's total output, and I've exceeded last year's total word count by 500 words.
My goal each year is to receive 52 acceptances (an average of one each week), and most years I have to produce slightly more than 52 stories to achieve that goal. As August winds down, I seem to be on track with both production and sales.
Last year I was not as productive as I strive to be, only producing forty short stories the entire year. With this story I have matched last year's total output, and I've exceeded last year's total word count by 500 words.
My goal each year is to receive 52 acceptances (an average of one each week), and most years I have to produce slightly more than 52 stories to achieve that goal. As August winds down, I seem to be on track with both production and sales.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Friday, August 15, 2014
Published
My short romance "The Thief of Hearts" appears in the August 21 issue of the Australian magazine That's Life!
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Published
My story "Moon Doggie and the Nightsurfers at Hammerhead Beach," an erotic story about gay surfing vampires, appears in the just-published anthology Until the Sun Rises.
Saturday, August 09, 2014
Thirty-nine
I finished and submitted my thirty-ninth short story this morning, a 2,400-word bit of crime fiction.
I met an editor at ArmadilloCon a few weeks ago and he asked if I'd send something his direction. This story is the result.
I met an editor at ArmadilloCon a few weeks ago and he asked if I'd send something his direction. This story is the result.
Sunday, August 03, 2014
Thirty-six, thirty-seven, thirty-eight
I finished and submitted my thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, and thirty-eighth stories of the year this evening. All were Christmas confessions.
Friday, August 01, 2014
Radio Interview
Yesterday, I was interviewed on a radio program. The interview was recorded and is now available here:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/attunemagazineradio/2014/07/31/personal-empowerment-with-michael-bracken
I've not yet listened to it, so I've no idea how well I did, but it certainly was fun.
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/attunemagazineradio/2014/07/31/personal-empowerment-with-michael-bracken
I've not yet listened to it, so I've no idea how well I did, but it certainly was fun.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
25
I received my 25th acceptance of the year this morning. An Australian women's magazine accepted a short romance I wrote back in 2009.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Published 2x
My story "Hot for the Teacher" appears in the September True Confessions, and my story "Resisting Temptation" appears in the September True Story.
Sunday, July 27, 2014
24
I received my 24th acceptance of the year this morning while I was still at ArmadilloCon. Announcing a sale that very morning while introducing myself at an 11 a.m. panel was kinda cool. This one's for a confession.
Friday, July 25, 2014
23
I received my 23rd acceptance of the year today. This one's for a bit of hardboiled crime fiction.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Reviewed
Lucy at Hearts on Fire reviews Active Duty and has this to say about my contribution to the anthology:
"Soaring – Michael Bracken Rated 4.5 Probably my favorite of the anthology and one of the sweetest. Wedding! This one is sweet and light. I loved that it begins with their wedding, gives insight on their courtship (a bookstore where he’s reading gay mystery anthology, awesome!) and then ends with their honeymoon. It was lovely."Read the entire review here.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Convention appearance
I’ll
be at ArmadilloCon in Austin, Texas, this weekend (July 25-27), participating
in three panels about writing:
Sa1000E Watch Out for that Plothole!
Sat 10:00 AM-11:00 AM
Our panelists give you tips and advice on fixing the plotholes in your works.
Sa1400F Before You Edit
Sat 2:00 PM-3:00 PM
This is a discussion of minor edits you can make before you really dig in. Find/Replace is your friend.
Su1100F Overhauling a Character
Sun 11:00 AM-Noon
Now that you have written a book, go back and rewrite your main character.
If you’re there, say howdy.
For more info about the convention, visit http://www.armadillocon.org/
Sa1000E Watch Out for that Plothole!
Sat 10:00 AM-11:00 AM
Our panelists give you tips and advice on fixing the plotholes in your works.
Sa1400F Before You Edit
Sat 2:00 PM-3:00 PM
This is a discussion of minor edits you can make before you really dig in. Find/Replace is your friend.
Su1100F Overhauling a Character
Sun 11:00 AM-Noon
Now that you have written a book, go back and rewrite your main character.
If you’re there, say howdy.
For more info about the convention, visit http://www.armadillocon.org/
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Guest post
My guest post at The Novel Approach, "How 'Soaring' Took Off," discusses how I came to write "Soaring" for Active Duty and includes an except from the beginning of the story.
If you leave a reply to my guest post, you will be entered into a drawing to win a copy of Active Duty.
If you leave a reply to my guest post, you will be entered into a drawing to win a copy of Active Duty.
