O | The Online Writing Workshop for SF, F & H Newsletter, Oct. 2003 W | http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com W | Become a better writer! | - - CONTENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - Workshop News: Ask Charlie: envelopes Last reminder: first novels by OWWers Workshop focus chats "Submit or die" challenge November writing challenge Market information Membership payment information - Editors' Choices for September submissions - Reviewer Honor Roll - Publication Announcements - Workshop Statistics - Feedback: Tip - assign keystrokes | - - WORKSHOP NEWS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Sorry this newsletter is two days late. We were missing one of our Editor's Choice reviews and didn't want to send out an incomplete newsletter. The World Fantasy Convention is coming up in Washington D.C., USA, at the very end of this month. There will be quite a few workshoppers there, so if you're planning to go and want to connect with them, drop us an email at support@sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com and we'll connect you. ASK CHARLIE: ENVELOPES I received this question at the help desk this month and thought I'd publish my answer here in case anyone else was wondering the same thing. Q: "This is such a minor, unimportant question that I feel silly asking, but here goes. On envelopes that you send out to potential markets with your writings, do you hand-write the addresses? It looks somewhat unprofessional, but it's what I've always done. I can't imagine it'd make a difference, but maybe printed labels make the entire package look better, and maybe that can only help. On the other hand, it may simply look pretentious." A: I don't expect that it makes any difference. Editors buy stories, not envelopes. Understand that my handwriting is not very neat. So on the sending envelopes I either run them through the printer or use a label, usually the former. For return envelopes, my practice is to run the envelope through the printer (not use a label). I also make sure the magazine's address is in the upper left return address spot (although I don't include the editor's name). And I use self-sealing business size envelopes for replies, so the editors don't have to lick them, as they get tired of licking when they have hundreds of subs to go through. It won't help sell the story, but the editor or editorial assistant will appreciate it. I have all of these things set up as templates, so it's just as quick and easy for me to do them this way as to hand-write the information. I don't think it makes the envelope look pretentious: when you're sending out stories, it's a business, and it simply appears professional. Neat, legible handwriting can also appear professional too. But the stories are more important than the packaging, unless the packaging is really negative in some way. So I wouldn't be dogmatic about my own practices for someone else if another method works better for them. Just be neat, and remember to appear professional. LAST REMINDER: FIRST NOVELS BY OWWERS TAINTED GARDEN by Jeff Stanley: What if an alien world was alive? What if it had secrets it wanted to keep from the people who lived there? High-concept SF -- more than just another first-contact novel. (http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0345459105&view=excer pt) STONE MAIDEN by Anne Aquirre: A deconstructionist look at fantasy, filled with real, sympathetic characters. (http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0345457676&view=excer pt) THAGOTH by Michael McClung: The greater the good there is, the greater the evil that will rise to oppose it. But the heroes will have to conquer internal demons before they can defeat the external ones. A fantasy about the human heart at war. (http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=0345459113&view=excer pt) Check out the future of publishing by buying these e-books for just $2.99, or read the free excerpts online and see what your fellow workshoppers are doing to attract attention. WORKSHOP FOCUS CHATS Mark your calendars for the following upcoming writing chats: Focus on . . . Eric Bresin! Wednesday, October 22, 2003 @ 1 PM EDT Yes, that's right, the schedule is wide open after next week! If you've been waiting to schedule your chat, now's the time! Ditto if you were a focusee a while back and are ready for another go. Just email Pen Hardy. The stories upon which we will focus are posted on the OWW with the word 'focus' in the title. All chats are held in the DROWWZoo chat room on AIM. "SUBMIT OR DIE" CHALLENGE It's the challenge that will never end! To encourage each other to submit work for publication, mailing list members periodically issue a "Submit or Die" challenge with prizes for the most rejections, the first pro sale, and so on. Feel free to join the challenge. Rules and prizes are posted at: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/SOD.html NOVEMBER WRITING CHALLENGE November's challenge is bad faeries: boggans, kelpies, sluagh, trolls, pookas, goblins and all the wee beasties that go bump in the night. This is another challenge where the Internet can be your friend -- try some Googling, remember to check your sources, and if you find useful links, share the wealth. As always, any