Sunday, December 25, 2011

Free Writer Info/Holiday Flash Fiction call


Writer’s Thought for the Week: Santa’s helpers are subordinate clauses. 

Is your writing is on hold because you’re too busy having a Merry Christmas, celebrating another holiday, or just plain enjoying some great seasonal food? They sound like good excuses to me.

If you’ve overindulged and need a break, take a rest at the Gotham Writers' Workshop web site. You will find many articles on various aspects of writing, plus information on their online and NYC classes.

If the holidays inspire you to write something short and quick, Earthbound Fiction wants Fantasy, Sci-Fi, or Mystery flash (500 words or less) with a holiday theme. Payment is via PayPal only. The deadline for holiday themed stories is December 31, 2011.




Saturday, December 17, 2011

Submission Call: Alternate History Anthology


Thought for the Week: Success is being praised by others...Always aim for achievement and forget about success. ~ Helen Hayes

Deadline: January 15, 2012

Candlemark and Gleam seeks submissions for an alternate history anthology, Substitution Cipher, a collection of tales of deceit, betrayal, and espionage, in worlds that could have been our own.

Submit stories between 6,000 and 20,000 words, in any genre appropriate to espionage: psychological or action thrillers, war stories, dystopias, and picaresques are equally valid submissions. All stories must take place on an alternate Earth, and the changed timeline must have some bearing on the plot of the story. Any historical time period and geographical area is acceptable, from the invention of war up to the present day.

Pays $75 and two contributor copies of the print book (the anthology will be published in both print and digital form).

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Poetry Prize/Bonafide Books


Thought for the season: One joy scatters a hundred griefs. ~ Chinese proverb. Whatever holiday you choose to celebrate this time of year, I wish you joy.

Deadline: December 31, 2011

No entry fee to compete for $2,500 in total prizes, including the $1,000 cash grand prize. 10 Merit Award Winners will receive $150 Franklin-Christoph writing instruments. Submit an original, unpublished poem on any theme. Limit of two entries per contestant. Entries should not exceed 100 lines each.

Deadline: January 1, 2012

Seeks literary essays 5,000 words or less for a collection about life and work in our eastern national parks east of the Mississippi. Whether you spent your time hitting the trails or alligator-proofing your cabin, we would love to read your experiences, cerebral and corporeal alike. From the Everglades to Acadia, we want to hear the societal, environmental, and existential implications of living in the park. What happened there? How did you get hooked? What keeps you coming back? If your essay is accepted, you receive $100 plus one copy of the book. 




Monday, December 5, 2011

WordTech Poetry/Solstice Publishing


WordTech Communications welcomes submissions of book-length (minimum 48 single-spaced pages) poetry manuscripts from residents of the United States. Our six imprints focus on lyric, narrative, formal, social, and experimental poetry.

The poets we publish must be active partners in the marketing and promotion of their books, especially by doing readings and similar events. If you are uncomfortable with the public presentation and promotion of your work, you may be better off with another publisher.

All chosen manuscripts are published under a royalty contract. The current reading period closes December 31, 2011. 

Solstice Publishing
 

We invite all authors to submit including unrepresented authors and new unpublished authors. Discovering talented new authors is a major focus for Solstice. We publish Mystery/Suspense/Thriller; Horror and Paranormal; Action, Adventure, and Western, Romance; Fantasy and Science Fiction; Young Adult 12 - 16 years; Non-Fiction
.

Solstice Publishing is the fastest growing mid-market publisher in the USA.  We opened our doors in 2008. With over 80 authors covering every category of fiction and rapidly expanding into nonfiction, Solstice is quickly gaining a reputation for fast paced suspense thrillers, sizzling romance, action adventure, science fiction, and a spooky collection of horror and paranormal reads.  Critically acclaimed authors have achieved top spots on best seller lists, become screenplays, and won movie deals with top Hollywood studios.”

Thought for the week: Success is the ability to go from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm. ~ Winston Churchill

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Poetry Primer/Micro Fiction Award



Aimed mainly at the would-be poet, this site contains advice on all types of verse forms from abhanga to zejel.

The 5th Annual Micro Award
Deadline: December 31, 2011

The Micro Award is presented annually for a work of prose fiction written in English, of any genre, not above 1000 words in length. Stories must have been published originally in 2011. Qualifying venues are any form of print or electronic publication designed for public display. Self-published stories are eligible. The author of the winning story shall receive $500 US.

Thought for the Week: Treat people as if they were what they ought to be and you help them to become what they are capable of being. ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Sunday, November 20, 2011

E-book Signing and an Anthology


Signing E-books: One of the complaints about e-books is that authors can’t sign them. Thanks to Autography.com, authors can now not only sign e-books, they can create autograph pages and include digital pictures or stock photos. The pages can then be e-mailed and downloaded into e-books on readers’ devices.

E-book signings can take place any time, anywhere, and the author and reader don’t have to be in the same place at the same time. Autography supports epub and mobi formats, allowing customers to enjoy their personalized e-books on every major e-book e-Reader platform including the Amazon Kindle™, Barnes and Noble Nook™, Apple iPad™/iPhone™, and the latest Android tablets and smartphones.

