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O | The Online Writing Workshop for SF, F & H Newsletter, December 2004 W | http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com W | Become a better writer! | - - CONTENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - Workshop News: Interview with Elizabeth Bear XiNK! freeware January writing challenge Documentary-makers seek SF writers/readers Market news Membership payment information - Editors' Choices for November submissions - Reviewer Honor Roll - Publication Announcements - Workshop Statistics - Tips & Feedback | - - WORKSHOP NEWS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Happy holidays! The transition from the end of one year to the beginning of the next is traditionally a time to take stock of the things we're thankful for and measure progress toward our goals. Here at OWW, we're proud to welcome back Karin Lowachee, author of WARCHILD and BURNDIVE, winner of the Warner Aspect First Novel contest and finalist for numerous other awards, and most recently judge for the Philip K. Dick Award. Karin, an OWW alum, has agreed to become OWW's new Resident Editor for Science Fiction. WARCHILD won Editor's Choice recognition several times while it was being workshopped. We're glad to have Karin back with OWW in this new capacity and thankful she has time to share her skills with us! As for our goals in 2005... some of them are, or should be, your goals. What do you want to accomplish this year with your writing? And are there any changes we can make to the workshop to help you reach them? Let us know... e-mail support@onlinewritingworkshop.com. INTERVIEW WITH ELIZABETH BEAR The latest Spectra newsletter includes a feature on OWW author Elizabeth Bear. To read her "Thoughts on Writing HAMMERED" go to: http://www.randomhouse.com/bantamdell/spectra/newsletter/ XiNK! FREEWARE OWW member Chris Murphy wrote to us looking for beta testers for his new freeware program for writers. This is the description he sent us: "XiNK! is a project based approach to writing. It's a word processor that has all the non-essential features (see MS Word and other office type solutions) stripped out. This leaves the writer free to concentrate on one thing -- writing. The application is based on the concept of "structure not format"; the only time a writer should ideally worry about format is when they are ready to proof or submit their work. This application has a collection of built-in exporters (some are still under development) that the writer can use to save their projects for distribution/submission in the appropriate formats (title page, footers, headers, etc.)." Members interested in testing the program should e-mail Chris for more information: cmurphy@fuelindustries.com JANUARY WRITING CHALLENGE Jodi, OWW's Challenge Dictator, Unicorn Warlord, and general menace, sent the following announcement: "Cows stare blank-eyed from their field across the way, and horses paw the packed dirt. The sweet scent of fresh-cut hay dissipates as the writers enter the henhouse. Summer's (we have people in Oz--we can do that, right?) heat lessens in the cool shade. The Challenge Dictator waits for the writers to settle down and stop complaining about the smell before she bends down and picks up a chicken. "Our January Challenge is 'Fancy Chickens.'" Participating in the monthly challenges is an excellent way to stretch your skills. 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! Over 30 challenge stories have gone on to publication. Challenging yourself, truly trying something that scares you but speaks to you, may pay off in ways you can't expect. Please don't post your challenge pieces to the workshop until January 1st. Include "January Challenge" in your title so you can show off how fancy (maybe not like the chickens) you are to all your friends. For more complete information on the monthly writing challenges, visit: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/Challenge.html DOCUMENTARY-MAKERS SEEK SCIENCE FICTION READERS/WRITERS The following e-mail came into OWW Support and we agree to pass it on: "My name is Annette King and I attend Aims Community College in Greeley, Colorado. I am also the (fortunate or unfortunate -- I'll get back to you on that) producer and assistant director of a documentary slated to begin production commencing our next semester in January. Currently the sole intention of the documentary is to put a nice piece into my crew's and my own portfolio, get it aired on our college's cable station and to submit into film festivals like Sundance, Cannes, and the Academy of Motion Picture and Science's Student Academy Awards. "This documentary is about science fiction and fantasy. The documentaries I've uncovered thus far, focus on a particular series, movie or the fans. None have really touched on how these genres have