genre you want, but remember to push yourself. Write something you'd never try otherwise, or if that's too scary, try a different sub-genre -- urban fantasy instead of high fantasy, space opera instead of hard SF. Participating in the monthly challenges is an excellent way to stretch your skills and try things that you usually wouldn't tackle. Pick a genre you usually don't write in, or a subject that challenges you. Do something daring; these pieces are for fun, so don't worry about them. If it fails, no one ever needs to know about it, but a lot of these pieces succeed. Challenging yourself, truly trying something that scares you but speaks to you may pay off in ways you can't expect. Over 30 challenge stories have gone on to publication. For more complete information on the monthly writing challenges, visit: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/Challenge.html MARKET INFORMATION SUPERLUMINAL 1 is a new science fiction anthology, edited by Nigel Read, that's seeking submissions from Australian writers. Cross-genre stories (eg SF/whodunnit, SF/romance, SF/satire, SF/horror) will be considered, so long as the central premise for the story remains SFnal in some way and there are no fantasy elements in the story. Please do not submit stories in which the SF elements are merely setting. Payment is 1 cent per word, plus a copy of the anthology. Submissions may be made by email. Complete guidelines can be found at http://www.users.bigpond.com/saxonblue2003/superluminal1/ MEMBERSHIP PAYMENT INFORMATION How to pay: In the U.S., you can pay by PayPal or send us a check or money order. Outside of the U.S., you can pay via PayPal (though international memberships incur a small set-up fee); pay via Kagi (www.kagi.com--easier for non-U.S. people); send us a check in U.S. dollars drawn on a U.S. bank (many banks can do this for you for a fee); or send us an international money order (available at some banks and some post offices). If none of those options work for you, you can send us U.S. dollars through the mail if you choose, or contact us about barter if you have interesting goods to barter (not services). 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The rest will be tucked away to lengthen the shoestring that is our budget and keep us running! For more information: Payments: http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/memberships.shtml Bonus payments and information about our company: http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/bonuspayments.shtml Price comparisons: http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/memberships_comparison.shtml | - - EDITORS' CHOICES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | The Editors' Choices are chosen from the submissions from the previous month that show the most potential or otherwise earn the admiration of our Resident Editors. Submissions in four categories -- SF, F, horror, and short stories -- receive a detailed review, meant to be educational for others as well as the author. Reviews are written by our Resident Editors, award-winning authors and instructors like Jeanne Cavelos, James Patrick Kelly, and Kelly Link, and by experienced science-fiction and fantasy editor Jenni Smith-Gaynor. The last four months of Editors' Choices and their editorial reviews are archived on the workshop. Go to the "Read, Rate, Review" page and click on "Editors' Choices." Congratulations to this month's Editors' Choice authors! Editor's Choice, Fantasy Chapter/Partial Chapter: GEPPETTO'S LOG, CH. 6 by Mark Alger The sixth chapter of GEPPETTO'S LOG is an intriguing look into the Astarte character. She's not entirely evil as most traditional villainesses are portrayed, but she does have a certain cruel spark. Although I enjoyed the characterization of Alger's Astarte, there were some flaws that weaken the story. Fixing them could change the character, but not the overall tone. Astarte calls herself a "fertility goddess" and separates her identity from the "Goody Two-Shoes Aphrodite", who is a "love goddess." I'd like to see some clarification of these definitions. In most mythologies, fertility goddesses represented birth, rebirth, growth, creativity, and life. Astarte has consumed men; she even kills one at the end of this chapter. She does not give life, but takes it instead. If Astarte was to be defined as a Warrior Queen (as some Phoenician experts have defined one aspect of this goddess), her murders would seem more in tune with a deity bent on some kind of domination. She's manipulative, powerful, self-centered, and ego-centered. I'm not convinced that "fertility goddess" equals "Generative Whore" who has "updated" her act as a "90s kind of grrl." I also suggest broadening this description to "modern kind of grrl" otherwise the 90s reference dates this piece. The date doesn't add anything since there's not a lot of difference in the attitude of sexually active women from the last three decades. Using the "grrl" spelling also adds a certain punk aesthetic that seems out of place. I like the rivalry between Astarte and Aphrodite -- Astarte views the Greek goddess as a "Goody Two-Shoes." Astarte would be much older than Aphrodite and more multidimensional, which I think Alger is attempting to show. Unfortunately, the earlier