Anthology: Trust & Treachery: Tales of Power, Intrigue, and Violence anthology seeks mystery, fantasy, sci fi, and horror stories that are 1000-5000 words in length.  Deadline Dec. 15, 2011. No romance, young adult, or erotica.

Pays $20 per story on January 1, 2012 or on acceptance, whichever comes later. Although the emphasis is on short stories, they will also accept select poems with payment at $5 per poem.

Thought for the Week: The greatest secret of success in life is for a person to be ready when their opportunity comes. ~ Benjamin Disraeli

Sunday, November 13, 2011

What's on your first two pages?


Writer's Thought for the Week:  Write about the truest thing you know. ~ Ernest Hemingway

First pages checklist

Award-winning author and sought-after workshop presenter Linda Rohrbough presented a special version of her Writer’s Toolbox workshop sponsored by Carteret Writers in Morehead City, NC yesterday. She wowed the audience at the first workshop of hers I attended in 2009, and she wowed this group as well.

She has free articles available on her website and on the Pikes Peak Writers Blog. The Pikes Peak link takes you to an article with a checklist of the common nineteen things found in the pages of best-selling novels found in bookstores during a certain period of time. It’s an interesting list and some of the entries surprised me. Food, for instance. Food is a common thread in Southern literature and something we all relate to, but would you expect to find in the first two pages of a book? Just for fun, check out the list and see how many you have.
  
This relatively new publisher (March 2010) is open to short stories, novellas, and novels until Dec.1, 2011. They will again be open to submissions on Feb. 1, 2012. They consider romance, paranormal, fantasy, mystery, suspense, thriller, YA, MuseItYoung for 10 to 14 year olds, horror and dark fiction, science fiction. The Muse It Up Publishing Blog gives you specifics on what individual editors seek. If  you have what they’re looking for, send it in before Dec. 1.

Their MuseIt HOT imprint takes erotica and is currently open to submissions with no deadline specified..

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Ghost Stories/Creative Nonfiction


Thought for the week: People can lose their lives in libraries. They ought to be warned. ~ Saul Bellow

Glass Woman Prize Call for Ghost Stories
Deadline: November 18, 2011

This no entry fee competition offers a $100 prize for a ghost story written in English by a woman. The definition of "ghost story" is up to the author and the sponsor looks forward to the many embodiments and disembodiments of this theme. The preferred length 1000 to 3000 words, but stories of any length may be submitted. One submission per author. The winning story will be offered non-obligatory publication on the Glass Woman Prize page.

Deadline: November 30, 2011

Creative Nonfiction
seeks submissions by and about nurses for their Becoming a Nurse anthology. What motivates nurses to enter, and to stay in, this demanding profession, and how are their daily lives affected by ongoing changes in the healthcare system? Becoming a Nurse will present readers with the world of medicine from the perspective of nurses in hospitals, in-home care programs, long-term care facilities, hospices, and the armed forces as they tell stories that recall and recreate the most salient moments of their careers. Submissions should be 2,500-5,000 words.

Note: This publisher accepts queries year-round for sections of their magazine as well as general un-themed submissions up to 5,000 words.


Sunday, October 30, 2011

Digital Glossary/Vestal Review Call for Submissions


Thought for the Week: Do not follow where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


If you have trouble deciphering technical jargon, or if you momentarily forgot what SEO stands for, the MPA Digital Glossary may help. It’s a collection of over 400 words, phrases and acronyms relating to the technology and use of computer networks and mobile devices.

Vestal Review  Deadline November 30, 2011 for the next issue

The theme of the next issue of Vestal Review is a twist on classic fairy tales. Submit a flash fiction story (500 words or less) about the new adventures of Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, Rapunzel, Jack and the Beanstalk, Snow White or any other well-known fairy tale character. No more than two submissions per author. Submit between now and Nov. 30, 2011. Pay varies depending on story length, 3 cents a word is a minimum pay.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Iowa Review Submission Call/Dishwater Words

Writer’s Thought for the Week: There is no greater joy than that of feeling oneself a creator. The triumph of life is expressed by creation. ~ Henri Bergson


THE IOWA REVIEW
 
Unsolicited manuscripts are welcome during the fall semester only--September, October, and November. The Iowa Review publishes short stories, flash fiction, graphic novels, self-contained novel excerpts, and plays; poetry of all kinds, including verse plays and longer work; and all manner of creative nonfiction, including personal essays, lyric essays, memoirs, and literary journalism. 

Pays $1.50 per line for poetry ($40 minimum) and $0.08 per word for prose ($100 minimum). They also publish 750-1,000 word reviews of book-length fiction, poetry, and nonfiction on their website.

DISHWATER WORDS

When editing your work, watch out for "dishwater words" like "there is" or “went.” If you went somewhere, how did you go? Did you walk, saunter, fly?

Hope Clark shared her personal list of words that “tell” instead of “show” on her blog. Why not download it and add your own nemeses to the list?

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Submission Calls: Short Story and Flash

Writer's Thought for the Week: Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things. ~ Robert Brault


Third Annual Beginner's Short Story Contest

Deadline October 20, 2011

A contest for beginner's only. If you have sold a book or a short story you don't qualify. If you have self-published, you do qualify. This is an honor system. The sponsors say this is a small contest and your chances of winning are good.