affected a culture, so that is what this documentary is focused on exploring. My crew and I seek to discover how science fiction and fantasy have contributed and impacted American culture and mythology. We intend on doing this through interviewing the staff, organizers and audience of Starfest, a local science fiction and fantasy convention. "Additionally, I would like to get interviews from people across America on this subject (and if you're in another country, our focus may be America, but we are interested in finding out how these genres affect the cultures and mythology of other countries too. Do not hesitate to participate!). "If you're interested in helping us, please contact me at beammeupfrodo-2005@yahoo.com. I'm actually posting for help on several groups, so please let me know which group you're posting from so I can give you the right questions for the genre and/or series that you,d like to interview for. Some, but not all, of the interview questions will be used as voice-overs in the documentary, and before we use them, you will be sent a waiver to mail us with your permission. If you would like to send us a recording of your answers yourself, please let me know in your e-mail and I'll send you the audio and video specs and address to mail the video or audio interview. "Also, if you live in Northern and Eastern Colorado (Morgan and Weld counties, Denver to Colorado Springs areas, the ski resorts and such) or live Southern Wyoming, or will be visiting these areas in the next 6 months, OR attending Starfest 2005, please let me know. We would love to get together with anyone in the area to do on camera interviews. And if there's anyone out there that would like to videotape interviews in their area or at their local convention, please let me know. The more the merrier! "Quick FAQ: If we use your interview or footage, you will be included in the credits. No, we cannot pay you; my crew and I are broke college students trying to dig up enough just to do the documentary. If you're under 18, you can still participate, but we'll have to have your guardians sign a waiver too if we use your interview. "So if this sounds like something you'd like to participate in, I look forward to hearing from you! Annette King: beammeupfrodo-2005@yahoo.com" MARKET NEWS Say... isn't this a great market? The next reading period for _Say..._ begins January 1. Check this month's "Sales and Publications" for some OWWers who've sold there recently. The submission guidelines may be found here: http://journalscape.com/ChristopherRowe/2004-12-06-18:40 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). Scholarship fund and gift memberships: you can give a gift membership for another member; just send us a payment by whatever method you like, noting who the membership is for and specifying whether the gift is anonymous or not. We will acknowledge receipt to you and the member. Or you can donate to our scholarship fund, which we use to fully or partially cover the costs of an initial paying membership for certain active, review-contributing members whose situations do not allow them to pay the full membership fee themselves. Bonus payments: The workshop costs only 94 cents per week, but we know that many members feel that it's worth much more to them. So here's your chance to award us with a bonus on top of your membership fee. For example, is the workshop worth five dollars a month to you? Award us a $11 bonus along with your $49 membership fee. 25% of any bonus payments we receive will go to our support staff, sort of like a tip for good personal service. 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 Jeanne Cavelos, Kelly Link, and Karin Lowachee and experienced SF & F 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: THIS ONCE PROUD LAND, Ch. 2 by Mel Mason I was so drawn to the mystery unfolding in the second chapter of Mel Mason's THIS ONCE PROUD LAND that I read the first chapter, too. I agree with one of the OWW reviewers tat this chapter could have been combined with the first. The opening bit of dialogue here in the second chapter is a great hook following the ending of the first, but a chapter break could suffice for breaking the scenes. In the midst of many typical epic fantasies that are big sellers and have huge followings -- and I'm a fan of many -- this smaller story has great appeal. I very much liked the idea of a young king trying to right the wrongs of his predecessors. Guided by an advisor, King Maxin seems intent on putting his kingdom into order. The discovery of a prisoner in the dungeons, who had been incarcerated for twenty-two years for a seemingly minor crime, brings to light a riddle. Who is the prisoner, and why had no one petitioned his freedom? The information in this second chapter is a nice easy way to introduce the reader to both the building plot and the intricacies of the