chapters are not available to read, so I'm not sure how Astarte was previously shown. Her "bad girl" image is entertaining and I can certainly see why she's a major player. As Astarte gets ready to go clubbing, a lot of attention is paid to what she's wearing, but there's no mention of her skirt (which we know she's wearing at the end of the chapter). Incidentally, strappy sandals are usually thin heeled with a heel between 1 1/2"-2". But a low wedge-heeled sandal with straps is usually referred to as a wedge-heeled sandal. Also, slight usually means delicate. A curvy or voluptuous woman like Astarte is not delicate. Kate Moss or Christina Aguilera might be described as slight. Astarte applies cosmetics to "render Her face perfectly." If Astarte is a goddess, why does she need makeup to make her face perfect? I suggest adding something to explain why a goddess would need makeup -- maybe her human aspect is slightly flawed, or perhaps she can only manifest before the world in a less-than-perfect form like this Aspect she's chosen. In this world, deities seem to be no more than superhumans with powers and prognosticating talents. If they are to be more than human, another race altogether with physical flaws, then this needs to be shown more clearly. At the end of the chapter, Astarte manipulates a man to pleasure her. Where are her pantyhose? Might I suggest stockings and a garter or skip the hose altogether? Alger gives a lot of attention to her clothes, which can be a powerful tool for a character who is oozing sex, but loses any impact they might have had by forgetting to follow through. Is the impact of her outfit trying to convey her modern sexiness or is it a tool to show how she can manipulate her world? This needs some work. Clarify the Troll law and the goddess contract. Right now it's very convoluted and confusing. "...in order to interact with homo sapiens, it is necessary that Trolls undergo a kind of brainwashing to permit them to understand and accept the more distasteful -- to them -- aspects of contract law and obligations." Essentially Alger is saying that Trolls have to be brainwashed to understand human contracts. Astarte isn't human, so does this sentence imply that goddesses abide by _homo sapiens_ laws? But I thought the deities were part of a "secret society"; a world within a world. The sex scene seems fitting considering the beginning of the chapter. But why use the German word "gesunder" (it should be capitalized because all German nouns are capped) when Astarte is an Eastern goddess? Does she use all kinds of languages? If she does, sprinkle them around in this chapter. Is the man German? Is he Indonesian? Does Astarte instantly understand Indonesian or does everyone speak English? Overall, this is an interesting view of Astarte, loaded with details. There are some great descriptions and tone throughout this chapter -- we really get a glimpse of Astarte's personality. But be careful of those details and consider how and why the details are being revealed. Slutty clothes and public oral sex alone don't convince me Astarte is the character pulling all the strings. She's a powerful goddess worshipped thousands of years ago by people reveling in hedonistic behavior. Right now, she seems to be acting like a stereotypical "bad girl" and I think she's supposed to be much more than that. --Jenni Smith-Gaynor Former editor, Del Rey Books Editor's Choice, SF Chapter/Partial Chapter: IMPLAC - SECTION 10 by Zvi Zaks I have not been following Zvi Zaks's IMPLAC, and so some of my concerns about his world building may not be problems. Nonetheless, there is much to admire here. Some wags have written that all future science fiction is really about the present. While I think that's an overstatement, it is much more often true than not, and here we find an excellent example. I particularly enjoyed how Zvi deploys the time-honored SF technique of talking about our culture by showing how our descendants will misunderstand us. More on this in a moment. But first a few questions. I had difficulty imagining the ship which is the setting for half of this chapter. The first sentence tells us: "The sub orbital craft, a tapered silvery triangle, lifted straight up from the Honolulu landing pad and pushed Tommy down into his seat with only a mild heaviness." This suggests a vertical rocket-like launch. But two sentences later we discover: "He turned his head to watch a stewardess who was walking slowly down the aisles and checking for the few passengers who had forgotten to fasten their seatbelts." Now we seem to be in a plane that remains more or less horizontal in flight. But when the ship lands several pages later: "The rocket settled tail first onto the landing pad. Tommy watched as the video monitor showed a huge crane approach to tilt the rocket back to the horizontal so the passengers could disembark more easily." The only way I can make this work is to imagine that the seats all swivel, which isn't mentioned in the text. But hey, I'm an English major, not a rocket scientist. A worldbuilding concern I had the colonization of Venus. We learn at the end of the chapter that the year is 2406. I suppose it is possible that our sister planet with a crushingly dense atmosphere and surface temps ranging up to 750 K could be