They consider stories in any genre, 1,000 - 1,750 words. No entry fee, but since we are a charity that sponsors cancer patients in writing courses, we're asking for $1 - $5 donations through credit card or PayPal at http://creativewritinginstitute.com/donate.php . If you can't donate, you're still welcome to enter. Up to two entries per person

Prizes: 1st place winner will receive cash (up to $100, depending on donations received) OR a free, tutored writing course at Creative Writing Institute, valued at $200. Also, a copy of Word Magic and Word Trippers.

2nd place: Two tutoring sessions with Deborah Owen, and a copy of Word Magic by Cindy Rogers.

3rd place: One tutoring session with Deborah Owen, and a copy of Word Trippers by Barbara McNichol.

10Flash Quarterly

The theme for the January 2012 issue is “It’s the end of the world as we know it.” Submissions will be accepted until they have purchased ten stories. When that happens, they  will post a notice online.

10Flash publishes speculative flash fiction stories — fantasy, horror, science fiction, suspense, crime and slipstream — between 800 and 1,000 words.  “We may fudge on the bottom number, from time to time, but the top limit is firm.”  Pays $20.


Sunday, October 9, 2011

Call for Mystery Novel Submissions


St. Martin's Minotaur/Mystery Writers Of America 1st Crime Novel Competition
 
Open to any writer who has never published a novel in any genre. Authors of self-published works only may enter as long as the manuscript submitted is not the self-published work and is not contract with a publisher for publication of a novel. Entrants must request an entry form by November 15, 2011 and entries must be postmarked by November 30, 2011.

Murder or other serious crime must be at the heart of your story. Your manuscript must be no less than 220 pages or 60,000 words.

If a winner is selected, Minotaur Books will offer him or her its standard author's agreement with the entrant for publication of the winning manuscript. After execution of the agreement by both parties, the winner will receive an advance against future royalties of $10,000.

Helpful Web Sites

While you’re polishing your mystery novel, check out these web sites.

This forensic database has links organized by categories such as arson, fingerprinting, and firearms.

Written by a librarian and published mystery writer, the Blood at the Source site offers pointers on how to research mysteries. 

Thought for the Week: The art of using moderate abilities to advantage often brings greater results than actual brilliance.  ~ Francois de La Rochefoucauld

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Query Help and Free Query Critique


Thought for the week: If you wish to succeed in life, make perseverance your bosom friend, experience your wise counselor, caution your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius. ~ Joseph Addison

Query letters 

You’ve slaved over your book. Now it’s done and you have to pitch it to agents or editors via the query letter. Because you know so much is riding on the query, it can be agonizing to write. “How to” articles and books don’t all agree on how to write one and real life experience proves there is no one right way.

One author wrote two versions of her query and could not decide which one to use, so she used both. As she sent them, she alternated between versions. After a number of months, she received two offers of representation, one from each version of her query letter. So don’t be too hard on yourself. There’s more than one way to grab an agent or an editor.

Smart writers start working on their query before they finish their books. It can help you focus while you write your book, and your query will be ready to go as soon as your book is done.

If you need help with your queries, here are some resources:



You can send your fiction or nonfiction book query letter to Marla Miller at The Writer magazine website and she critiques it online for free. Click Marla Miller to read or view her most recent critique.

If you want Marla to critique your query, send it to marketingthemuse@gmail.com. Use the subject line "The Writer Query Letter Critique." Queries for nonfiction and fiction (all genres) are welcome, and critiques are free.


Saturday, September 24, 2011

Why "deadline" and Pedestal call for submissions


Thought for the week: The pessimist complains about the wind. The optimist expects the wind to change.  The realist adjusts the sails. ~ William Arthur Ward

Why do we call it “deadline”?

All writers deal with deadlines. If you frequently submit to contests or magazines, you live by those dates. Miss one and you either are disqualified or have an annoyed editor on your hands.

As much as we dread them now, deadlines used to be worse. During the American Civil War, prisoners were kept in wooden stockades. A railing marked the limit of the detention area. If a prisoner crossed the line marked by the railing, his captors assumed he was trying to escape and he was shot on sight. Both the Union and the Confederacy used the term and, as you might suspect, there is disagreement over which side used it first.

PEDESTAL MAGAZINE

Deadline: October 14 for October 2011 issue.
Poetry submissions: "open," no restrictions on style, theme, length, or genre.
Fiction submissions: Maximum length=1,500 words. The story must contain the sentence, "Nobody thought that was where it was supposed to go." 
Pays $.05 per word for fiction,  $40 per poem.

The December issue will feature speculative fiction: science fiction, fantasy, horror, slipstream, surreal, and experimental. All fiction submitted between October 28 and December 14 should be speculative and not exceed 2,000 words.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Hope Clark, Essay Contest, and Nashville Review


Writer’s Thought for the Week: Books don't get written by talking about them, by looking for a 'secret formula' or by agonizing over them. Books get written by gluing one's behind to the chair and writing them.  ~ Mercedes Lackey

Hope Clark, editor and founder of FundsforWriters, is the guest at the Writers Chatroom Sunday, Sept. 18 at 7:00 pm U.S Eastern time. The chat is moderated and no password is needed to enter. Join the chat and ask any writing related question you have. For details and info on Hope and future guests, see http://www.writerschatroom.com/schedule.htm

10th Annual FundsforWriters Essay Contest
http://fundsforwriters.com/annualcontest.htm

Deadline: October 31, 2011  (received, by midnight ET)

This year’s theme is “diligence”: “Your definition of diligence…might involve a personal relationship, a child, a career, a manuscript. Maybe you weathered a difficult phase in your life, and now… you’ve come out on the other side relieved yet wiser, stronger and empowered.”

