Holding My Breath Just Made Me Dizzy, Nothing More

A SFWA pro-level market just rejected a flash story of mine (FS).  I was a tough rejection to take because response time was making me hopeful.  Why oh why do I pay attention to stuff like that?  A long response time just means they haven’t decided yet.  It doesn’t take any longer to say “yes” than “no” so getting caught up worrying about how long editors scratch their heads is counterproductive.

I have plenty of irons in the fire and I need to find a different fire to toss FS back into.  There’s a good chance I can see my third SFWA-qualifying sale on the horizon already, but crossing fingers and refreshing Duotrope aren’t going to make it happen any sooner.  I just need to keep the writing flowing.

 

Visions of Slush Piles Dance in My Head

The thought comes to me every few months or so: maybe I should volunteer as a slush reader.  I always decide not to, usually because of time constraints, but the thought is persistent.  I suspect I will eventually give in and do it.  That leaves the questions: when? which?  I can’t answer those.  I will answer the question: why?

Reason #1: The Learning Curve  When I do something sub-standard in a story, I have to send it out to different zines and collect rejections and maybe a few comments before I recognize what horrible sin was committed on the page.  Those sins tend to be invisible to me in my own work.  But in other people’s work, the flaws are more obvious because my appreciation of their story is limited to what is on the page and is not amplified by pre-existing visions in my own head.  Seeing these shortcomings repeatedly will help me recognize them in my own work.  This particularly holds true for the attention-grabbing needs of a story.  I know a lot of writers/slushers who insist it was reading countless bad openings that taught them to avoid those mistakes in their own work.  That would probably be a good thing for me.

Reason #2: Community Immersion  I am a SF writer, a small time blogger, and a member of the Codex writing group.  I have attended a few local cons and participated (briefly) with the local NaNoWriMo group. That is how the SF community knows me, those few that do know me.  Slushing would add a dimension to my involvement in the community and give me another hat to be recognized in.  I love the SF community (okay, I love a lot of it…there are back alleys I avoid) and would like to be a more recognized player.

Reason 3: Making SF a Jobby-type Job  Every writer will tell you that writing is a job.  Saying it doesn’t make it so, though.  It’s still a hobby for me.  I do it when I want for as long as I can squeeze in the time, but it stays on the bottom shelf in order of priority.  It is likely that slushing would actually subtract from the time I get to write.  However, it would be something I needed to keep up with, something people needed from me and thus something I couldn’t put off indefinitely (unlike my novel, the poor fella).  Sure, most slushers dare I say all?) are unpaid volunteers, but I’m not looking for the paycheck part of a job.

Reason #4: To Feel Valued  If I’m making life and death decisions about stories, that means someone trusts my opinion to some degree.  That has meaning to me.  It feels good.  I want that warm, fuzzy feeling coming from SF.

Reason #5: Editorial Empathy  I am a fairly empathic person.  Not psychic empathic, just I like to consider how other people feel.  Editorial staffs can be tough to empathize with since I’ve never done what they do.  Slushing isn’t editing a magazine, but it’s a toe into their world.  Then at least my toe could be more empathetic.

So I won’t likely pound on any doors for slushing gigs at the moment, but I’ve thought it through and I’ll eventually be on the lookout for something.  I think Apex was looking for slushers recently, but I don’t know that my tastes are quite in line with theirs.  I write dark stuff, but only certain shades of dark.  Maybe I’m just waiting for the right opportunity to present itself.  Or maybe I’m just after the best of both worlds: feeling good about myself because I want to slush without having to actually do any work.

Maybe that will be a new year’s resolution: find a slushing gig.  Hmmm…something to think about.

Newcomer to my Free Fic

I put a new story up in the Free Fiction section of this blog.  Not new per se, but not one that’s ever been offered for free.  “Brother Goo” was originally printed in Beyond Centauri from my good pals at Sam’s Dot Publishing.  It’s a kids magazine (something like 8 to 18) so this won’t be a dark, gritty story.  Middle Grade fiction is probably what it should be classified as.

And don’t forget to follow links to my stories in free online archives.  “ZFL“, “The Drake’s Eye“, and “How Quickly We Forget” are all available through Every Day Fiction.  “Leech Run” can be read or listened to at Escape Pod.  All these links are in my bibliography, but I recreated them here, too.  Links to places to buy books/magazines containing my stories can also be found on my bibliography.  A couple of those are available as ebooks, too.

Read, enjoy.

My new writing toy

No, my new writing toy is not a new computer.  Not a tablet, not a voice recorder, not voice-to-text software.  Don’t worry, you can still get me any one of those for Christmas.

I finally broke down and bought Scrivener for Windows.  I purchased it with my 20% NaNoWriMo discount which expired yesterday.  It was a bit of an impulse buy, seeing the discount tick away, but I’d been thinking about it for a couple months.

I haven’t written anything with it yet.  I watched the tutorial video and I really liked the idea of it.  I intend to import my novel into it as soon as I finish the steampunk story that will never end.  (Hmm…there’s something to that…but I digress.)  The index card system really seemed to fit my scattered style.  I can outline as much or as little as I want and adjusting the outline brings the part of the story I need to adjust right to my fingertips.  I’ll be sure to update here when I get things going.

I also intend to use Scrivener for the Codex Weekend Warrior contest, an in-house flash fic contest.  Between the two [novel and flash], I should get a decent overview of how useful the software can be for my writing style.

I should pull the steampunk story in too, especially since I plan to do a lot of restructuring once my first draft is finished, but I don’t want to waste time learning the formatting tools while working toward a deadline.  So steampunk stays in Word for now.

Hopefully I’ll have an update in a couple months on how it’s all working.  My New Year’s resolution may well be to do all my writing in Scrivener.  We’ll see how it goes.

Have any testimonials about Scrivener?  Any warnings?  Any favorite tricks?  Let me know.  I could use all the help I can get.

A Captive Audience

I sold a reprint to a mainstream market!  Well, kind of a mainstream market.  Okay, it’s Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader’s Flush Fiction Anthology.  So it’s better than a mainstream market; this book will be sitting someplace where it’s bound to get picked up and read!

It’s a new life for “Excuse Me”.  It originally ran in The Rejected Quarterly in full 1500-word hilarity.  I shaved it down to size and now it’s flash funny. (Okay, I am contractually obligated to say “make that FLUSH funny.”  Okay, not so much obligated as mildly amused.)

Not sure of the details of when it’ll be out or anything.  More when I find out more.  I can say I that I love the Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader series and I’m stoked to be a part of their first foray into fiction.  What better to put in a bathroom reader than a story about time traveling flatulence?