O | The Del Rey Digital Writing Workshop Newsletter, July 2001 W | delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com W | Become a better writer! | - - CONTENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - Workshop Partner Information - Workshop News: Anne McCaffrey to comment on August Editors' Choice nominees E-mail alerts now available Synopsis Focus Group The August Member Challenge OWW Horror workshop Reminders - Editors' Choices for June submissions - Reviewer Honor Roll and reviewer prize - Publication Announcements - Workshop Statistics - Feedback: Poll question: weekly reporting Tips from fellow workshoppers | - - WORKSHOP PARTNER INFORMATION - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Online Writing Workshops's partnership with Del Rey Books continues through March 5, 2002, making membership in the workshop free to all. Visit the Del Rey Books Web site for sample chapters of upcoming books, in-depth features, author interviews, special offers, and more: http://www.randomhouse.com/delrey Del Rey's featured title for July/August: RAVENHEART by David Gemmell Eight hundred years have passed since King Connavar of the Rigante and his bastard son, Bane, defeated the invading army of Stone. In that time, Connavar hasbecome a legend, and the Rigante have lost the freedom so many gave their lives to preserve. A conquered people, they live and die under the iron rule of the Varlish, their culture all but destroyed. Only one woman remains who follows the ancient paths once trod by the Rigante. She is the Wyrd of Wishing Tree Wood--and she alone knows the nature of the evil soon to be unleashed on a doomed and unsuspecting world. In a perilous land, facing an uncertain future, the Wyrd finds her initial hopes pinned on two men: Jaim Grymauch, the giant Rigante fighter, a man haunted by his failure to save his best friend from betrayal; and Kaelin Ring, a youth whose deadly talents will earn him the rancor of all Varlish. One will become the Ravenheart, an outlaw leader whose daring exploits will inspire the Rigante. The other will forge a legend--and light the fires of revolution. Read an excerpt at: http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0345432266&view=excerpt and read an author Q & A at: http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0345432266&view=qa | - - WORKSHOP NEWS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | ANNE MCCAFFREY TO COMMENT ON AUGUST EDITORS' CHOICE NOMINEES The next Del Rey author to participate in the Editors' Choice process (after Terry Brooks a few months ago) will be bestselling and beloved author Anne McCaffrey. Ms. McCaffrey will be contributing her own mini-reviews of the nine Editors' Choices and Runner Ups for the month of August. Her comments will be published in the October newsletter (after the ECs and ECRUs are announced in August), as well as added to the individual submissions. E-MAIL ALERTS NOW AVAILABLE Our new Telltales system of e-mail alerts is now in place. You can now sign up to be notified whenever the members of your choice submit or review, or whenever a review is given to your submissions. You can choose to be alerted for new and updated reviews and submissions, or new ones only. You can even temporarily suspend your telltales and reactivate them. --Don't miss a review--find out about it instantly! --Keep up with your favorite authors--don't miss a chapter! --Keep up with reviewers from whom you learn a lot. --Follow the exploits of the members of your critiquing group. --Sign up for submission telltales on members to whom you owe reviews. Visit your Telltales page--just click to it from the bottom of the Your Info or Welcome pages. And watch for the telltale bird, which marks where you can sign up for telltales on reviewer histories, member-directory listings, and submissions. SYNOPSIS FOCUS GROUP Interested in learning how to write a better synopsis of your novel? Many publishers request the first three chapters and a synopsis when interested in a novel, and many writers have a hard time creating a synopsis that's detailed enough to show off their book while streamlined enough to be useful to the publisher. OWW is organizing a synopsis focus group that will begin early in August and last about a month: we'll read some how-to articles on synopses, then trade and critique our own synopses on a special mailing list, and finally try to come up with a FAQ or guide based on what we've learned together. If you're interested in participating, let us know at support@onlinewritingworkshop.com by the beginning of August. (Everyone on the Writing list who's expressed interest is already on our list--no need to write us.) THE AUGUST MEMBER CHALLENGE Some core members of the workshop have begun a monthly writing challenge, open to all, in which writers submit stories or scenes on a particular topic. Past topics have included pain, love, death, and music. The July challenge is humor; the August challenge is elves. For rules and how-to information, see a page maintained by a member: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/Challenge.html Basically, just submit a piece on the current month's theme, put "Elf Challenge" in your title so other challenge participants can find it, and give at least brief reviews to as many other challenge entrants as you can). Search for titles containing "Challenge" to see some of the challenge entries. We at OWW think this is great, but we aren't in charge. For more information and to participate in choosing the challenge topics, join the Writing discussion list (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/oww-sff-writing). OTHER UPDATES TO THE WORKSHOP In the Submission Selector, you can now choose to list submissions from most to fewest reviews as well as