You may choose to pay a $5 entry fee or not. Without an entry fee, writers are eligible for cash prizes of $50/$25/$15 for 1st/2nd/3rd. With a fee, prizes are $400/$100/$50. Winners will be published in the Dec. 2, 2011 FundsforWriters newsletters. Other submissions will be considered for publication but will be paid the standard rate of $45 if selected.

Nashville Review

The current submission period ends October 1. This journal publishes flash, short stories, novel excerpts, poetry, creative nonfiction, and comics. Fiction and nonfiction may be up to 8,000 words. You may submit up to 5 poems at a time. Pays $100 for fiction, nonfiction, and comics, $25 per poem. No reprints.

Their other submission periods are Jan. 1 to Feb. 1 and May 1 to June 1.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Legal Matters/Short Short Fiction Contest

Thought for the Day: Accepting the unacceptable is the hardest lesson to learn and the most important to achieve inner peace. ~  Char Wilson, artist

Legal Matters

Legal Write Publications has a Twitter account @LegalWritePub on articles and blogs that deal with the legal side of writing, as well as a blog covering copyright and related issues: http://legalwritepublications.com/blog/.  Their web site offers free e-reports on the benefit of copyright and what it does NOT protect: http://legalwritepublications.com/freebies/

Esquire/Aspen Writers’ Foundation Short Short Fiction Contest

Deadline: October 7, 2011

Win a trip to New York to study with Colum McCann, and a scholarship to the Aspen Summer Words Fiction Workshop if you can beat Colum McCann (in 78 words). Entries must be 78 words, in honor of Esquire's 78th birthday, and will be judged on plot, characterization, theme, and originality.

Ten winners will receive reimbursement up to $500 for round trip economy plane fare to New York for a fiction workshop, taught by Colum McCann, and a literary party. Winners also receive reimbursement for up to $500 for two nights lodging in New York City.  One of the ten finalists will be selected as the Grand Prize winner of a full scholarship for the advanced fiction workshop at Aspen Summer Words (June 17 to 22, 2012).

The contest is sponsored by Hearst Communications.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Got a Yarn? and Anderbo No-Fee Novel Contest

Writer’s Smile for the Week: There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.  ~ William Somerset Maugham

The Yarn web site http://yareview.net/  targets writers of young-adult literature. (They define young-adult as age 14 and up.) The web site includes interviews with published authors. If you have published a young-adult book, you can request an interview by e-mailing the editor at kerri@yarereview.net.

They also publish fiction, essays, and poetry but currently offer no payment.

ANDERBO NO-FEE NOVEL CONTEST
http://www.anderbo.com/anderbo1/andernovelcontest-02.html

Deadline: September 21, 2011

Submit the first 36 pages (up to 9,000 words) of your unpublished novel. The contest will be judged by the anderbo.com editorial staff; they guarantee to choose and use one manuscript-excerpt. The sponsor of this contest, Mercer Street Books & Records, will pay an honorarium of $500 to the winning author upon publication on Anderbo.

A win may or may not lead to full publication of your novel, but it would be a plus to mention in a query letter.


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Irene Who?/Emotional Titles and Inkwell Submissions



Sorry I’m so late with this week’s post. Hurricane Irene got in the way, or should I say I was in HER way? The eye of the storm passed over Beaufort, NC last Saturday bringing sustained winds of 85 mph with higher gusts. I was without power or cable for two and a half days and am just now getting back to normal. Thankfully, neither home nor family suffered any damage. We were very lucky to have a strong category 1 storm instead of a category 3. Irene was a messy guest, though, and the cleanup after her visit continues.

If you were in Irene’s path, I hope she left you unscathed.

Thought for the week: We must believe in luck. For how else can we explain the success of those we don't like? ~ Jean Cocteau

Advanced Marketing Institute has a free Emotional Marketing Value Headline Analyzer for analyzing the emotional marketing value of a headline or title. You just type in your headline, select the type of business or industry you are targeting, and it gives you an "emotional rating" for the title based on your word choice.

The rating includes an explanation of which emotion your headline most impacts: intellectual, empathetic, or spiritual. It takes only seconds and is helpful in creating a good title or headline. You can try it here: http://www.aminstute.com/headline.

Inkwell is open for unsolicited poetry, prose and artwork submissions until November 15. Submit previously unpublished work only. Submissions for the spring 2012 issue may be on any subject. The fall 2012 issue will focus on the theme “Living On the Edge.” Pays $10 per printed page plus two copies. http://www.inkwelljournal.org/submit.html

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Homophones and Consequence Poetry

Writer’s thought for the week: “Literature is the art of writing something that will be read twice.”  ~ Cyril Connolly

Homophones are words that sound identical but are spelled differently.  Think bored and board or foul and fowl.  If we choose the wrong one, a spell-checker is no help.