world. So far, the culture is the usual feudal framework we all recognize in fantasy. The characters seem to have a strong presence, and I look forward to seeing more of the prisoner. I would like the see two things clarified. The POV is weak. In the first chapter, the opening felt as if the story was going to be told from the POV of Natan, the advisor. The first few sentences of that chapter were great hooks and showed a solid personality. But as that chapter went on and this chapter was introduced, that voice drifted into the background and became muddled with the young king's and the 3rd person POV. Stick closer to either the king's POV or Natan's, and the story will have more flavor and depth. The other clarification I'd like here is the sense of conflict. The mystery of the prisoner's identity is solved at the very beginning of this chapter. The young king's desire to correct his predecessors' mistakes is an interesting plot device, but I'd like to get a stronger sense here of how that action will affect the rest of the story. The question seems to be about the prisoner's initial reaction and then to the prisoner's long-term reaction (or his relatives) to being freed. An audience with the king and Natan could reveal more about the prisoner and his situation than this focus on the passive conversation between King Maxin and his advisor. The mystery is still very fresh, so the information parceled out in the conversation is relevant; I'm not sure this is the strongest way to show that information to the reader. Unless the prisoner's relatives have a stronger part to play in this novel, to focus on their disinterest in releasing their Earl isn't enough to hold up this chapter. I'm curious about the fate of the prisoner and what he will do once he's well enough to return to his ancestral estates. This is an interesting and accessible story that has a potential to go the distance. Focus the POV and try moving the focus to the confrontation with the prisoner for a stronger chapter. --Jenni Smith-Gaynor Former editor, Del Rey Books Editor's Choice, SF Chapter/Partial Chapter: GRASSES-IN-THE-WIND, Chapters 8 & 9, by by Ian Morrison Jumping into this novel midway, I still found it very easy to follow and intriguing enough that I immediately went to Chapter 9 to see what happened next. The clear rundown before the chapters was helpful; as synopsis writing is important when submitting novels to publishers, the seven plot points listed gave enough of an overview of the action and characters that I was not confused unduly even reading this in the middle. I wish I had read from the beginning, however, since the science fiction element was obviously in the first chapter. Yet though these chapters read like an alternate history, there are sufficient "weird things" like Lil's Maze visions and her unusual strength to keep the reader reminded that this is not a straight history-influenced tale a la Guy Gavriel Kay. In fact this story reminds me more of Maureen McHugh's work. The first scene in Chapter 8 I found to be a bit confusing, as Mey was telling a story about her past, they were sitting in the present in front of a fireplace, and then Lil was remembering visitors from that morning. The time frames for everything muddled what was actually being said and the wonderful images evoked in the telling. Though the writing is clear and unencumbered, I found my mind jumping around tracking the threads. I think it can be easily fixed if in the second-to-last paragraph there is a segue between Mey's telling and this line: "When the cups had been emptied and talk slowed, an old man asked about a nephew he hadn't seen in fifty years." Perhaps just mentioning Lil remembered again. I did like the fact though that in Lil's remembering she actually missed part of Mey's story -- this struck me as very real, as when our minds wander we do miss what people say. Not all narratives (or parts of narratives) need to be linear (in fact I tend to enjoy narratives that don't follow the same track of most other books), but in mixing timeframes you have to be extra careful with segues in order to ground the reader. One of the things I loved about this submission was the dynamic of the prose, the use of telling details and specific uncliched language without overdoing it in order to create an image. Example: "She started behind the shop, scrubbing back and forth to loosen what looked like weeks of accumulated filth. Always dirt, she thought, digging in the dirt my whole life, but she rejoiced in the smooth rhythm of the work--push, lift, push, lift--until the broom became a fierce weapon." The characters are all uniquely drawn, though I did find myself wondering about what more might be going on in Lil's mind as she's in this weird and sometimes frightening situation. She doesn't seem overly worried or moved about anything until the