by fewest to most reviews. Just choose "by reviews (most first)" in the pulldown menu and click the "List" button. In the submission listings, the authors' names are now linked to their entries in the member directory. TRY OWW'S HORROR WORKSHOP Our horror workshop was launched on June 1 and is gaining members steadily. If you write or read horror, now's your chance to participate in a workshop where you can be a big fish in a small pond! We've got some great submissions and some really dedicated reviewers at work. Plus editor/Odyssey workshop director Jeanne Cavelos (of the Abyss horror line) will be contributing a detailed review monthly. (This workshop is not sponsored, so far, and is supported by membership fees.) If you know any horror writers who don't know about our workshops, please tell them about this one! Check it out at http://horror.onlinewritingworkshop.com REMINDERS Adding your picture to the member directory: your picture must be stored on a different Web server. Make sure that server allows access from other servers--some don't. Your picture URL must start with "http://", the URL is case-sensitive (e.g., don't use uppercase if the file is named in lowercase) and it must be no bigger than 200 x 200 pixels. Using the "append text" form: you need to submit your first chunk of text via the regular submission form before you follow the link to the "append text" form and submit the rest. | - - EDITORS' CHOICES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | The Editors' Choices are the submissions from the previous month that show the most potential or otherwise earn the admiration of our Editorial Board. Each gets a composite review by the Board, which is published on the site and in the newsletter. We usually pick one fantasy chapter or partial chapter, one SF chapter or partial chapter, and one short story. (The volume of short stories is much less than that of chapters, so we're not going to pick a fantasy story and an SF story each month unless that imbalance changes. Mixed SF/F chapters will be considered under whichever category seems to predominate in the submission.) We also list two runners-up in each category, with our comments. To view Editors' Choices on the workshop, go to the submission list and click on "Editors' Choices" in the Submission Selector. Six months of ECs will be archived there, with their editorial reviews. Our Editorial Board: http://delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com/editorialboard.shtml In order to make sure that some of our most professional members don't take too much attention away from other deserving writers, we've decided that novels will be ineligible for EC consideration if they have been chosen as previous ECs in any six-month period (January-June and July-December). Runner-ups will not be subject to this rule. So if a chapter of your novel has been an EC, we won't put future chapters of it into the nomination process for a while--but if those chapters are of EC/runner-up quality, we will be acknowledging them briefly just to be fair. Congratulations to this month's Editors' Choice authors and runners up! Editors' Choice, fantasy chapter/partial chapter: DOG AND THE WHEEL 3 by Ilona Gordon A well-written piece with a strong opening, vivid characters, and quite a few memorable passages throughout. Generally, we wanted to read more, wanted to know more about the characters and the world they were in. Be careful about what form of vernacular you are using. You can pull the reader out of the story very quickly, especially since otherwise you maintain the medieval feel of this world so well. The following passage is especially jarring: "By now his mind is warped and he sees the world in black and white. He is probably a psychotic murderer, dad. . ." Even if we accept the use of "dad," we just don't buy that these people are familiar with the term "psychotic murderer "at this stage in their civilization. The opening with the luminous moth/wall and the owl hunting them is vivid and beautiful, although it begins to get a bit heavy on the adjectives after a while. There is some lovely imagery: "An old woman barred the heavy wooden door to the bedroom. Deep lines creased her tan face, and from that face startling blue eyes looked at Headhunter like violets from a freshly plowed field." (That said, one has to wonder whether plowing a field causes violets to spring into being?) "Puss" should be "pus" ("You smell worse than a puss bucket.") "Waived" should be "waved" ("He waved them on and watched them go..") A nice passage wherein Dermont details the benefits that will accrue to Headhunter after his father's death. Before that, the gratuitous insults seemed a tad bit overdone. Some of us had just begun to get impatient with the name-calling when it evolved into a different kind of conversation. One member of our editorial board would like to draw your attention to the following: "'You did what?' Steven's voice was an icy hiss." He says: "Ahem. My first editor at Del Rey brought to my attention many years ago the fact that an utterance needs to have some S sounds in it in order to be properly characterized as a hiss. I have carried this lesson with me ever since." The description of the smokeless torches gets a bit repetitious. A strong effort. Most of us find the piece promising and would like to see more of Headhunter and his world, but correct the anachronistic language use. Editors' Choice, SF chapter/partial chapter: SNOWDANCER Prologue/Ch. 1 by T.K. Thorne A solid, well-written entry. Most of us would definitely have been intrigued and interested enough to read on, if there had been more to read. (One of us would have preferred more action, though.) There's some very fine description through the alien's point of view, and