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Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Looking for Some Whimsical Fantasy?

I have posted several times about my good friend, Jon Kitson, who has found success publishing short stories over the last two years. You will soon be able to read one such story in both print and ebook format in a new anthology set for release on July 22nd. Please check out the details for FAE below....



Synopsis:
"Meet Robin Goodfellow as you’ve never seen him before, watch damsels in distress rescue themselves, get swept away with the selkies and enjoy tales of hobs, green men, pixies and phookas. One thing is for certain, these are not your grandmother’s fairy tales. Fairies have been both mischievous and malignant creatures throughout history. They’ve dwelt in forests, collected teeth or crafted shoes. Fae is full of stories that honor that rich history while exploring new and interesting takes on the fair folk from castles to computer technologies and modern midwifing, the Old World to Indianapolis. Fae covers a vast swath of the fairy story spectrum, making the old new and exploring lush settings with beautiful prose and complex characters. Enjoy the familiar feeling of a good old-fashioned fairy tale alongside urban fantasy and horror with a fae twist."

With an introduction by Sara Cleto and Brittany Warman, and new stories from Sidney Blaylock Jr.Amanda BlockKari CastorBeth CatoLiz ColterRhonda EikampLor GrahamAlexis A. HunterL.S. Johnson,Jon Arthur KitsonAdria LaycraftLauren LiebowitzChristine MorganShannon PhillipsSara PulsLaura VanArendonk Baugh, andKristina Wojtaszek.

Fae will be available in trade paperback and ebook via Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com, Kobo.com, and other online retailers, and for wholesale through Ingram. You can also find Fae on Goodreads.

You can visit the Goodreads giveaway here: https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/92441

Happy Reading!

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Finding Inspiration in Writing Prompts

Most writers are eternally asking that elusive question: Where do ideas come from? They ask published authors at book signings, send lengthy e-mails and vehemently tune in when an author discloses that sparkling fountain of youth in which they dip their pen and proceed to ink out beautiful, haunting stories that leave us mad with envy, but desperate for one more line.

Popular fantasy author Neil Gaiman used to offer funny quips when asked this question. Now he just tells the truth, “I make them up.  Out of my head.” His answer is pointedly simple and not at all surprising.

Because there is no fountain of ideas, no treasure trove of brilliant stories that we too can discover. Or is there? I think that the deeper truth here is that we all have access to such a magical place, but it lives within us. We live in a world that is externally seeking. That looks out there for the answer when all of the answers, and I do mean all of them, lie within us.

Good ideas are good because you pluck them from your own conscious mind (or unconscious mind) and you write your experience of them. If you’ve  never had children, a hilarious chick lit book about raising five kids and four dogs will most likely fall flat. It’s not the idea that’s gold, but what the writer does with the idea. It’s the tiny details delivered by their personal experience wrapped around the larger situation that makes for a hilarious and ultimately relatable story.

Writing prompts are great ways to mine the gold that you already have within. Prompts are merely that, a prompting, that gentle prod that pushes you down a path that maybe you weren’t traveling. But once on it, the road unfolds like red velvet carpet and suddenly you’ve found your magic. Perhaps in the process of writing your book, story, or article, the prompt will be abandoned. It often exists solely as a shard of inspiration, a jumping off point.


Get started with a few writing prompts below and remember to turn your eyes inward for the brilliant details, images and voices that are already speaking within you.

  • While packing up the estate of your new spouses recently dead mother, you discover a photo album of yellowed newspaper clippings. What are they about?

  • When your lover dies suddenly in a motorcycle accident, you start seeing a therapist who recommends that you try regression therapy. During one session, you discover a repressed childhood memory. What is the memory?

  • Write a story that starts with: 'He stepped into the elevator, sweat popping along his upper lip and he checked again to ensure that the revolver was carefully hidden beneath his blazer.'

  • Remember your scariest Halloween experience. Now write the story from the perspective of someone else who was there.

  • Write your fondest childhood memory from the third person point of view.
Use these and other writing prompts to discover your own ideas and to narrow down the story that longs to be told. Trying to write something that you’re not interested in or not familiar with is difficult and will often produce mediocre results. Find your element, your ideal space within the words, the memories and the fantasies of your consciousness and your writing will shine. 

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Writing Jobs for Wednesday July 20th

Writing Jobs in Michigan 

Writer/Editor/Collaborator: Ann Arbor

Data Analyst/ Research Assistant: Ann Arbor

Writer for Educational Consulting Firm: Ann Arbor

Federal Grant Writer: Auburn Hills

Freelance Copywriter: Birmingham

Copywriter and Internet Marketer: Brighton

Part Time General Assignment Reporter: Clio

Clarity Report Writer: Detroit

Prop Football Writer: Detroit/Telecommute

Need Editing Help for 2500 Word Paper: Lansing

German Language Tutor Wanted: Lansing

Support Analyst: Livonia

Freelance Writers: Oakland

Technical Writer: Shelby

Music Bloggers Wanted: Southfield

Junior Editor: Troy

Ad Copywriter: Troy

Desktop Publisher: Warren

Technical Editor: Warren

Online Editor: Wyandotte

Telecommute (From Home)

Digital Copywriter

SEO Article Writers Wanted 

Sewing Writer 

Car Writers for High Gear Media 

Textbook Writers

Transcriber

Blog/Content Writers

Writers and Activists for Social Action Website (pay is unclear)

Unpaid

Pork and Mead Magazine Needs Writers: Detroit

Poetry and Short Stories Wanted 

New Start-up Website Seeks Writers 

Horror News Site Seeks Contributors 


Rejection slips, or form letters, however tactfully phrased, are lacerations of the soul, if not quite inventions of the devil - but there is no way around them.