Working with a critique group, I’ve noticed that some writers, myself included, tend to make the same mistakes with these words.  To and too are common mistakes, as are for and fore. To weed out embarrassing mistakes before hitting “send”, we need to be aware of this pitfall. 

A good tactic is creating a list of words you frequently misspell to develop your own private checklist.  You can start by reviewing a list of the 100 most common homophones.

Consequence Prize in Poetry
http://www.consequencemagazine.org/poetrycontest.html

Deadline: October 1, 2011 (received)

This prize recognizes exceptional work addressing the consequences of armed conflict or social injustice. The award for best poem includes a cash prize of $200. The winning poet and three finalists will have their work published in the Spring 2012 issue of CONSEQUENCE Magazine.

There is no entry fee and you may submit up to three poems of any length.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

No Excuses/Mainly Murder Press

Thought for the week: “In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.” ~ Albert Einstein

NO EXCUSES

Let’s face it, we all make excuses at times for why we cannot write.

A writing group in Kabul, Afghanistan  has over 1,000 members and published 50 books in various languages in spite of the war. They are unable to sell most of their books – freedom of expression is not widespread and threats to writers are constant.

I don’t know about you, but my excuses pale in comparison. Was the expression “If they can do it, I can do it” ever more appropriate?

MAINLY MURDER PRESS
http://mainlymurderpress.com/store/submissions.php

Opens for submissions in October 2011. This publisher is a traditional publisher and does not publish e-books. I like the fact that authors retain e-rights - the ability to sell e-rights later could prove very valuable. Their niche has been mystery novels with an emphasis on New England-based stories by New England authors, but as of January 2011 they began considering stories written by others and set outside the region.

They consider cozies, quirky character studies, hard-boiled detectives, or lively amateur sleuths. Mainly Murder Press charges no fees of any kind to authors for publishing services.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

The Writer free info and Iowa Short Fiction Award


Writer's thought for the week: "Write a novel if you must, but think of money as an unlikely accident." ~ Pearl S. Buck

The Writer magazine web site restricts some of its content to magazine subscribers. If you don't subscribe, you can still access a number of articles here: http://www.writermag.com/Articles.aspx?categoryId=FFA92DA8-8F8A-4EE1-A270-0412DAE83EB2     Articles with a "W" in a gold square next to the title are restricted; all others are public access.


IOWA SHORT FICTION AWARD

Any writer who has not previously published a volume of prose fiction is eligible to enter. Writers are still eligible if they have published a work in a small print run. The manuscript must be a collection of short stories in English of at least 150 word-processed, double-spaced pages. Stories previously published in periodicals are eligible for inclusion. Award-winning manuscripts will be published by the University of Iowa Press under the Press's standard contract.

Links to stories from previous winners are on the web site.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Self-Publishing considerations and Calyx Books open for submission

Writer's thought for the week: “Literature is strewn with the wreckage of those who minded beyond reason, the opinion of others.”   Virginia Woolf

Thinking of self-publishing? Here are some things to consider: http://www.terrylinks.com/getpublishednow

CALYX Books is open to submissions for book manuscripts of novels, novellas, and linked short story collections of any genre until August 31, 2011. http://www.calyxpress.org/submission.html

Submissions should include three chapters or sections (approximately 15,000 words), a table of contents (if appropriate), and a synopsis.  All manuscripts should be double-spaced and include page numbers, the manuscript title, and the author's name.  Submit a cover letter with biographic information, list of previous publications (if desired), and contact information.

Send materials to: CALYX Books
                            PO Box B
                            Corvallis, OR 97339

Monday, July 25, 2011

Free Agent Advice and Three Chicken Soup Books Seeking Submisions

Thought for the week: "There are only two ways of living, one is as if nothing is a miracle, the second is that everything is a miracle. I believe in the latter."  ~ Albert Einstein

Evan Marshall, agent and author of The Marshall Plan for Novel Writing, has a 73-page free download of tips on writing and publishing your novel. You can download THE MARSHALL PLAN® FICTION MAKEOVER: 52 Ways to Instantly Improve Your Novel here: http://www.writeanovelfast.com/FictionMakeover.pdf


CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL

The Chicken Soup folks have three anthologies open for submissions until August 7, 2011. Submit true stories, 300 to 1200 words.
http://www.chickensoup.com/form.asp?cid=possible_books

Boost Your Brain Power! Who doesn't want to be smarter, think faster, have a better memory? We're seeking stories about people who have improved their ability to think and use their brain in some way and as a result, improved their life. Your stories will provide the inspiration and motivation to those looking to get more from their grey matter. 

Say Goodbye to Stress!  We're seeking stories about people who have felt or feel stressed out, found a way to resolve their stress, learned to rethink their stress, improved their lives by handling stress, etc. Your stories will provide the inspiration and comfort to those who are stressed out.

Say Hello to a Better Body! It can be hard for women over 50 to lose weight and stay fit. We're looking for stories from women over 50 who have found answers. How did you find the motivation to lose weight and get fit? Are there special routines that you have found that make it easier to maintain your weight and fitness? Did you find ways to make self-care more of a priority?