intriguing details reinforce Mayre's alienness throughout the prologue. Chapter One shifts the POV and the scene, but is equally interesting. Motz is a satisfying combination of young, tough, and scared, and her hacked instrument hints intriguingly at some plot complication to come in the future. One weak spot is the invented words. One editor described them as "gratuitously difficult to pronounce." For instance, how does one pronounce "Mayre"? It could sound like "Mary," or it could be a pun on "mare" or "mer" (i.e. "sea"). That would make sense for a being that lives in the sea, except that presumably the aliens don't speak Latinate languages, so their words for "sea" would be different ones, and in any case, they couldn't possibly all be named after sea things. In other words, it's an awkward word choice that pulls the reader out of the story. Ditto "cwth." The reader must stop every time and try to decide how to pronounce it. We suggest either a different name or at least a pronunciation guide. Then there's "Motz," which from the way it's spelt should rhyme with "rots." But then the character says that it is short for Mozart; perhaps it should be spelled Moatz to begin with. Pay close attention to the dialogue. It's a good choice to make it seem as close to real conversation as possible (i.e., repetitious with lots of incomplete sentences), but it is possible to overdo it. Finally, the ending of the chapter seems to draw more from television ("Will Motz survive? Tune in next week!") than from literary craft. It doesn't really raise the tension or create enough mystery to compel us to read on. We already know what the jump will feel like, and we already know that it's quite survivable. Consider extending the chapter a little more until you come to a place of genuine rising tension or mystery. A strong piece of writing with well-imagined sensory detail, a prologue that draws the reader in, and an initial chapter that introduces new characters and setting and keeps the reader interested. Editors' Choice, short story: KNIGHTS TEMPORAL by Nigel Atkinson This story hooked us from the very beginning. (Actually, we were hooked from the author's notes, explaining that this was "an ecclesiastically-based dystopian techno-thriller cum time-travelling locked room murder mystery. Well, maybe. That's the plan anyway.") We aren't quite sure if there's a simpler way to classify this story, or even if it is a story--more than one editor feels that it's the beginning of something much, much bigger--but we were sure that it was sharply written, bursting with interesting sfnal and future-world details, promisingly satirical, and that we would like to read more. We loved the professional writing; the notion of civil servant/priests; the "Bester Effect"; the idea that the Catholic and Mormon Churches (what about the Christian Scientologists? The Episcopalians? Orthodox Jews? You may want to touch on some of these other religions, just to ground the story) have in effect bought the world, making conspiracy theorists around the world momentarily blissful. It's a ridiculous premise, but we'll buy it as long as you give us headlines like "BOSS BISH PREGGERS AGAIN!" The opening quote from St. Augustine is also lovely and pertinent--a narrative that manages to reference, in an organic way, St. Augustine, Leslie Charteris, and Alfred Bester, is doing not just one but many things right. At the moment, our main quibble concerns Juliet Frame. It's okay if she's enigmatic: on the other hand, it seems odd that David Crean doesn't access any sort of dossier on her personal history. We should see him researching her personal life, her professional contacts; at the moment, all we know is that she wrote a dissertation on the Bester Effect. We should know more about her--more should come out during her first interrogation. How old is she? Does she have a family? A boyfriend? Do they question her colleagues? The discussion about her "soul" is a bit confusing--it seems to mean something quite serious to David, Bishop General Fletcher, Ragnor, and to Juliet herself. Don't hold back on essential plot information too long. Otherwise you run the risk of irritating rather than tantalizing your readers. A minor comment: David thinks that Juliet Frame "was small even for a woman." This seems a little odd. How small is she? Women, like men, come in all different sizes, and unless she's child-sized, David probably just notes that she's small. At the very end, when Juliet mentions her body/double, we wondered about the body as well. Wouldn't David and Ragnor have gone to take a look at it? In the story as it currently stands, it isn't clear why the Church has drafted David to investigate the murder/mystery. It doesn't seem to be for either his faith or his scientific background. So why is he involved, and what exactly is he supposed to be looking for? So far, he doesn't seem to have looked at much. As we mentioned, this is probably pushing more towards novella/novelette length. Two final minor comments: we loved the titles of the section headings. Titles like "Knitting with Water" were evocative, and seemed to refer to more than one thing--both David's attempt to piece together a seemingly unsolvable mystery, and the old woman in the corner shop, knitting while David bought his newspaper. This kind of layering and doubling repays close reading, and holds the narrative together even when plot elements seem occasionally flimsy. And lastly, when writing dialogue, always use commas to separate commands or questions like ""I don't think you realise what kind of trouble you are in[,] Dr. Frame" and "Don't bandy words with me[,] Mr. Crean." Runner Up, fantasy chapter/partial chapter: AS ABOVE, SO BELOW, Chapter 2, by The Tempest We enjoyed and were intrigued