made habitable in four hundred years, but the time span seems a bit short to me. I hope the chronology of terraforming is covered earlier in the book. I think Tommy is working well as a character. Obviously his bout with cancer has shaken him. I like the way he uses his sexuality as an indicator of his recovery. The line "The disappointment [at a cool response from the flight attendant] was another sign that he was recovering from the cancer and its treatment" struck me as spot on. A bit of plotting that was a tad too rococo for my taste was the way Tommy gets access to Saul, the director of the museum where the Implac brains are supposedly stored. They have an initial encounter thanks to the many bribes Tommy distributes. But then Tommy is sent away to look at the exhibits before he can have the conversation he needs to have. When he comes back the next day he is given a page of runaround by an assistant before he gets to see the director again. If he had discovered a key plot point or had a moment of character development in between these meetings, the delay might have been justified. Here it feels like stalling. Also the end of the chapter feels rather like Zvi manipulating the characters as opposed to his character pursuing his own agenda. Tommy has come to Jerusalem to find the Implac brains, not to tell Saul Davidson his life story. For me, the most enjoyable part of this chapter was Tommy's bafflement at the various religions of our time. Zvi has to give him something to do while he's in transit from Honolulu to Jerusalem, so he tries in vain the flirt with the flight attendant. But that isn't really happening, so instead we get a skillfully crafted infodump about our own history! I particularly appreciated the suggestion that these people would only have the foggiest idea of who the Nazis were. The real danger to history is not Holocaust deniers but Holocaust forgetters. That the origins of the marauding robot Implacs are tied up in the popular imagination with absolutes of good and evil is a very promising theme. When the flight attendant says, "No. That can't be right. The robots developed their own wickedness. No human could be that evil. The creatures even turned against their own creators. But the Power was with us. It was the Power that saved us," this reader senses that the human society of Zvi's future is about to be whacked upside the head. Nice work, Zvi. Press on! --James Patrick Kelly Author of STRANGE BUT NOT A STRANGER and THINK LIKE A DINOSAUR http://www.jimkelly.net Editor's Choice, Short Story: "Appalachian Troll" by Barry Hollander Here's a great, funny, disturbing story, just in time for Halloween. It feels a bit like Little Red Riding Hood, only there's a troll instead of a wolf, and Granny Kellum is maybe even scarier than the troll who wants to eat her. What makes the story work is voice, setting/character, and magic based around spitting, smell, and nursery-style rhymes, that feels like real magic, specifically because it's constructed around such mundane details. Look at the first paragraph: "Granny Kellum saw the troll first, saw it in the fire one night. When Granny said she'd seen something you paid attention, so the next morning we crawled into Bobby's old Jeep and he drove us down the old logging road that comes as close as you can get to the Trail without walking. Then we walked." That's a paragraph guaranteed to keep an editor reading. So is this one: "I stepped back, but Granny laughed and laughed, until she coughed, then she kept hacking until she spat a wad of yellow phlegm on the bridge between them. The troll stared at Granny, at the spot, then he hacked and spit a black wad on top of her yellow. With the end of her stick, Granny stirred the mess together and the pair of them squatted, examining the result, which to me looked like one of those modern paintings you see in magazines sometimes, the ones with swirls and odd colors that make no sense at all even when some prissy expert says they do. The troll and Granny nodded and something passed between them, some understanding, as if they were listening to the same radio station and nodding to the same song. Each one knew enough to make life miserable for the other, that was my guess." There are also wonderful digressions (the sort that turn out not to be digressions at all when you look closer), as when the troll complains that he can't live in the cities because homeless people come and sleep under his bridges. Granny Kellum replies, "Why don't they just squeeze in with some of their own people? You always make room for family." This aside pays off at the end, thematically, when the troll catches both a hitchhiker, and the narrator's - Janie's - older, meaner brother, Bobby, and tries to lure Granny and Janie onto his bridge. You might strike a bargain with a troll over the leftovers of hikers, but what price are you willing to pay for family? I'd encourage anyone who wants to write short stories to allow themselves sufficient digressive play, when writing first drafts. Writing that rushes from Point A to Point B to Point Ending doesn't make for a successful short story. The climax of the story is hair-raising, but things trail off a bit at the end (no pun intended). I'd love to see one or two more sentences about Granny