Monday, July 18, 2011

Write a Book/Direct a Movie plus On the Premises Fiction Contest

Writer's thought for the weekIt grieves me to think how far more profound and reverent a respect the law would have for literature if a body could only get drunk on it.  ~ Mark Twain

Directing a movie vs writing a book

Sinbad (his real name) is a local author in Beaufort NC who self-published his novel and is now even more adventurous: He is producing, directing, and starring in a movie based on his book, The Sword of Tortuga. He plays James, a washed up Errol Flynn type B-movie actor who encounters real life intrigue and murder during a reenactment of Beaufort's pirate invasion. As an extra in some of the scenes, I realized that directors have to think about the same things writers do. Just as directors have to communicate the desired result to his or her actors, writers must convey our mental images to our readers.

Last week we did a cocktail party scene aboard a large powerboat. I was part of a group of three extras directed to chat among ourselves in the stern of the boat, drinks in hand. We did so. Artificial rain and lightening are evident, but we are dry, sheltered by the deck above us.

Writers also need to set the scene and let our readers know where we are.

Cut. New directions: The microphone is very sensitive and picks up every noise. Just pretend you are chatting.

Just as the actual words of the side conversation did not need to be heard, dialogue that does not move things along or deepen characterization does not belong in our writing.

While we pretend to chat, a character named Julie leaves the main cabin and walks past us to the far stern of the boat. She does not acknowledge us, but I, as the closest one to her as she walks by, decide to look at her before turning my head back to the conversation with my companions. I also occasionally react to the lightening. Apparently this is okay with the director because the camera keeps rolling awhile before he says "cut."


While writers can use plain narrative, it is better to show things through our characters. How are different characters reacting to each other? How do they react to the environment? Two characters may be at the same picnic, but maybe only one notices the surrounding plants while the other concentrates on his drink and the other partiers. 
Next, the director informs us that we need to react more because James and Julie are engaged in a loud argument just a few feet away from us. Until then, my group of three knew nothing about a fight or another character in the scene. All we saw was a young woman standing alone at the back of the boat because the director/camera man is also the one playing James. The actual fight where she yells at him and slaps him across the face is filmed later.

It's unlikely that we would forget to introduce a character, but things can get choppy when we are revising a manuscript. If we change the sequence of events and are not careful, it's possible that our readers wonder about a character who suddenly appears out of nowhere unless the surprise is part of the plot we make it clear that other characters are surprised by this, too.

Do the similarities between writing and directing make me think I'm ready to direct a movie? Not on your life!

In case you're curious about Sinbad and his movie, here's a link: http://www.pirate-privateer.com/adventures_movie.html

On the Premises Contest #15
Deadline: September 30, 2011
Theme: Myths and Legends

Some kind of myth or legend must be important to your 1,000 to 5,000-word story. "Family legends" are fine. The judges won't care whether the myth or legend is true as long as your story is fiction.  

Prizes: $180 for first, $140 for second, $100 for third, $40 for honorable mention. On the Premises will publish between zero and three honorable mentions.

Details: http://www.onthepremises.com/current_contest?utm_source=MadMimi&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Contest+%2315+launches!+July+2011+%27%27On+The+Premises%27%27+newsletter&utm_campaign=Contest+%2315+launches!+July+2011+%27%27On+The+Premises%27%27+newsletter&utm_term=Current+contest

Sunday, July 10, 2011

WriteOnCon free conference and The Road of Eerie



Writer's thought for the week: Writing time is like closet space: you use whatever you have and then want more.  ~ Susan Kelly
 
WriteOnCon

This free online children's writers conference will be held Aug. 16 – 18. The conference offers hourly events including live chats, blog posts, and videos created by agents, editors, and authors in children's publishing.

The curriculum is focused on picture book, middle grade, and young adult writers. However, much of the information provided applies to all writers, and many of the publishing professionals who participate cross over. To register or get more information, goto writeoncon.com.

If you missed last year's WriteOnCon, the videos and audios are available here: http://writeoncon.com/about/schedule/


The Road of Eerie   Deadline Sept. 15, 2011

Somewhere in a sleepy town or a hectic city or a vibrant field or a shaded wood... lies an old road, a neglected road, a downright eerie road. But on Halloween—the eeriest day of the year—it will become a rediscovered road. And your protagonist will never be the same. What's the story?

No entry fee to submit a short story (1,000 words max.) electronically. Attachments accepted. Only one story per author. Open to writers worldwide. Your story must not have been previously published.

The prize is $100 and publication in The Verb.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

July 4th and Rhymes with ?

July 4th makes me reflect on my ancestors and the first time they saw the Statue of Liberty as they sailed into the harbor. My father left struggling post WWI Germany in 1930 for the opportunities available in the U.S.. My maternal grandparents left the Czech republic in 1911 seeking a stable future away from European wars. They all found what they were after.

Some men have thousands of reasons why they cannot do what they want to, when all they need is one reason why they can.  ~ Mary Frances Berry

This quote applies to writers, too. One day some writing friends and I sat around sharing some of the excuses we come up with to not write. Laundry, walking the dog, grocery shopping, and phoning a friend were popular. Too often, we let our writing slip to the bottom of the priority list as we did "just one more thing" before writing. Some days the desire "to have written" is there, but less so than the desire "to write." 