by this entry, though it could have been more substantial. Nicely imagined description and dialogue. One editor said, "No nits worth picking. I'd very much like to read more of this." Since the author asked, the second title ("As Above, So Below") is the stronger. FARFALLE/CHRYSALIS is too precious and vague. Very nice opening detailing the twins' powers. It draws the reader in at once. However, though the interaction between Koryn and Nera seems to work, it's difficult to tell in so short a scene, and difficult to really believe the connection between the two of them. Some minor details: the last exchange needs more attribution. It gets confusing, trying to figure out who is talking to whom. And the glottal stop signified by the apostrophe in the middle of " Dol'mat" is unpronounceable. Unless it isn't in fact a glottal stop, and is meant to signify that there have been letters removed from the middle of the word (the way that "you've" signifies "you have"). All in all, a too-brief piece that shows a lot of promise. It's been ranked lower largely because its partial state makes it difficult to judge if the chapter accomplishes its aim. Runner Up, fantasy chapter/partial chapter: ISABELLE THE TYPICAL, Ch. 1, by Douglas Keaton We have lots of conflicting opinions on this excerpt, which is common with writing that is experimental. One of us found it a bit confusing, but stillthe most intriguing of the three nominees. Another simply said "wispy...dreamy...sleepy...zzzzzzz." All of us found that overwriting and overly belaboured language detracted from the character and the story. But most of us were intrigued enough by Isabelle and the flow of the story to want to read on for a bit. Nice irony to the title; Isabelle is obviously destined to be anything but typical. That said, consider substituting the word "ordinary" for "typical," which has a more contemporary ring to it. "Ordinary" seems the older word, more in keeping with the universe of this story. Here's an example of a lyrical passage which has marred by overwriting: "She tugged at the line. The fish tugged back. She laughed and her father with her. Just beneath the surface, like a watercolor smeared, the trout shook his head as if in negation but really in hunger." The head-shaking complicates an otherwise lovely image. And sometimes those attempts at creating evocative images often conjure up images that are at best confusing: "The thumb only protruded from palm to completion in clean fingernail." This could be said more clearly. The writing is at its best when it's pared down, as in the following: "Did you hear of Dame Isabelle's five wins at the tournament yesterday? Yes, I certainly did. It wasn't quite fair, though. Three of them were crushed by her boot. Nancy to Wendy, Wendy to Nancy at that party last night." The nature of the memory that opens the chapter is confusing. We are told that: "Here, she knew, was a moment whose flavor would find her at odd moments for all of her life. Find her as she crossed a room and caught a summer draft." Yet Isabelle is four at this point. Does she really have such profound understanding at that age, or is this the adult Isabelle's commentary on her younger self? This needs to made clear in several places. Also, there's some confusion throughout as to who's saying what. "Here was a moment between the ones that slipped away, to form her character not at all, or else insidiously." Again, a sentence that sounds artful and profound but means...what? At one point Isabelle cites Descartes to Sir Matthew. Does that mean this story is set in the real world, sometime after the writings of Rene Descartes? And it's unclear what the author is trying to do with the past/present mix. Some clues would help reduce the frustration. But despite pretty phrasing that's getting in the way of the storytelling, Isabelle is a likable and interesting character and the story itself fairly involving (though not dissolving or resolving). Runner Up, science fiction chapter/partial chapter: SANCTUARY CH. 2 by Elizabeth Donald An intriguing chapter, competently written, with potentially interesting characters. The author asked if the entry felt rushed; we'd characterize it as not containing enough development of character or situation. We got a strong sense of time and place. Be aware though, that one editor found the whole setup implausible and another said that the setting was less evocative and original than it could have been. The language is fairly good, although the dialogue is occasionally stilted. The character of Aurora is compelling, though a bit more insight into her determination to be a fighter might be useful. We begin to get a good feeling for the characters introduced so far, but there needs to be even more character development. At the moment, it's difficult to understand the characters' motivations or even to tell them apart. Perhaps the most distracting thing about this excerpt is the POV, which wavers all over the place. Whose story is this? Decide that, and then tell the story mostly from that person's POV, with occasional switches when your POV character is not in the scene. The opening is serviceable, but avoid telling us how things are said when we could just as easily figure it out for ourselves: "Yes, Father," she said dutifully, and got off her bed. John led her out of the quarters they shared and through the halls. "Where are we going?" she asked quietly. "You'll see," he said enigmatically. It seems like a stretch that John would forbid all exercise on the grounds that it could promote militarism. What about simple health? And when Aurora asks how one fights an alien, Adams replies that no one knows how to fight them. Aurora responds: "I know what they look like. I saw one." Why does Adams take this so