Reviewed
Brandilyn reviews Active Duty at Prism Book Alliance and has this to say about "Soaring," my contribution to the anthology:
"Soaring is the story of a wedding made possible because of the repeal of DADT. An airman and his banker lover meet under the restrictions of DADT and have to find a way to make their relationship work. We start and end on the wedding day and look at the beginnings of the relationship in between. It was an interesting and sweet tale."Read the entire review here.
Tuesday, July 08, 2014
Thirty-five
I finished and submitted my thirty-fifth short story of the year this evening. This one's a 5,400-word bit of crime fiction.
Monday, July 07, 2014
Upcoming radio interview
At 1 p.m. Eastern time (noon Central time, etc.) Thursday, July 31, I'll be interviewed by Jean Maurie and Maggie Lukowski during their Personal Empowerment program on Attune Magazine Radio. I'll be discussing my writing career with an emphasis on writing confessions. Learn more, and learn how you can hear the program, at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/attunemagazineradio/2014/07/31/personal-empowerment-with-michael-bracken
Friday, July 04, 2014
Thirty-four
I finished and submitted my thirty-fourth story of the year this afternoon. This one's a 3,600-word confession.
Reviewed
Kristy at 3 Chicks After Dark reviewed Active Duty and had this to say about "Soaring," my contribution to the anthology:
Captain Hunter and Scott began their relationship when it was not safe for Captain Hunter to be out and proud. His career was on the line and he wasn’t willing to give it up so close to retirement. After a stolen weekend together they knew they had something special. Captain Hunter just couldn’t take the chance and walks away. The distance doesn’t last long and finally they both agree to hide their love and be very discreet. The short story is their wedding day! They didn’t waste any time tying the knot and declaring their love once they could with the repeal of DADT! The end is so sweet it will leave you verklempt! Husband, my husband?!Read the entire review here.
Thursday, July 03, 2014
20
I received my 20th acceptance of the year today, for one of the stories I mentioned in yesterday's post.
Wednesday, July 02, 2014
Like a virgin
"Submit it and forget it" was one of the best pieces of advice I received as a beginning writer, and, though it was difficult to do in the beginning when I only had a handful of manuscripts floating around, it became easier as time went on. When I had dozens of manuscripts under submission I could barely remember them all and, later, when I improved both my writing skill and my marketing abilities, I didn't fret much because nearly everything sold on first or second submission.
For the past several years I have been writing most of my short stories on assignment, on invitation, or for markets where I've already placed multiple stories. Life has been good.
On the other hand, it had been a long time since I wrote anything just for me or that really stretched my abilities in some way. At the beginning of the year, I decided to change that.
In an earlier post, I described how I've been triple-tracking my writing. During the first writing session of the day, I write stories for a pair of magazines that have published one or more of my stories each month for a bloody long time. During my second writing session of the day, I write stories in a genre where I've had long-term success, and much of what I write is sent to a handful of anthology editors who have each published several of my stories. During my third writing session of the day I work on stretch-stories or just-for-me-stories.
One unexpected outcome from this is that I've created a few stories for markets to which I've never previously sold and a few stories for which I had no specific market in mind during the writing. So, like a beginning writer, I'm following the time-tested, time-proven theory of submitting to the best market and working my way down until I receive an acceptance or run out of places to submit.
An even more unexpected outcome is that, despite having more than three-dozen manuscripts under submission, I am acutely aware of only a few. I find myself unable to "submit and forget" them, which causes this:
The editor of one anthology, an editor to whom I had never previously submitted, mentioned in her blog that she had made decisions on all submissions and would be notifying writers this week. It's Wednesday already and I haven't heard a thing. Is that good news or bad?
A fellow writer mentioned in a Yahoo group that she had received a polite rejection from the top magazine in that genre after only three weeks. My story's been there five weeks already. Is that good news or bad?
I'm nervous and tingly all over, just as I was back in the day when I was sending out my first few manuscripts.
It's nice to know that I'm not really the jaded old writer I thought I had become and that I can still feel like a virgin writer submitting for the very first time.
For the past several years I have been writing most of my short stories on assignment, on invitation, or for markets where I've already placed multiple stories. Life has been good.
On the other hand, it had been a long time since I wrote anything just for me or that really stretched my abilities in some way. At the beginning of the year, I decided to change that.
In an earlier post, I described how I've been triple-tracking my writing. During the first writing session of the day, I write stories for a pair of magazines that have published one or more of my stories each month for a bloody long time. During my second writing session of the day, I write stories in a genre where I've had long-term success, and much of what I write is sent to a handful of anthology editors who have each published several of my stories. During my third writing session of the day I work on stretch-stories or just-for-me-stories.