Sometimes I grant myself a writing vacation and take a week to read some of the books on my list. You do have a list, don't you?

Other days I find the discipline to make myself write even though inspiration is lacking. Often when I do that, I find that my muse awakens and I actually accomplish something. I just need to remind myself of one reason why I can.

Rhymes with ?

Several years ago, a poetry judge for a writing contest gave low marks to poems that rhymed and said many writers who submitted needed to take a poetry writing class. I rarely write poetry, but I felt like saying, "Well, excuuuuse me! Some of us are old-fashioned and enjoy reading poems that rhyme." I think writing a good poem that rhymes is much more challenging than writing a prose poem.

If you write poems that rhyme or maybe just want to include a fragment with rhyming words in your fiction, this site that might help: http://words-that-rhyme.com. You enter a word and the site returns a list of words that rhyme with it.

It isn't foolproof, though. Many of the responses simply have the same letter combinations but are pronounced differently. For example, when I entered the word "allow" one of the responses was "below."  Depending on the effect you are after, similar but non-rhyming words still may be useful.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Free Copyright Webinar and Main Street Rag Call for Submissions

Writer's thought for the week: "Some say writing inspiration comes from sunny days, cuddly kittens and children romping through fields of daisies. Those people have somebody else paying the bills." ~ Karuna Eberl

Questions about copyright? The Arts Council of New Orleans web site has a free on demand 25 minute presentation on copyright. It covers the importance of registration, registering using the online eCo system, the need for work for hire agreements, derivative works, and public domain. You can listen to it here:
http://artscouncilofneworleans.adobeconnect.com/copyright_webinar_final_webinar_2011

MAIN STREET RAG is open for submissions for three themed anthologies and a novella series.
http://www.mainstreetrag.com/MSR_Short%20Fiction%20Anthology.html
http://www.mainstreetrag.com/MSRNovella.html

The reading period for all four runs through 9/15/11, but will end for the anthologies as soon as they have accepted enough to fill a book.

The anthologies are:

The List: We’re looking for stories with lists in them—any kind of list, serving any purpose. We want fiction that explores how lists can help to structure or lend meaning to a story. We want to see work that examines what our habit of list-making reveals about our lives. Send us your fiction with odd, funny, heartbreaking, mundane, or mind-blowing lists.

Just Tattoos: How do tattoos haunt, hurt or give meaning to the character's story? Who wears or inks these tattoos? What defines the human body and art?

Secrets: Tell us how someone is changed by the secrets they keep; or how secrets from the past haunt the present. Pass along a secret that startles and intrigues, or show us what happens when a secret is held too tightly.

Novellas should be between 30,000 and 50,000 words.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Ploughshares open for subs; Tips on story analysis

Why do you write? "The truth, the unvarnished truth, is that I haven't a clue. The answer to that question lies hidden in the same box that holds the origin of human creativity, our imperative need as a species to communicate, and to be touched." —Gloria Naylor

Ploughshares is opens for submissions from June 1 until January 15.
http://www.pshares.org/submit/guidelines.cfm


This journal "welcomes unsolicited submissions of fiction, poetry, and a limited amount of nonfiction." Snail mail submission is free but there is a $3 fee for online submissions. Submit one prose piece or one to five poems. Pays: on publication: $25/printed page, $50 minimum per title, $250 maximum per author, plus two copies and a subscription. They say their backlog is heaviest in the fall, so the earlier you submit, the better!

Interesting web site: Author Lisa Cron's web site has a list of questions to ask yourself about your story: http://www.wiredforstory.com/writingtips/
While you're there, take a little time to browse this interesting site.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Orion Magazine Open for Submissions June 15

Writer's Thought for the Week: "What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure."  ~  Samuel Johnson

Orion Magazine
hhttp://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/mag/guidelines_for_article_submissions/

Due to the high volume, Orion now only accepts submissions twice yearly, during designated submission windows. The next submission period will be June 15-30, 2011. Manuscripts received during this time will receive a response by September 30, 2011.

Orion welcomes "thoughtful submissions concerning the collision of nature and culture, the commingling of people and place." Orion considers unsolicited essays, narrative nonfiction, interviews, profiles, short fiction, and picture essays. They also consider submissions for their Place Where You Live and Coda departments. Sample articles are available on their web site.

No more than two submissions of no more than 6,000 words each per person. Feature articles range from 1,500 to 6,000 words, departments from 350 to 1,200 words. Lead time is typically six to nine months. Pays $400 to $1,000 for feature pieces, $50 to $450 for shorter texts. They purchase first North American serial rights, as well as exclusive worldwide electronic rights for sixty days and nonexclusive permanent web rights for their electronic archive.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

iPhone Workshop and In the Snake

Writer's thought for the week: "Words are but air; the pen leaves a mark." ~ Anonymous

Author and speaker Linda Rohrbough developed an iPhone version of her workshop "Pitch Your Book". 
http://www.lindarohrbough.us/index.php/iphone-app
 It has Apple's approval and is available for $3.99.

I don't have an iPhone but I attended this workshop at a writer's conference. I almost didn't go because I didn't have a book to pitch, but none of other workshops in that time slot interested me. Linda's workshop was the best one of the whole conference. She taught us a simple, effective three-step formula for talking about your book with an agent or editor. 