completely in stride? Isn't it illegal for the children to leave the sanctuary? Absorbing and well written, but the characters, especially the children, are a little flat, and the story lacks sufficient physical context. Runner Up, science fiction chapter/partial chapter: LENORE CHAPT 7 by Isabel Scott A strong submission and well enough written, if sloppily typed. (Please always re-read your text and do a spell and grammar check before submitting!) Some of us really enjoyed this excerpt. The word choice and the cadence of the language create a rough (extremely vermin-infested) world that draws readers in and keeps them guessing. The characters are compelling and multilayered. But the title is weak; we suggest changing it. This seems to be fantasy, except for the word "spaceport" thrown in near the end. Perhaps it's more clear from the earlier chapters that this is a world with differing levels of technology, but it's something that your characters should also seem aware of. The emotional rollercoaster Lenore rides seems overly fast in this one chapter, flying from hate to love as she does. And one editor fournd Lenore's caring for Hugh despite all the rough treatment and humiliation is a little cliched, unless the first six chapters set it up better than is implied here. To quote: "Personally, I get a little tired of strong-warrior-woman-falling-for-her-captor stories. She should kick his butt and get out of there." Examples of nice phrasing: "She taunted him with laughter. He thrust and that quickly his knife was her knife." The scene where Lenore kills Hedrin is exciting and gruesomely watchable, though it does contain some hyperbole that should be reconsidered: "His manhood shriveled to the size of a worm." (Doubtful, unless he was congenitally deformed or worms are stouter on that world.) And: "She. . .slit his bag. His gonads spilled out onto the ground." (A bit of severing or yanking might be necessary to actually get the gonads out of his slit bag and down onto the ground.) After she wounds him, Lenore kicks Hedrin with her bare toes with sufficient force to slide his body along the ground and we are told that he died "half from blood loss, half from his busted innards." (Long powerful toes or not, it would really hurt to kick someone with that kind of force!) Great dialogue, though occasionally stilted. Lenore and Betina discussing Hugh's health while he joins in, befuddled by the opium, is one scene that is well crafted and stands out in memory. The lancing of the abscess is convincingly nauseating--well done! A fascinating chapter with strong characters and good action, which suffers largely from some sloppy writing. Runner Up, short story: SHE WHO SOWS, REAPS by Jennifer de Guzman We found the setting of this story intriguing, and very much liked the intermingling of bits and pieces of folklore with details of realistic life. The writing is strong, and it's wonderful to see a nuanced story about a monster who may not exactly be a monster--the author never settles for the easy conclusions. Having said that, we would like to see the author work on character, something that "horror" stories sometimes skimp on, when it's really the most essential piece: we need to care about the characters, in order to care what happens to them. Character builds suspense. While Mateo Cablayan is clearly the protagonist, Father Juan is probably the most fully complicated of the characters, easiest to identify with, for a contemporary reader. This is partly because, as Mateo says, Father Juan is "wise and calm, but still very modern." At several points, Father Juan seems to be addressing an audience of readers, rather than Mateo or the other members of his congregation. Unfortunately, this makes Mateo and his wife seem less real: more details about Mateo and his wife Luz and their relationship will help. Make it clear to us that they have quirks and history. Let Mateo remember specific things about Luz, from before she sunk into her depression. Let us see how Mateo fits into the social order of Narvacan, and that Luz has friends, or doesn't have friends, or at least that the other women have begun to gossip about her, before the Bongolans' baby disappears. At the moment, Mateo and Luz are a bit underwritten: write some flesh onto their bones. Details like Mateo wondering about the emotional capacities of men and women are good: this should resonate at the end, when he makes his terrible discovery in his wife's garden. One note: "Maybe I hold in too much, he thought. So much that I don't even know what I'm feeling. It all slips through, like the water through my net." You probably need to add "Or maybe it all slips through..." as either he holds it in, or else it all slips through, not both. Relationships with secondary characters need to be worked on. First we learn that Jesus Bongolan's wife is missing from the fields, then that she's had a baby, and immediately after that, that the baby has been stolen, and then that Mateo and Jesus are friends and that Mateo has warned Jesus about the aswang, and then that the village is suspicious of Luz. All of this information may be essential, but it is given to us in a very unnatural and inorganic sequence. Write some of this information into the earlier story. Again, when Mateo finds out that there are rumors that his own wife is an aswang, it seems odd that he goes out to sea without first going home to check on her. He might not go home, for any number of reasons, but the author needs to make his actions seem natural rather than just plot-convenient. All of the details about the aswang are wonderfully eerie and gruesome: they make the flesh creep. The juxtaposition of description of tongues like sharp bamboo straws, with sentences like ""Aswang could be anybody, respectable