end of Chapter 9 and the appearance of the T'ot Man and Woman (fantastic characters, with that hint of otherworldiness that tweaks the reader again that this is not just a straight alternative history). As this seems to be a tight third person narrative, I'd like to feel more of the subtleties of Lil's emotions and worries in this unfamiliar world and situation. The roots are all there, just amp it up a bit more. Another thing that makes this submission sing is the actual pacing of the prose. Sentences are varied in length and structure, creating a rhythm to the words that helps propel the narrative. Too often in less mature writing the prose tends to follow similar patterns, delivering details more than creating a mood or a style through actual sentence structure and imagry. But if a writer pays attention to the "music" of a sentence, and implements appropriate imagery to evoke the world and character, you are writing on multiple levels. Example: "During the night, the empty sky drew heat from the earth so that morning puddles were ice, and the dirt road down to Jalkala sported a crust of iron that made a satisfying crunch under Lil's boots. She stole a look at Mey. The two of them reminded Lil of a photograph she had once seen of Russian peasant women following the Soviet army on its march to Leningrad. Bundled in dark wool, heads down, plodding. She hoped it wasn't an omen." Overall I find in just these two chapters a well-illustrated world, believably peopled, that I would definitely keep reading about if this were a book in my hand. --Karin Lowachee Author of BURNDIVE and CAGEBIRD (April 2005) http://www.karinlowachee.com Editor's Choices, Short Story: "Godivy" by Vylar Kaftan "Better Late Than Never" by Clayton Deschamps Much like last month, I've chosen two stories which are very different animals from each other. There were many other excellent stories last month, including an imaginative alternative history of Tolkien's England, Bill McKinley's "Return of the Queen," and James Lemacks' vivid, somewhat surreal "Surgery in Gil." -- K.L. "Godivy" by Vylar Kaftan This is a engaging and odd story. Some of the imagery is strikingly beautiful: the mermaid stripper, covered in ivy, lounging in the back of a taxi; the liberated photocopiers that grow tails and swim out the windows of the office. The reader is disarmed by the Alice-in-Wonderland almost-sensical dialogue, and by the strangeness of the office world, where administrators fight over the sexual favors of their photocopiers and raise their children on expresso. While I wouldn't suggest making this story too much longer, there are certain parts of it that don't quite have the right weight yet. We are told that the children of the administrators -- the grayfaces -- are present in the office, "attached to each other" and bred for "the horrors of office work," and that the office administrators are in heat, but we don't see either the grayfaces or any administrators other than The Director. The office isn't really even sketched in, and it needs to be. Some questions and suggestions: When the mermaid frees the photocopiers, why doesn't she take her transplanted child, The Director, with her? Whose child is Jared? "Their fathers raised them suckling on expresso in the nipples. Nipples are a popular drink at the strip club." Who is breast-feeding the grayfaces? And you might want to ditch the strip club. You don't want to introduce more locations that the reader doesn't get a chance to visit, especially in the first paragraph of the story, where they have more weight. You should consider beginning the story with the second paragraph, with Godivy -- with Jared drinking expresso from her nipples. Work in the details of the first paragraph later, when Jared gets to the office. Take a look at the end of the second paragraph. Sentences like "She is fine for breeding and he likes that about her" don't work very hard. The sentence above, "She is the mother of his first hundred duplicates, and only one of them is smudged" is a much stronger, more striking sentence. Paragraphs should always end on vivid images, or sentences that advance character or plot. There's something confusing and hasty about the description of the potted plant shattering when Jared throws it through the office window, and the vines that then explode up and capture him. Is Jared watching out through the window to see what happens? How high up are they? Keep us firmly in Jared's POV, and show us the strangeness as it happens. Don't speed up moments which should be beautiful and weird. Instead, try slowing these moments down, lingering and describing them vividly. "'Who - what - are you?' asks Jared, straining against the vines which entrap him." Why not break up the line of dialogue and the description, so that they both stand out better, and so that the vines are more menacing? Since