Kellum's illness. Does she take to her bed out of pique that she's been bested by a troll? Did she always love Bobby best? The other twist, of course, that you could play with, is whether Janie has had something to do with her grandmother's illness and death. Maybe Janie is just as scary as all the other characters in the story - like her grandmother, she has a keen sense of smell, and it seems likely that she's inherited the same kind of magic. The very last two sentences of the story have a jokey flavor to them. There's no resonance, or emotional weight, or even anything to give the reader a shiver up the spine. You could probably come up with something much stronger if you ended by focusing on Janie and the talents that she seems to have inherited from Granny Kellum. What kind of life is she going to have now? Does she miss Bobby and Granny Kellum? I'd also make the first description of the troll slightly scarier. Right now he comes across as a kind of troll-action figure. You can make him funny-looking and scary at the same time if you use the right details. I'd also work a bit more on the troll's dialogue about eating people. It seems as if he's trying to trick Granny Kellum and her family into believing that he doesn't like to eat people, and yet he's an old, old troll. Surely he's already acquired a taste for flesh, and surely Granny Kellum would know that. Maybe you could have the troll suggest that he's given up eating people. And I think the reason he wants to eat the Kellums (and Granny Kellum especially) is because he has a taste for witches/magic. Maybe you could work that in, at the climax, and have the troll say to Granny, wistfully, as he's eating Bobby, that Bobby will do, but he's sure that she'd taste even sweeter. I'd love to see slightly more of the setting. It seems pretty clear that this story is set around the Appalachian Trail. I wish that there was a name for the gorge that the troll now lives under, and there would probably even be a name for the area around the gorge. You could do more with local folklore and plant lore. Again, you don't need much, but it would make the story even stronger. A few line edits: first of all, there are lots of comma splices throughout the story. Go through and fix the ones that don't seem essential for voice, and then insert commas in dialogue when people address each other: "Come out troll" should be "Come out, troll" and "Well old woman, do you know" should be "Well, old woman, do you know," etc. Think about whether or not it would be more effective for the troll to call Granny Kellum "Granny" instead of "old woman" -- it seems sneakier, somehow, and more troll-like. When Janie says of the troll "at least he'd chosen a pretty place," why does she use the masculine pronoun? I'd suggest "at least the troll had chosen a pretty place" -- or you could have Granny Kellum say that she can tell from the smell that it's a male troll. When Janie says "He was well-spoken for a troll," I'd suggest cutting the last part of that sentence. "He was well-spoken" makes her seem more surprised. After all, how many trolls has she met? The description of the troll's teeth is terrific, but again, when Granny shows off "her own collection of teeth" I'd cut "which ranged in color from white to various shades of brown." It's sharper if you keep it short, and the reader can imagine for herself what Granny's teeth look like. It doesn't seem very convincing that Bobby turns green at the thought of eating spiders, when he doesn't flinch at the idea that the troll eats people, unless Janie tells us that Bobby has a horror of spiders. When Janie and her family see the hiker "bundled up in rope," it would be scarier/weirder if it didn't quite seem like ordinary rope. If you simply add an adjective and make it something like "bundled up in some kind of sticky rope," then it has more impact. "The troll came up then, straddled the hiker with a frown on its face." This is bad sentence construction. "The troll came up then, and straddled the hiker. It had a frown on its face" is better. "The hiker, a man in his 20s with blond curly hair, looked at us." Again, this is bad sentence construction, and you're missing an opportunity for Janie's eye to linger on the hiker, and make us feel even worse for him. Better: "The hiker, a man in his 20s, looked at us. He had blond curly hair." This way, we get a feeling that Janie might like the way he looks - she's noticing things about him, a piece at a time, the way we see people when we meet them. You don't need to pack everything into one sentence. "People disappeared in these mountains all the time." I would end that sentence right there. It's stronger, faster, and scarier. You don't need all the qualifiers that follow. "The troll hauled the hiker to the end of the bridge, the man's eyes wide in disbelief." Again, if you break that sentence apart so that the hiker gets a sentence of his own, it has more impact: "The man's eyes were wide in disbelief." "Vomit showed around the edge of the rag and it sprayed out his nose onto the bridge." It has more impact if you just say "Vomit sprayed out his nose, onto the bridge." Slow down the fight between Bobby and the troll just a bit. For action scenes, keep the sentences mostly short and punchy. For example, "I