people during the day who planted rice or fished or made pottery" is fabulous. When it turns out that Luz is the baby thief, even if she isn't the aswang that the village has been looking for, that's fine. We don't need her to be revealed as a supernatural and bloodthirsty monster--but we do need to see how she has changed in Mateo's eyes. How does she appear to him now? Would it be easier to accept her actions if she were an aswang, and not simply his wife? And what will Mateo do now? One can't just simply cover one's wife's legs with garlic and holy water. Runner Up, short story: SERENADE by Michael Martineck All three of this month's nominees stood out, not only because they were well-written, but also for the writers' close attention to world-building. Lots of small details in this story, like the antique locket that Alec's wife Margot uses as a concom (although "concom" as a word is distractingly clunky and Star Trekkish), make the future seem just as real as Margot's pregnancy--again, also made concrete by the use of many small, telling details. The larger premise of the story--that artists depend upon corporate patronage, and that patronage, in turn, is dependent upon world-web popularity--doesn't seem all that far-fetched. If art (information) is free, then artists will need sponsors, and corporations will use art and artists as a form of advertising. This future feels entirely too possible--nice extrapolating! The details about music also feel real, although remember that it's "chords," not "cords." Descriptions of Alec's performance as when he plays the second set after finding that he's not in Windmill's budget are compelling and believable. The author might want to suggest that "Doris from budget" is a fan, and that's why she's risking her job to tell him. The plot, unlike the world, feels a bit rushed and improbable. We'll buy the set-up: "He wasn't 25 anymore. He needed a steady gig. They. The little family. Mortgage, diapers, little jars of smushed peas." That's good, funny, biting set-up. However, once the author has introduced Alec's difficulties, and told us that "it was never a good idea" to go looking for a new patron, we find out at the end that Margot, unknown to Alec, goes out and finds a new patron as easy as pie. We'll buy she's more practical than he is, and better at business, but why doesn't he then consult with her? And has she told him that she's solved his difficulties? And it seems a little improbable that Windmill would really want to cut Alec loose because he's too popular--they would probably want to tie him down cheaply instead. And, of course, if company-artist relationships are really as devious and difficult as this, then artists would have agents (as they do now.) Give us a bit more of Alec and Margot's relationship, and a bit more about company-artist relationships as well. The dopamine/addiction/art subplot also needs a bit more space to develop: Alec, once he's embarked on his grand experiment, begins to disappear from the story. Pin him down, and show us close-up how he changes, and how Margot and he adjust their relationship. Winifred is an interesting character, but she, like Doris, needs to have more of a place in the story. The author has a gift for making characters seem real: once they're real, and in the story, they need to stay in the story. Remember that the reader should feel that a whole world and a cast of characters exists in AND outside of the narrative, and not just when convenient, to propel the narrative. Work on this some more--it may end up a lot longer than you originally expected, but the writing overall is strong enough to support as much story as your characters need. | - - REVIEWER HONOR ROLL - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | This month's reviewer MVP is workshop newcomer Bob Allen. Along with receiving four Honor Roll nominations in the past month for his reviews, Bob is currently one of our top five reviewers as well (based on number of substantial reviews). We're sending him a copy of previous workshop member Cecilia Dart-Thornton's novel THE ILL-MADE MUTE, which was an Editors' Choice long ago. It is adorned with an OWW bookplate signed by Cecilia. We list in the Reviewer Honor Roll area of the workshop the people who have given useful, insightful reviews that have been appreciated by the authors. After all, that's what makes the workshop go, and we want to give great reviewers a little well-earned recognition from the workshop community. In the newsletter we list reviewer names and submissions reviewed; on the site we also include comments from the submission's author. Most months we also award a prize to one or more special reviewers. If you've received a review you really appreciated and would like to the reviewer to appear in the Reviewer Honor Roll, just use our online honor-roll nomination form at http://delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com/honorroll.shtml or e-mail support@delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com the following information: Name of the reviewer Title of the submission reviewed and author (your name) Any comments you have on why the review was so helpful This month's honor roll: Bob Allen, reviewing HOTWIRED, Ch.s 1 and 2, by Allie Davidson Bob Allen, reviewing THE JEFFERSON SOCIETY by Brynna Ramin Bob Allen, reviewing various stories by David Reagan Bob Allen, reviewing TRIUMPH OF THE TRIUMVIRATE, Ch. 1, by Steve Kornic Manda Benson, reviewing "Worth the Cost?" by Elizabeth Anne Ensley John Borneman, reviewing "Second Coming" by Hannah Bowen Tom Brown, reviewing "Old Bones" by Nigel Read Christopher Jude Defensor, reviewing "She Who Sows, Reaps" by Jennifer de Guzman Roger Eichorn, reviewing FEAR ITSELF, Prologue and Ch. 1, by Bob Allen Roger