the vines are extremely lively, why not rework the sentence so that it's the vines who are acting on Jared? Most of the time that a writer joins an important line of dialogue to an important action, I'd suggest breaking them apart, so that both dialogue and action get the appropriate stress. In a story this short and strange, it's important that the language be as clear and precise as possible. I can't stress this strongly enough. Every sentence of a short story, especially one so unconventional, has to matter. Every sentence has to ring like a bell. Watch out for the usual kind of thing, like unclear pronoun references and distracting and unbalanced constructions in sentences like "Two feet poke out from the leaves like an unearthed corpse." When Jared hears laughing behind him, is it the Director laughing or Godivy? When "more photocopiers swim through," what exactly are they swimming through? Don't let the reader get caught up in small, unimportant details or constructions which are muddy rather than transparent and clear. "The Director is motionless, his twig fingers reaching toward Jared's photocopier." This sentence makes no sense. And I'm curious, I admit, how Jared first became aware that the Director had designs on Jared's photocopier. Do other administrators lust after this same photocopier? And how does Jared immediately know that Godivy also wants his photocopier? And does the photocopier look back at Jared when she swims away through the window, or does she not look back? What did Godivy mean when she said "It's my turn now."? This seems confusing rather than mysterious, or intriguing. I think you may be making a mistake by ending the story with Jared, instead of with the photocopiers diving down the waterfall of ivy. I'd build on that image and make it something joyful and vivid. This isn't really a story about Jared and the office. This is a story about escape and strangeness. There seems to be some interesting sociological subtexts here, about race, gender, even the environment. There's Godivy, who tells Jared that black mermaids have feet, and that "no one painted us in the nineteenth century because they said we weren't even people." There's the image of the black and white chessboard, the liberation of the sexually subjugated photocopiers. To be honest, I have no idea where the story is going with these issues, and I'm not sure that the author does, either. A story this strange and perverse is difficult to critique, after I've taken a look at line edits. But there's something here worth pursuing. This story stuck in my brain after I'd finished reading it. "Better Late Than Never" by Clayton Deschamps "Better Late than Never" is a lively, solid traditional SF story in which competent and problem-solving female and male colonists arrive at their target planet only to discover that someone else has gotten there first. I don't have any quibbles with the technical aspects of the story, and the writing is sturdy, but there's no consistent POV character, which is a setback. Frankly, there's no reason not to keep a tight, focused POV. We need to start a bit smarter: what the reader gets in the first few pages is mostly sitcom-witty banter instead of character and setting. I see this a lot when I read slush, where instead of dialogue and description which tells me who the characters are, and what their relationships to each other are like, the author supplies arch, empty-calorie banter. The speech tags are also cliches of too-cute wryness. Characters take deep breaths, or raise their eyebrows. They sigh. I worry that writers feel they need to write characters this way because they know that they are supposed to show (show characters raising their eyebrows), not tell. Frankly, I'd like to see a bit more telling. No reader cares if the dialogue is cute and witty if they don't care about your characters who are speaking that dialogue. Why not choose either Felix Chambery or Olga as your main character? Why not tell us something about Felix from Olga's POV, or vice versa? At the moment, none of the characters -- except for Olga and the Lupin colonist Ng -- feel the slightest bit rounded. You might consider combining Felix and Goode: I consistently confused them as I read. Most writers spend most of their descriptive energies early on in their stories. But while there's some wonderful description of the planet Lupin, later on, there's almost no description of the colony ship for the first twenty pages or so. Instead, we get some brief throwaway lines like "cramped nagivation room," "low ceiling," and "lined with pipes and conduits." We don't even find out until much too late how many people are onboard ship: 155, I think, but much of the time the crew (passengers?) are referred to as a "crowd." Who is this crowd? Why are there so many women? How and why did they come together as colonists? