Archive for July, 2007

Hardboiled Horror

James Van Pelt tells me he’s editing an anthology for Notorious Press called Hardboiled Horror. Here’s a bit from the guidelines:

Stories submitted for this anthology should include elements from both Horror and Mystery/Crime. How you blend the two camps will be an important factor in story selection. For example, it is probably not enough if the protagonist stumbles into a situation and discovers that it is supernatural. That realization should come as a RESULT of specific detection – not accidental encounter. Stories can also start as Horror, then add the “detection” element. Protagonists can be mortal or not, as long as you are blending the styles. You may even submit tales that initially seem like they are destined to have a supernatural conclusion, but which are resolved in earthbound ways. Stories may certainly lean more heavily on one side or the other, but should include both genres.

Other details of note: submission window is June 15 to Sept. 30, and payment is “about $50 per story, maybe more for a novella and less for a short-short.”

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How to Sell Your First Genre Novel

I thought this might be of interest to some of my readers: 

How to Sell Your First Genre Novel

a 3 hour seminar on breaking into — and staying in — genre fiction taught by editor/author Laura Anne Gilman

Learn what makes genre writing different from mainstream or literary publishing, and how to parlay that knowledge, and a love of the genre, into the start of a successful career.

-The breakdowns and crossovers of genre classification

-How to work within genre structures to create something original

-How to pitch your work to a genre editor as opposed to a mainstream house

-The important know-how that give new authors a foot in the door

-The importance of a series concept versus a stand-alone book

-How to maintain a career once you’ve had your first book accepted

WHEN Wednesday, August 29, 6:30-9:30 pm

WHERE mediabistro.com, 494 Broadway (Spring & Broome), New York, NY 10012

PRICE $65

Laura Anne Gilman spent fifteen years as an editor for major NYC publishing houses before going freelance. She is the author of the popular `Retrievers´ series from Luna Books, which includes Staying Dead, Curse the Dark, Bring it On, Burning Bridges and Free Fall (2008), the Grail Quest trilogy for young adults, and over thirty short stories. In addition, she has edited two genre anthologies, and writes paranormal romance under the name Anna Leonard.

 I don’t know more about this than what’s reprinted above, but I’ve taken a Mediabistro class before, and thought it was pretty good.

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Contest: Imagine You’re a Transformer

My pal, Jeremy Tolbert, is having a blog contest. He asks:

If you were a transformer, what object would you turn into? Assume you have a robot shape and something else. What’s the something else?

After he receives the answers, he’ll make a poll and there will be voting. The winner will win a copy of the Fantasy anthology sampler, which features his awesome  story, “The Yeti Behind You.”

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More Than Meets the Eye

Here are some of my favorite pull-quotes from the Transformers reviews I’ve seen thus far:

  • The only thing that matters is giant freaking robots. — Patrick Lee, SCI FI Weekly
  • Chikachikachika! Now I’m a dump truck! VROOM! — Jeremy Tolbert, blog
  • AHHH! AAAAH!!! ROBOTS, OMG ROBOTS and they’re FIGHTING and they’re all like, PIT-OO, PIT-OO, PIT-OO — and I’m all LIKE YEAH, THAT’S WHAT I’M TALKIN’ ABOUT, and then did you see that one over there — did you see WHAT HE JUST DID and HOLY SHIT THAT’S OPTIMUS PRIME THAT’S OPTIMUS PRIME LOOKIE HE’S GOT BIG OL’ SWORD AND IT’S ORANGE AND ALL KILLY AND STUFF, and that guy who HE’S BEATING LIKE A LITTLE TIN DRUM is MEGATRON and I think that now I can DIE OF AWESOME POISONING because that was more awesome than a whole SWIMMING POOL THAT HAS BEEN FILLED WITH AWESOME, and then someone shoves A PAIR OF GIANT DUELING ALIEN ROBOTS INTO THE SWIMMING POOL, and there’s a UNICORN STANDING IN THE BACKGROUND, GRANTING WISHES and SHITTING DIAMONDS. — Cherie Priest, LiveJournal

You know, I usually resist going to see big summer blockbuster movies in the theater. I usually end up seeing them eventually, though often grudgingly and often don’t see them all the way through. But this…I don’t think I can resist this. Dude! Chikachikachika!

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Garden State Horror Wrtiers Contest

Lookee here:  

GARDEN STATE HORROR WRITERS SHORT STORY CONTEST

Extended Deadline: August 20, 2007

The GSHW is looking for enticing, well-written speculative fiction. There is no theme this year so let your imagination run wild, but please, no more than 3,000 words.

Entries can be in Horror ~ Science Fiction ~ Fantasy ~ Mystery ~ Suspense ~ Thriller.

First prize is $100 and The Graversen Award; second prize is $50 and third prize $25. Each eligible entry will be critiqued by three published writers and/or editors.

Go to www.gshw.net for deadlines, complete rules, etc.

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Article About Writing Workshops

My article about writing workshops, “Basic Training for Writers,” which recently appeared in the SFWA Bulletin, has been published on their Web site [PDF].

[Excerpt:] Writers choosing to specialize in writing science fiction, fantasy, and horror have a number of opportunities to study with luminaries in the field by participating in writers’ workshops. These workshops are in-depth examinations of a writer’s strengths and weaknesses, and force students to both write and critique the work of others a great deal. This provides for a rather intense experience, which is why this sort of workshop is often referred to as a “writer’s boot camp.”

In my role as assistant editor of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, I’ve seen the results of these workshops first hand. Some writers don’t show an appreciable increase in skill or craft right away (for some it takes a while for the lessons to sink in, and for some it never sinks in at all), but for others it’s as if their writing experienced a quantum leap–as if going to the workshop turned some key and unlocked their inner writer. While examples of the former are fairly common, examples of the latter are harder to come by.

But one such writer is David Marusek. He’s what you might call a poster child for workshopping success. “I attended Clarion West in Seattle in 1992 and sold two short stories that I wrote there. I sold one on the spot to Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine. I sold the other a month later to Playboy. These were my first ever fiction sales, and I have been publishing regularly, if not prolifically, ever since,” he said. Marusek’s stories have gone on to be lauded by both fans and critics alike, and in 1999, his story “The Wedding Album,” was nominated for a Nebula Award and won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award.

Before attending Clarion West, Marusek says that he had been writing for about seven years on his own, with no writing classes under his belt and only a few week-long workshops. He was collecting personalized rejections from editors, but he couldn’t seem to break into print. “In retrospect,” he said, “I believe I had taught myself the basic elements of the craft–characterization, plotting, dialog, etc.–but I still lacked that certain ineffable something that makes them all jell into a story. And that’s what I picked up at Clarion West.”

Read the whole article.
Tags: writing workshops science fiction fantasy

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