Eichorn, reviewing DOE, Chapter 1, by Steve Nagy Elizabeth Anne Ensley, reviewing EDGE OF ICE, Ch.s 1.1 and 1.2 by Rob Campbell Nora Fleischer, reviewing PROMENADE by Melinda Kimberly The members of Going to Get Published Dammit (a critiquing group), reviewing HEART'S DESIRE (all chapters) by Jennifer St.Clair Bush Sam Godwin, reviewing DRAGON'S TEST by RJ Hayes Sam Godwin, reviewing A WISH FOR PEACE, Prologue, by Theresa P. Johnson Penelope Hardy, reviewing "Harmony of Life" by Rick Lorentson A. L. Hicks, reviewing THE BANDIT LITTLE RED, Ch. 1, by John Hoddy John Hoddy, reviewing THE BLOOD OF ETERNALS by Gregg Jackson domynoe l, reviewing "World Builders" by Jana Paniccia domynoe l, reviewing THE HEART OF SATURDAY NIGHT by Mark Reeder David Nihsen, reviewing SANRATHS REVENGE by Emma Gilbertson Brynna Ramin, reviewing FEAR ITSELF Ch.s 2 and 3 by Bob Allen M T Reiten, reviewing "Second Coming" by Hannah Bowen M T Reiten, reviewing "It/They and the Cosmic Other" by Tom Shafer Delos Rifenburgh, reviewing STALEMATE, Prologue and Ch.s 1-3, by Laura Kent Jeff Stanley, reviewing HEARTS DESIRE (all chapters) by Jennifer St.Clair Bush Jeff Stanley, reviewing TO HIDE A STAR (all chapters) by M T Reiten Marguerite Wilson, reviewing THE NIGHTMARE SUN by Richard C Rogers Eugene Woodbury, reviewing "Second Coming" by Hannah Bowen More details and specific praise can be found at: http://delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com/honorroll.shtml | - - PUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Congratulations to our members who have recently made sales or garnered other honors of various sorts! ("DROWW" is the original Del Rey workshop, 3/99-9/00.) The latest news is listed below. Our complete online Hall of Fame is at http://delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com/halloffame.shtml Jennifer St.Clair Bush has sold print rights to YA novel THE TENTH GHOST to Cosmos Books, a division of Wildside Press (http://www.cosmos-books.com) and has sold HEART'S DESIRE to Cosmos Books as well. Both will be out in 2002, and an e-version of THE TENTH GHOST is coming soon from Bookmice.com. HEART'S DESIRE was workshopped and one section was an EC runner-up. Jennifer says, "All the people who reviewed HEART'S DESIRE really helped me make it into something I am proud of." Mark R. Knight's short story "At the Tower of Dragons" has been accepted by Aphelion: The Webzine of Science Fiction and Fantasy (http://www.aphelion-webzine.com). It was workshopped in May, and Mark says, "I don't think I'd have gotten that far without the help of the workshop." Richard J. O'Brien's novel THE BABEL CODEX will be available soon from PublishAmerica's imprint AmEricaHouse (http://www.publishamerica.com/bookstore-b.htm). It's "a contemporary fantasy replete with secret gnosis, shadowy government agents and five unlikely heroes." Nancy Proctor sold short story "The Dragon of Shiner Creek" to Speculon (http://www.speculon.com), where it is scheduled to appear in the August 1st issue. Antonietta B. (A. B.) Wallace's novel THE MARK OF THE WEREWOLF is available through PublishAmerica (http://www.publishamerica.com/bookstore-m.htm). More information: http://abwallace.com | - - WORKSHOP STATISTICS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Number of members as of 7/20: 4926 Number of submissions currently online: 1726 Percent of submissions with 3 or more reviews: 67% Percent of submissions with zero reviews: 0.6% Number of submissions in June: 1097 Number of reviews in June: 4185 Ratio of reviews/submissions in June: 3.81 Estimated average word count per review in June: 361 Number of submissions in July to date: 642 Number of reviews in July to date: 2945 Ratio of reviews/submissions in July to date: 4.6 Estimated average word count per review in July to date: 368 | - - FEEDBACK - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | POLL: What info would you want to get in a weekly workshop report? As part of our new telltales system (e-alerts from the workshop), we're eventually going to give members the option of receiving a weekly report. We'll include in this report the member's current submissions with their cumulative ratings and number of reviews; a list of reviews contributed by the member during the week; and other information that might be of use to members. What else would you like to see? E-mail us at support@delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com if you have suggestions. TIP: IMPROVE YOUR NON-VISUAL DESCRIPTIONS I found this exercise to be extremely useful. Go to a place you can sit with your eyes closed (or have a partner to warn you of danger so you can keep your eyes closed). Sit in that spot for five or more minutes (I suggest at least ten--at most fifteen at one time) and feel, listen, smell, the things around you--concentrate on all your other senses with your eyes closed. At the end of the time period, grab a notebook you had handy and write down what you heard, felt, smelled, etc.