Thank you, danke, gracias, merci boucoup, much obliged.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Please
Please do not eat, ingest, chow down on, feast upon, gobble, masticate, munch, nibble, nosh, devour, dine on, gorge on, pig out on, scarf down, snack on, sup, swallow, or wolf down your thesaurus and then gag, hurl, eject, spew, heave, puke, retch, throw up, upchuck, or regurgitate it into your story, anecdote, apologue, book, chronicle, epic, fable, fairy tale, fiction, folklore, memoir, myth, narrative, novel, parable, potboiler, saga, tale, or yarn.
A visual story about courage and not giving up
I saw this on Janet Reid's blog. I had to share it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Um9KsrH377A&feature=player_embedded
Never give up on your dreams.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Short Story Writers: Keep Track of the Rights You Sell
Most magazines do not accept reprints. I do. It didn't make sense to me, not to. Well, I came across the reason that magazines don't accept reprints. Authors that don't keep track of the rights that they have sold for a story and submit previously published work that they no longer have the print or electronic rights to.
First let me say that the vast majority of my submissions are poems and stories that have not been printed before, so it only comes up when I want to include a story or poem that has been previously published. If you sold the print rights or the electronic rights to someone else and they haven't been returned to you, then you don't have them to sell to me or any other publisher. Think of it this way, if you loan a book to a friend, you don't have it to loan to someone else until the first friend returns the book to you.
I'm not going to go into the ins and outs of copyright and the rights that you can sell. There are several good books on the subject out there. Three of them are:
Copyright Plain and Simple by Cheryl Besenjak published by The Career Press
The Copyright Permission and Libel Handbook by Lloyd J. Jassin and Steven G. Schechter published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Literary Law Guide for Authors by Tonya Marie Evans and Susan Borden Evans published by FYOS Entertainment, LLC
Get them. Read them. Memorize them.
For each short story or poem that you send out on submission, keep track of what rights you have sold to whom and for how long.
If I have any more trouble with this, then I may have to rethink my stand on accepting reprints.
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Faegotten - A New Serial in Copper Wire
I have another six part serial that I have added to Copper Wire: Faegotten by Jude Tulli. In the first episode "Wish", the wish-fulfilling fairy pays us a visit and boy, does she have an attitude. The direct link to the story is here: http://www.scribblersandinkspillers.com/copperwire/faegottenwish.html
For the next six months around the 22nd of the month, we'll follow the adventures of this feisty fairy from the land of the Fae. Next month she takes a turn as the Fairy Godmother...
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Beta-reading vs. Editing vs. reading submissions
I am about caught up with all the submissions for Crystal Codices that have been glaring at me for a very long time now. I've taken a bit of a break on working on things. My brain got a little bit fried during August and September with all that I had to do to get Emerald Tales, Crystal Codices, and everything else up and running. So, in the past week I have been beta-reading novels for a few friends. Which leads to the title of this blog post.
See, I had one of my friends say thanks for the editing. Except that when I beta-read my brain is in a different gear from when I am editing and when I am reading submissions my brain is in a different space from either of those.
When I read submissions, I read them as a reader would. I don't see the typos, grammatical mistakes, etc. As long as the story holds my attention, I continue reading. If it doesn't hold my attention for any reason, then I pass on it. This leads me to a huge stack of stories that do hold my attention that I have to then go through again when considering submissions for Emerald Tales.
When I beta-read for a friend, I don't see the punctuation and grammar mistakes. If I notice one, then I mark it, otherwise, I am reading for flow, for plot holes, at characters and their reactions, looking for things that don't make sense.
When I am editing a story, my teacher's brain is fully engaged looking for the typos, punctuation, and grammar mistakes.
I don't know if agents and other editors are the same way. It would be interesting to find out.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Handling feedback from Others
In my personal life, I provide feedback to writers who are also friends of mine. I do it for free and as a courtesy to them. It bothers me though, when they treat my words like gospel. Think about what I say? Yes. Accept it like the tablets on the mountain just because I am a publisher and editor? No. Please, no. I am human and I make mistakes.
This is true for anyone who gives you feedback on your writing. If it doesn't seem right, then question it or disregard it. If the person giving you feedback tells you that there is only one way of doing something, then take two steps back. Because there is more than one way to write a story.
Regardless of the source, it is best to treat all feedback that you get on your writing as suggestions.
If you belong to a writing forum and someone starts spouting what seems to you like a lot of blahblah malarkey, then ignore it. Seriously, there are so many ways to approach writing a novel and actually writing that novel that you need to do what works best for you. However, listening to how others approach something, thinking about it, trying it, those are all valuable actions to take. But, accepting it just because So and So said S0 and they are an editor/agent/publisher, no. That goes for me, too. Don't accept everything I say as gospel.
Note, I am specifically talking about the writing process and everything you do before you query your novel to an agent or submit your story to a magazine publisher. The editing process for publication requires dialogue and conversation. If you ignore what your editor tells you, you're going to have difficulty selling anything to them again. ;)
One Confusing Disappearance
This month's installment in the Annals of Hypnosia, story and artwork by Mette Pesonen, has been uploaded. You all can go read it now. :)
The direct link to the story: http://www.scribblersandinkspillers.com/hypnosia/confusingdisappearance.html
The direct link to The Annals of Hypnosia page: http://www.scribblersandinkspillers.com/hypnosia/hypnosia.html
Coming next week: A new serial story "Faegotten" by Jude Tulli.
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