pulled out my own knife" is enough. You don't need the rest of the sentence: "figuring he was my brother and I had to help." I would also break up the sentence about Granny sniffing at the wind, as well as this sentence, like so: "When the wind blows the right way, I think I smell a bit of Bobby. As far as I know, the troll hasn't bothered any more hikers." And again, think about those very last two lines. Janie and her story deserve a better ending. --Kelly Link Editor of TRAMPOLINE, available from Small Beer Press http://www.kellylink.net/ Editor's Choice, Horror: "Growing Pains" by Heidi Anderson Heidi, you have some very powerful and interesting things to say in this story. Often, when I read stories, I feel that the authors are telling the kinds of story they like reading, which is fine, but that they have nothing new to add and no new insights to give. This makes the reading experience, ultimately, feel rather empty. But I don't feel that at all here. In addition to the powerful ideas, you have a strong, compelling main character, an involving plot, and a distinctive, effective style. For the first five pages of this, I was mainly very impressed. The last two pages didn't seem as strong as the rest, so I'll focus my attention there. One reason that the end didn't work well was that I guessed more or less what would happen on p. 3. You tell me in your second paragraph on p. 1 that this will be the story of how the character becomes normal. On p. 3, at the end of the Friday entry, you tell me what she considers normal. So now I know that a monster will come into her head before the end of the story. Now, many great stories tell us at the beginning how they will end, and we still feel a huge amount of interest and suspense, because we want to find out _how_ the character will come to that end. THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE by C. S. Lewis is one example, and "The Black Cat" by Poe is another. There can be many reasons why this works: great writing, fascinating characters. But the most common reason this works is simply that the ending we're told to expect seems so unlikely or difficult or compelling. We simply can't imagine how the character can reach that point, so we must keep reading to find out. Here, to be honest, I never really felt your main character did only good, and had no monster, so it seemed like it would be pretty easy for her to develop one. You only _tell_ me she's good, rather than _showing_ me, so it's never conveyed in a powerful, convincing way. The climax also lacks surprise. I'm anticipating on p. 2 that her shift supervisor is going to attack her, so there's no shock when she's finally attacked. I was waiting for it to happen. I didn't know that the attack would cause the monster to arise in her, but as that happens, it seems kind of a standard reaction, so I'm not surprised at that either. I was hoping for something really powerful and shocking at the climax, because you had built up the suspense well through your detailed description of her daily life. The story up to the climax seemed really original, so I had high expectations. To me the climax was more standard than the rest: girl is attacked by sicko and gets revenge, and perhaps will go on getting revenge. That's a pretty familiar horror ending. I'm not saying it can't work--writers take old ideas and make them fresh all the time--but I don't feel it is working for you yet. Having the guy cut up in chunks is nice, but it seems to come out of the blue, and is not resonant enough with your great ideas to make this climax stand up to the strength of the rest. Remember that a climax needs to feel both surprising and inevitable. There are many ways you could go about strengthening the climax. You could make it more surprising by having the attack come from a more unexpected quarter, such as one of her brothers, and more inevitable by planting more clues along the way. My suggestion, which you can take or leave, is to change the story in a more radical way. I'm much more interested in someone who believes she can only do right--that if something is right she must do it, and if it's not right she can't do it. That's a fascinating idea! I'd rather see you really show us that, and explore the implications, than claiming she's already that and focusing on her change to normalcy. I'd like to know how she can tell herself that leaving the house when her mother has taken pills is "right"--does she think her mother deserves to die if that's what she wants? Then how does she tell herself that it was "right" to come home too early, while her mother is still alive? For me, seeing the evolution of her beliefs about what is right, and what actions that forces her to take, would be really interesting. Other than that, I'll just make a couple stylistic comments: --"After dinner I walked to work and put in a six-hour shift making milkshakes and bagging fries, wishing a fugue state would conveniently come along so I didn't have to be there in my head as well as physically." The end of the sentence is awkward because you don't use parallel structure. Parallel structure means putting grammatically similar elements into similar form: "...so I didn't have to be there mentally as well as physically." (The other possibility would be to