--this is more profitable when done with the writer's "eye" for description in mind. I did this on the beach and came up with so many new ways to describe the setting of a beach that I may not have thought of otherwise. When I read what I wrote of that experience, it has the power to send me back to that ocean beach every time with the details it inspired--and there is no sight in the description anywhere (I can't wait to incorporate some of the details in a beach scene of a future novel)! (Thanks to member Laura Kent for this writing tip.) TIP: WHEN _NOT_ TO REVIEW Never review somebody's piece when you are a) tired b) in a rush to get some credit so you can post the piece you have been working on all day and can't wait to see responses c) not in the mood to review I have found that I give the worst reviews when I am tired and in a rush. I have done this, and I find I get frustrated that I can't find a short piece to read, with easy mistakes to point out or suggestions I can give without any real effort. I did exactly this, and wrote an appaling review which I later apologized for and re-wrote. If I can make this mistake, perhaps others can. What I ended up doing was venting my frustrations at not finding a piece I could review with no effort. Had I found one, the review I would have done may have provided tips, but would not have been all that positive. I guess you could expand this to "Never review when you are not really in the mood." It's far better to wait until you find a story (or stories) you enjoy, then review them properly when you are in the mood. Otherwise you are not being constructive. (Thanks to member Gregg Jackson for this writing tip.) TIP: PASSIVE AGRESSION "Good storyline, but watch the passives." "Too much passive voice." "Use more active sentences instead of passive." Do these sound familiar? They should: Use of passive voice is one of the most frequent criticisms on the workshop. But are we as writers really so... passive? Before you dish out some passive aggression in your next review, put your editing skills to the test! Rewrite these sentences, changing passive to active as necessary: A) "The Red Pony" was written by John Steinbeck in 1945. B) Kukla, Fran, and Ollie were attending the class. C) The explosion could be heard from miles away. D) Magda was a no-nonsense sort of woman. E) The award is being presented by Coach Thomas. F) Johnny's grades were falling rapidly. G) The professor was murdered late last night. H) The moon is bright tonight. I) Several passive constructions were flagged by the editor. J) Kylie is acting silly. So, how many of these sentences did you rewrite? If you edited more than Sentences A, E, and I, put down that red pen and let's review. In an active sentence, the subject carries out the action while the object receives or describes it: Mary throws the ball. A passive construction turns this right around, so that the object performs the action and the subject receives it: The ball is thrown by Mary. Passives are formed by combining a form of "to be" with the main verb's past participle. What about Sentences B, F, and J? They have "to be" with a participle, so they must be passive, right? Wrong! Many people will misidentify these as passives, but they are really examples of progressive tenses. Look carefully. In all three sentences, the subject is the one carrying out the action. This is easier to see in the simple past or present tense: Kukla, Fran, and Ollie attended; grades fell; Kylie acts. Progressives indicate action that is continuing or was interrupted. Compare "I went to the store" with "I was going to the store." "I went to the store" sounds finished, while "I was going to the store" leaves you wondering if I ever got there. We have forms of the verb "to be" in Sentences D and H, too. Are they passive? No again! These sentences illustrate linking verbs. Linking verbs connect a subject and a complement; they are usually forms of "to be" but can also be verbs related to the senses like "to taste," "to look" or "to sound." A complement is a word or phrase that tells us more about the subject's condition: John is tall. Dinner smells delicious. So if "to be" and participles aren't good ways to identify passives, what is? The surest way is to find the sentence's main verb and ask who or what did it. If the answer is "the subject," the sentence is active, no matter how it looks. But even if the sentence is passive, it's not necessarily wrong. In Sentence C, the explosion is what was heard, not who heard it. In Sentence G, the professor was the victim, not the murderer. Both sentences are passive--and completely acceptable. Passives are actually preferred when the identity of the actor is unknown or unimportant. Any number of people might have heard the explosion; the professor's murder is still unsolved. A passive can also be used to focus attention more strongly on the recipient of the action than on the actor, usually when the recipient becomes important later. Sentence A ("The Red Pony" was written by John Steinbeck in 1945) is passive, but if the rest of the paragraph is an analysis of the themes in the novel it works as written. If the paragraph goes on with a Steinbeck bibliography, though, it needs to be changed! By now, you should be a pro at accurately picking out the passives. You won't be misled by progressives or deceived by linking verbs, and your hand won't automatically reach for a red pen every time you see a page full of "is," "was" and "were." Now it's time to get working on those reviews, confident in the knowledge that if you end up writing "Nice plot, but too many passives!" you'll be right! [This tip has been brought to you by the verb "to be," actively trying to change its passive image.] (Thanks to member Donnamarie Thiel-Kline for this writing tip.) TIPS APPRECIATED Got a helpful tip for your fellow members? A trick or hint for submitting or reviewing, for what to put in your author's comments, for getting good reviews, or for formatting or titling your submission? Or a writing tip? Share it with us and if we agree it's useful we'll publish it in the next newsletter. Just send it to support@delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com and we'll do the rest. See you next month! The Del Rey Digital Writing Workshop for Science Fiction and Fantasy delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com support@delrey.onlinewritingworkshop.com | - - Copyright 2001 Online Writing Workshops, LLC - - - - - - - - -|
Visit our newsletter page [an error occurred while processing this directive]