- Isaac Asimov

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Writing the Short Story


Short stories are a fiction writer's toe in the water. They are short, or can be, poignant and usually must pack a punch if they're going to see publication beyond the tattered notebook in your top drawer. However, any writer who has written or attempted to write a short story knows that those 1,500 words may be the hardest you'll ever write. There simply is not enough space to delve as deeply as you want to - not enough pages to build to climax and then wrap it up in some meaningful way.

I have written and struggled to write short stories for years. I have obsessed over the words, closed the file and then refused to look at it for months afterwards, Eventually when I get some much need space, I can return to the work, edit it and start submitting. I get rejected frequently, but those few journals that say they're considering it and even one that accepted a short story and then later published someone else's - somehow keep the flame alive.

T.C. Boyle, fiction author and English Professor at the university of Southern California, stresses that "there are no rules," when it comes to writing short fiction. Boyle says that fiction is an art (I'm sure we all agree) and that it is merely an individual work by an individual person. Understanding this helps us to let go of a need to mimic greater writers or to drown ourselves in the self-deprecating tendencies that arise when we review and edit our own stories. Boyle, in his courses, advises students to read a lot - and not just the classics, but contemporary writers also. Additionally, he is a supporter of writing what you don't know (not the normal writing advice) because he believes that fiction is a process of discovery. (Read the full article here at Writers Digest.com)

Writing advice is everywhere these days, but read it anyway. Read it because in doing so - you're reading, you're seeing someone else's style and maybe you're gleaning some piece of advice that has not crossed your desk before. Then go for a walk in nature, return to your computer and let the words flow. If you like what you've written - look below for some online journals and magazines seeking submissions. 










Contests 

Echoes of the Right to God - Accepts Essays, Fiction and Poetry - No Entry Fee - Deadline: April 16th

Writer Advice Sixth Annual Flash Prose Contest - Accepts Fiction, Memoir and Creative Nonfiction - Entry Fee: $10 - Deadline: April 15th 

Never be bullied into silence.  Never allow yourself to be made a victim.  Accept no one's definition of your life; define yourself.  ~Harvey Fierstein

Friday, February 11, 2011

Writing Jobs for Fri. Feb. 11th

Writing Jobs in Michigan 

Scientific Method Paper: Ann Arbor

Grant Writer for Clean Energy Invention: Ann Arbor

Medical Writer: Ann Arbor

Technical Writer: Auburn Hills

Automotive Service Writer: Benton Harbor

Technical Writer: Canton

Associate Editor: Dearborn

Freelance Writer for AutoShopper.com: Detroit and Telecommute

Grant Program Writer: Detroit

Vigilante Journalists: Detroit

Technical Writer: Farmington Hills

Writer: Flint

Technical Writer/Project Manager: Grand Rapids

Medical Writer: Kendle

Logistic Engineer/Technical Writer: Kingsford

Technical Writer: Livonia

Website Product Description Copy Writer/Editor: Marine City

Transcriber: Portage

Service Writer: Roseville

Outdoor Survival Creative Writer: Royal Oak

Senior News Producer: Saginaw

Technical Writer: Sterling Heights

Technical Writer: Sterling Heights

Telecommute

Freelance Web Writers 

Writers for H.S. Publication

Blogger for Internet Television Site 

Online News Writers and Bloggers 

Assistant Editor 

Small Business and Small Business Finance Bloggers 

Writing Internship 

SEO Writers Wanted 

Stock Market and Economy Writer

Freelance Web Writer

MMA Writer 

Submissions

Short Story Submissions 

Stories or Scripts for Short Films 

Short Fiction for L Magazine 

The Daily News Press is Seeking Submissions 

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Contests for Writers

I'm sitting here this morning sipping my coffee and realizing that the snow may be keeping all of us writers close to home. So let's, at least, get something done. Check out these contests and consider writing something out of your genre. If you always stick to horror, write some poetry. It's a great way to stretch your abilities and your mind. Also - I would love to hear your comments about success with contests, markets or jobs and if you have a blog, website or even Facebook page - let me know and I will link to your site.

Free




Entry Fee Required

Creative Nonfiction Essays - $25 fee - Deadlines Jan. 31st and March 16th

Michael Steinberg Essay Contest - $15 fee - Deadline Feb. 28th

Julia Peterkin Award for Fiction - $15 fee - Deadline Feb. 15th

2011 Confrontation Poetry Prize - $10 fee - Deadline Jan. 31st

Glimmer Train Short Fiction Award - $15 fee - Deadline Jan. 31st


And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise.  The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.  ~Sylvia Plath







Sunday, January 2, 2011

Time to Write

Well the Christmas Holiday and New Year's Eve are officially behind us. The New Year is not generally something that I consider vastly important, but for those of you who take this time to set goals and instigate change for the upcoming year, consider starting off 2011 with a round of submissions. Dig out those old short stories and get your red pens ready because I've compiled a list of markets for every writer from poet to horror master. I will be doing the same and I wish you all a bottomless spring of motivation and creativity in 2011.

Heart and Soul Magazine - Empowerment Magazine for African American Women

Apple Valley Review - Online Literary Journal

Pif Magazine - Accepts fiction, poetry and author interviews.

Blackbird - An Online Literary Journal

Strand Magazine - Mostly short stories (mystery, detective etc)

The American Scholar - Accepts fiction, essays and poetry.

Halfway Down the Stairs - Accepts poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction.

Palabra - A Magazine of Chicano and Latino Literary Art

Defenestration - Humor Magazine

The Long and Short of It - Romance and Erotica

Realms of Fantasy - Fantastic Short Fiction

Strange Horizons - Fantasy and Science Fiction

You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you.  ~Ray Bradbury