say, "so I didn't have to be there in my head as well as in my body.") --You sometimes seem to repeat words without realizing it. It's fine to repeat words on purpose, for emphasis. But writers often repeat words unintentionally, and that can make for some very awkward passages. You don't want to be emphasizing words that you don't mean to emphasize. An example: "When I got up my youngest brother was up watching cartoons. He hadn't had breakfast so I made him come up to the table and eat. I told him what had happened with mum and I promised him everything would be all right. He is only a baby and he gets scared sometimes. As soon as I knew he was okay I got my other brother and my sister up and we all had breakfast." Four uses of the word up is at least one too many. You'd do better with just one or two. --You are overusing looking/seeing/eye words, particularly on p. 6. This is a common weakness of developing writers today. We are fixated on eyes from TV and the movies, where actors convey a lot in a look. But in a story, a look is not a subtle expression conveying a range of emotions; it's just a look. These tend to be pretty empty words, and also tend to set up weak sentence structures. You're usually better off just describing what the character sees rather than saying she looked at it. If your point of view is clear and consistent, then we'll know your POV character is looking at whatever you describe. For example, "I sighed and stepped towards the street but a sharp click made me pause. I glanced back at the man and froze, my eyes drawn to the line of silver that started at the end of his arm. He had a knife, the brightest cleanest thing in the alley." You could write, perhaps, "I sighed and stepped towards the street, but a sharp click made me turn. A line of silver extended from the end of his arm. He had a knife, the brightest cleanest thing in the alley." That's about it. I hope my comments are helpful, because I think this story has a lot going for it, and I'd love to see you make it as strong as it can possibly be. --Jeanne Cavelos http://www.odysseyworkshop.org/ | - - REVIEWER HONOR ROLL - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | The Reviewer Honor Roll area of the workshop recognizes members who have given useful, insightful reviews. After all, that's what makes the workshop go, so we want to give great reviewers a little well-earned recognition! If you got a really useful review and would like to add the reviewer to the Reviewer Honor Roll, just use our online honor-roll nomination form -- log in and link to it from the bottom of the Reviewer Honor Roll page at http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/honorroll.shtml. Your nomination will appear on the first day of the next calendar month. The Honor Roll will show all Oct nominations beginning Nov 1. Here are some advance highlights from the September honor roll: Reviewer: Michael Staton Submission: portals of darkness - chapt. 3 -judgment by jim giammatteo Submitted by: Jim Giammatteo Nominator's Comments: Michael took a chapter that had been critted by about a dozen people already and managed to find 9-10 new points that were important that no one else had touched on. He was dead-on in several areas and the suggestions will go into the rewrite. One of the things i like about Michael's reviews is that he doesn't just say, this doesn't work, or i don't like this, but he takes the time and effort to provide an example of why he doesn't think it works and in most cases, a sample of what he thinks works better. He also found some inconsistencies that needed fixing. Thanks, Jim. Reviewer: Juliet Nordeen Submission: The Moonlit Days - YA October Challenge by Raymond Walshe Submitted by: Raymond Walshe Nominator's Comments: Juliet did an excellent job of giving me the mind's eye view of the reader. The likes, dislikes, gut reactions, sticking points, etc. I could not ask for a more complete review! Reviewers nominated to the honor roll during September include: kit davis, John Hoddy, John Tremlett, Tara Devine, Robert Haynes, pam obrien, jenni mckinney, elizabeth hull, Karen Over, Tony Valiulis, Gill Ainsworth, Sharon Lee, Holly McDowell, Leah Bobet, Treize Armistedian, Ilona Gordon, Juliet Nordeen, Juliet Nordeen, Heidi Anderson, Keith Robinson, PJ Thompson, Kirsten Corby, Debbie Moorhouse, Lizzie Newell, Leah Bobet, Bob Keller, Juliet Nordeen, Brad Beaulieu, Juliet Nordeen, Andrew Ringlein, Marlissa Campbell, Melinda Goodin, Linda Dicmanis, Pamela OBrien, Leonid Korogodski, Rick Dwyer, PJ Thompson, Michael Goodwind, Adrian Peter Firth, Gill Ainsworth, Michael Elliott, Rachel Swirsky, Kathryn Allen, Eric Bresin, Michael Goodwind, Helen Mazarakis. We congratulate them all for their excellent reviews. All nominations received in September can be still found until November 1 at: http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/honorroll.shtml | - - PUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | We can't announce them if you don't let us know! So drop Charlie a line at support@sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com whenever you have good news to share. Sales and Publications: Sandie Bergen told the mailing list that her story "The Cairngorm" has been accepted by _Whispering Spirits_ (http://clik.to/whisperingspirits), an ezine dedicated to ghost stories, for the October 15th edition. She wrote: "Though this particular story was not workshopped on OWW, I still have to thank everyone who reviewed my other stuff, pointing out my mistakes. . . or rather, pounding me over the head until I said 'hey, you're right!' I have learned so much in the last ten months; it's absolutely amazing." Double the pleasure! Leah Bobet reports two sales this month. Her flash piece "Key of Heaven" appears in the current issue of _Aoife's Kiss_. And her EC runner-up story "Rosewater for His Lips" has been accepted for the premiere issue of _Arabella Romances_. "Almost forgot," Hannah Wolf Bowen e-mailed us a few days ago. "Sold my Editor's Choice, 'My Kingdom,' to _Abyss & Apex_ (http://www.klio.net/abyssandapex/). Glad that one found a home." So are we! Little woo hoo! Eric Bresin's flash "It's the End of the World and It's Your Fault" is in the current issue of Nevermore Magazine (http://www.nevermoremag.com/). Stella Evans's short story "Indra's Rice" appears this week in _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com/). Go read it. Really. Jennifer Michaels and former OWWer Cal Bates co-authored "Vanity," which will be available on Halloween in the _Dead in Thirteen Flashes_ anthology (http://www.dreampeople.org/). She told us about working with a co-author: "This was my first experience working with another author on a project. It started with a very rough draft, which I e-mailed to a friend for comments. He in turn rewrote the story entirely, using a different twist on the same idea. I'd recommend trying it at least once, especially if you're having a hard time making a certain story work. In my case, it took a flat story and made it sellable." Derek R. Molata sold "Counting Bubbles" to _Champagne Shivers_ (http://www.samsdotpublishing.com/champagne/cover.html) for their February 2004 issue. He sends "thanks to Cynthia Cloughly, Sherry Iskrzycki, and Gill Ainsworth for their comments." Derek also sold four poems to _The Breath E-Zine_ (http://www.thebreath.com/ezine.htm), a Canadian online literary journal, for their November 2003 issue. On fire! Ruth Nestvold (http://www.ruthnestvold.com) is having an amazing year. She just sold her story "King Orfeigh" to _Realms of Fantasy_. James Stevens-Arce's screenplay "Sins of the Heart" is a quarterfinalist in the 2003 Slamdance Screenplay Competition. Pretty darn cool. Lisa von Biela was "very happy to report I just received a second acceptance from _Alien Skin Magazine_ (http://www.alienskinmag.com), for my story 'The Performance.' It's a short short, workshopped here first, and it's scheduled to appear in the November 2003 edition!" _Deep Magic_ (http://www.deep-magic.net/) has accepted Wade White's story "A Hero By Any Other Name." Congratulations, Wade! | - - WORKSHOP STATISTICS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Number of members as of 10/20: 671 paying, 102 trial Number of submissions currently online: 634 Percent of submissions with 3 or more reviews: 74.6% Percent of submissions with zero reviews: 3.0% Number of submissions in September: 545 Number of reviews in September: 2395 Ratio of reviews/submissions in September: 4.39 Estimated average word count per review in September: 743.3 (Wow!) Number of submissions in October to date: 257 Number of reviews in October to date: 1234 Ratio of reviews/submissions in October to date: 4.80 Estimated average word count per review in October to date: 729.7 Total number of under-reviewed submissions: 74 (11.7% of total subs) Number over 3 days old with 0 reviews: 6 Number over 1 week old with under 2 reviews: 25 Number over 2 weeks old with under 3 reviews: 43 | - - FEEDBACK - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | TIP: ASSIGN KEYSTROKES Cat Collins e-mailed us with this tip: "I use a lot of italics in my work, to denote mindspeak, usually. I discovered the 'assign keystrokes' function on my computer! Some brilliant person made it easy to customise the keyboard within a word processing programme. I have assigned the tags for open italics, close italics, line break, open bold, and close bold to function keys not actively assigned in my WP programme (WordPerfect). Now, instead of typing the whole tag, I just hit the appropriate function key. So I don't forget, I've put tiny stickers under the keys with the tag they represent. You could also use this method for those words that contain multi-national symbols like the accent mark over so many vowels in Fantasy writing! Assigning a particular word to a key saves you the time of typing the word, opening your 'symbols' file, and selecting the multi-national character to insert in the word. I just wish I'd discovered this before reaching the last chapters of my second novel! Darnit." 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? Share it with us and we'll publish it in the next newsletter. Just send it to support@sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com and we'll do the rest. Until next month -- Just write! The Online Writing Workshop for Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com support@sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com | - - Copyright 2003 Online Writing Workshops, LLC - - - - - - - - -|