Conferences can be expensive and time-consuming, and I often find that I am only interested in certain parts of them. Will other iPhone apps for writers be available soon? I might just have to get an iPhone. I'm not saying conferences have no purpose. You can't ask an iPhone app questions. Well, you could, but you won't get answers. You're not networking while listening to your iPhone, and you won't get a one-on-one in-person session with an editor or agent that way either. But $3.99 for a workshop in my home or office instead of getting dressed up and driving somewhere? Sounds good to me.

In the Snake
http://www.inthesnake.com/submissions/

This new ezine wants short stories for their first issue scheduled for October. All genres accepted but no explicit sexual descriptions or excessive violence. "We are very interested in stories that focus on the evolution of characters, questions of identity, and perception of self." Pays $50 per story on acceptance for one-time Web publication rights.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Threepenny Review

Writer's Thought for the Week: "This manuscript of yours that has just come back from another editor is a precious package. Don't consider it rejected. Consider that you've addressed it 'to the editor who can appreciate my work' and it has simply come back stamped 'Not at this address.' Just keep looking
for the right address." —Barbara Kingsolver  

THE THREEPENNY REVIEW is open to submissions through August.
http://www.threepennyreview.com

Submit only via snail mail or their submission system. No e-mail submissions, no simultaneous submissions, and no reprints. Do not submit more than one story or article, or more than five poems, until you have heard back about your previous submission.

Critical articles should be about 1200 to 2500 words, Table Talk items 1000 words or less, stories and memoirs 4000 words or less, and poetry 100 lines or less. Pays $400 per story or article, $200 per poem or Table Talk piece for first serial rights in both print and digital editions. Selected sample content is available on their web site.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Short Story Month

Writing tip: "Never be ashamed of your subject, or of your passion for your subject. Your 'forbidden' passions are likely to be the fuel for your writing… Your struggle with your buried self, or selves, yields your art." ~ Joyce Carol Oates  
 
The Emerging Writers Network has declared May "National Short Story" month. Here are two opportunities that include short stories as well as other forms.

The Gulf Coast Writers Association will accept submissions for its fourth print anthology of short fiction (up to 3,000 words) and poetry (up to 40 lines) between June 1 and September 1, 2011. Stories must be set in Mississippi and clearly capture a Southern tone. They accept most genres. Both unpublished and previously published work are accepted. Payment for selected work is $25 and one copy or five copies for one-time publication rights. 

Shock Totem considers original, unpublished stories of dark fantasy and horror—mystery, suspense, supernatural, morbid humor, fantasy, etc. Stories must have a clear horror element. Looking for short stories up to 5,000 words (firm),  tightly woven flash fiction up to 1,000 words, and microfiction up to 200 words. They also look for nonfiction: journalism about real horrors such as disease, poverty, addiction.
Pays 5 cents per word (3 cents for reprints) with a $250 cap on all accepted stories.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Black Orchid Novella Award

Thought for the week: "Writing is not the lottery. New writers have to be realistic about what it takes to get published. But there is one similarity to the lottery: You have to play to win." ~ Lori Perkin 


BLACK ORCHID NOVELLA AWARD
http://www.nerowolfe.org/htm/neroaward/black_orchid_award/BO_award_proc.htm

Entries must be 15,000 to 20,000 words in length and postmarked by May 31, 2011. Each entry must be an original unpublished work of fiction that conforms to the tradition of the Nero Wolfe mystery series:

       1. "traditional" in flavor
       2. The sleuth's deductive abilities solve the crime. No coincidences.
       3. The killer is known to the victim. No random psycho shootings. 
       4. The characters must have an engaging relationship.
       5. Some wit is required.
      
No entry fee. The winner will be offered a standard Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine contract.

The Wolfe Pack, founded in 1977, is a forum to discuss, explore, and enjoy the 72 Nero Wolfe books and novellas written by Rex Stout. The organization promotes fellowship and extends friendship to those who enjoy these great literary works of mystery through a series of events, book discussions, and a journal devoted to the study of the genius detective, Nero Wolfe, and his intrepid assistant, Archie Goodwin. The organization has more than 500 members worldwide.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Easter Bunny and Wiley Wabbit

Ever wonder where the Easter Bunny came from?  He arrived with German immigrants, the same ones who brought us Kris Kringle and the Christmas tree.  The "Osterhase" or Easter Hare follows the same rules as Kringle: He visits children's home the night before the holiday and leaves presents for good children only.

Traditionally, children built nests of clothing in corners or secluded areas of their homes where colored eggs would be found on Easter.  The nests evolved into the Easter basket which is often hidden Easter morning for children to search and find.

In honor of Elmer Fudd's "Wiley Wabbit"", this week's market is

WILEY WRITERS
http://www.wilywriters.com/blog/?page_id=1234

They publish only short fiction (1,000 to 5,000 words) that falls under the genre umbrella of speculative fiction: horror, fantasy, science fiction, and paranormal romance/mystery/adventure.  Monthly issues are themed and April through November 2011 themes are listed online. Pays $50 and up.

Thought for the week: Life is made up of small pleasures. Happiness is made up of those tiny successes. The big ones come too infrequently. And if you don't collect all these tiny successes, the big ones don't really mean anything. ~ Norman Lear