Writing

Farewell to thee, Fantastic Stories of the Imagination

March 12, 2007

One of the story submissions I sent out came back return to sender, no forwarding information. I found the mailing address under the submission guidelines at this site, but I guess the site is a bit out of date.

Returned mail

Farewell to thee, Fantastic Stories of the Imagination.   Sort of sad to think that there’s one less channel for science fiction short stories, but I guess I’ll just have to look for another place to send it.

Or start writing in other genres, to match the place I’m going to submit to.

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Cheating at writing assignments

February 19, 2007

When I was in grade school, we used to have writing assignments where we had to write a story that used every word on a vocabulary list.  The list might look like this:

  • apathetic
  • erudite
  • esoteric
  • hemisphere
  • xylophone

…and so on for up to 10 words.  The assignment was supposed to teach us how to spell the word correctly, and how to use it in context. 

Of course, in grade school (as in later school) some students would choose to complete the assignment quickly rather than learn something.  Every now and then someone would write a story that went like this:

Once there was a boy who had to write a story with vocabulary words.  The words were apathetic, erudite, esoteric, hemisphere, xylophone, [and so on till the list was complete].  Can you guess what story the boy wrote? 

(No, I never used this tactic.  Honest!)

I think of that when writing my next few blog entries.  When I made my resolution to write 1 blog post each day, I figured that I would use it as a daily writing exercise.  However, I’ve found it difficult to actually sit down and write once a day, so I’ve been writing several posts in one setting and then fudging the “timestamps” in Wordpress to fill in the dates. 

For example, I’m writing this post on 3/3/07 at 2:11pm, but setting the date to 2/19 to fill in the 2/19 gap in my archives.  In this way, someone looking at the archive will see that there’s a blog post a day.

Can’t say that I feel too bad about this - the main point is to get into the habit of writing and I think overall the quality of my blog posts is improving.  I imagine I can still learn how to improve my wirting without actually following the letter of my “1 blog post a day” assignment.

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Story rejected - Writer survives

July 1, 2006

Today I received my first-ever rejection letter from Asimov’s Science Fiction for the short story I wrote.  If you ever wondered what such a rejection letter looks like, here it is:

Dear Contributor,

Thank you very much for letting us see your submission.  Unfortunately, it does not suit the needs of the magazine at this time.

Your submission has been read by an editor, but the press of time and manuscripts does not permit personal replies or criticism.  For your general information, though, most stories are rejected because they lack a new idea or theme.  A great many of the ideas that may seem innovative to an SF newcomer are in fact overfamiliar to readers more experienced in the field.  The odds greatly favor this being the cause of this rejection.

Sincerely,

Sheila Williams
Editor

After reading this letter, I envisioned someone at Asimov’s reading the story (or at least part of it), attaching a Post-it marked “Unoriginal” to the printout, and giving it to a lowly intern who attached the “unoriginal” rejection letter variant to the printout and mailed it back to me.

And yet I feel oddly inspired.  Perhaps the story was unoriginal in concept; I’ll submit a more original concept to Asimov’s next time.  I think perhaps I needed to get past the mental block of submitting the story and getting someone to look at it - lucky I have a number of other stories to finish off and send out.

I was even more encouraged when Googled “rejection letters,” and came across the following page at http://lettersofrejection.com/displayletters.php?qryID=53:

Dear Contributor:Thank you very much for letting us see the enclosed submission. Unfortunately it does not suit the needs of the magazine at this time.

Your submission has been read by an editor, but the press of time and manuscripts (approximately 850 per month) does not permit personal replies or criticism. For your general information, though, most stories are rejected because they lack a new idea of theme. A great many of the ideas that may seem innovative to an SF newcomer are in fact overfamiliar to readers more experienced in the field. The odds greatly favor this being the case of this rejection.

Another common cause (all too common, we’re afraid) of rejection is the obvious lack of basic English compositional skills on the part of the author. By this we mean that the writer has misspelled or misused everyday words, and/or mispunctuated same. Stories are rejected on this basis because a writer must be familiar with the tools of his or her trade, just as an electrician or carpenter must.

Finally, your story may have been rejected, not because it lacked a new idea, or was misspelled or mispunctuated, or because the writing was not “professional” enough, but simply because it failed to rise far enough above the other 849 seen that month.

Sincerely,
Gardner Dozois
Editor

The rejection letter above was last updated 9/25/03.  It’s possible they just deleted the last two paragraphs, or maybe they’re saying I have “basic English compositional skills” by sending the shorter variant!  (Okay, they’re probably just saving on toner but I’ll take encouragement where I can. 

I’m reluctant to mail the story to the other addresses I’ve collected, even though I have a number of envelopes, stamps, and printouts downstairs ready to go.  If the story is indeed unoriginal, I may just be wasting postage by sending it out for more rejection.  Then again, I may at least get some more constructive criticism in future submissions.

What the heck - I’ll send at least send some printouts to the other sci-fi magazines, just to see what their rejection letters look like.  www.lettersofrejection.com has a pretty good collection of rejection letters, but I also started a page at http://joesanswers.com/index.php?title=Writing to track my own rejection experiences.

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Submitting a short story

May 12, 2006

Finally finished a short story today.  There’s nothing quite like the feeling of typing your name, address, and the word count at the top of the page, and printing it for the last time.

I plan to use this post as an online record of where and how I should submit the manuscript.  Here are the links I have so far:

This may be more suitable for a wiki.  Think this’ll be a good reason to set one up.

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