One unexpected outcome from this is that I've created a few stories for markets to which I've never previously sold and a few stories for which I had no specific market in mind during the writing. So, like a beginning writer, I'm following the time-tested, time-proven theory of submitting to the best market and working my way down until I receive an acceptance or run out of places to submit.
An even more unexpected outcome is that, despite having more than three-dozen manuscripts under submission, I am acutely aware of only a few. I find myself unable to "submit and forget" them, which causes this:
The editor of one anthology, an editor to whom I had never previously submitted, mentioned in her blog that she had made decisions on all submissions and would be notifying writers this week. It's Wednesday already and I haven't heard a thing. Is that good news or bad?
A fellow writer mentioned in a Yahoo group that she had received a polite rejection from the top magazine in that genre after only three weeks. My story's been there five weeks already. Is that good news or bad?
I'm nervous and tingly all over, just as I was back in the day when I was sending out my first few manuscripts.
It's nice to know that I'm not really the jaded old writer I thought I had become and that I can still feel like a virgin writer submitting for the very first time.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Thirty-three
I finished and submitted my thirty-third short story of the year this evening. This one's a 2,500-word erotic story.
Friday, June 27, 2014
Published 2x
My story "Duped By a Con Man" appears in the August True Confessions, and my story "Trapped By a Tornado" appears in the August True Story.
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Thirty-two
I finished and submitted my thirty-second short story of the year, a 5,300-word confession.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Sunday, June 08, 2014
Thirty-one
I finished and submitted my thirty-first short story this morning. It's a 3,400-word confession.
Monday, June 02, 2014
Sunday, June 01, 2014
Thirty
Earlier today I finished, but I have not yet submitted, my thirtieth short story of the year. This one's 5,200 words and might be generally classified as a ghost story. I've not done this in a long, long time, but I wrote this story with no particular market in mind, and now I have no idea where to submit it.
Too many ideas, not enough time
There isn't enough time to write every story I want to write. I have several hundred stories-in-progress and each day I seem to add to the list. In an effort to become more efficient without quashing my flow of ideas, I recently reviewed many of my stories-in-progress, with an emphasis on confessions.
I found 52 confessions that I felt I could finish without undue stress. In each case I had written at least 1,000 words or had written a rough plot outline. Now, when I sit down each morning to write confessions, I select a story from the list and work on it until it is complete rather than bounce from story-to-story as I often used to do. Confessions are written for a specific market, so I know where to submit each one as I complete it, and I've already completed and submitted five of the stories on the list.
I also found three stories that have no specific known market--a noir story, a ghost story, and a fantasy--and I've been doing the same thing with this much-shorter list during my evening writing sessions. I've finished the noir story, am about to complete the ghost story, and will work on the fantasy next.
Most of the erotica I write during my mid-day writing session is written for specific projects, so I don't have a list of stories-in-progress that I dip into. Rather, I write erotica based on the due date of whichever anthology is up next.
So, now, when I sit down to write--regardless of which of the day's three writing sessions it happens to be--I know what I'm going to work on. This has eliminated a lot of fumbling around and helped to increase my productivity.
At the same time, I keep myself open to new story ideas. I jot them down whenever I have them, but I only jot down enough to remind me what I hoped to write. Then I return to the work-in-progress.
At some point, I'll have to create new lists to work from, and that's a good thing because it means I've finished writing everything on the existing lists.
I found 52 confessions that I felt I could finish without undue stress. In each case I had written at least 1,000 words or had written a rough plot outline. Now, when I sit down each morning to write confessions, I select a story from the list and work on it until it is complete rather than bounce from story-to-story as I often used to do. Confessions are written for a specific market, so I know where to submit each one as I complete it, and I've already completed and submitted five of the stories on the list.
I also found three stories that have no specific known market--a noir story, a ghost story, and a fantasy--and I've been doing the same thing with this much-shorter list during my evening writing sessions. I've finished the noir story, am about to complete the ghost story, and will work on the fantasy next.
Most of the erotica I write during my mid-day writing session is written for specific projects, so I don't have a list of stories-in-progress that I dip into. Rather, I write erotica based on the due date of whichever anthology is up next.
So, now, when I sit down to write--regardless of which of the day's three writing sessions it happens to be--I know what I'm going to work on. This has eliminated a lot of fumbling around and helped to increase my productivity.
At the same time, I keep myself open to new story ideas. I jot them down whenever I have them, but I only jot down enough to remind me what I hoped to write. Then I return to the work-in-progress.
At some point, I'll have to create new lists to work from, and that's a good thing because it means I've finished writing everything on the existing lists.
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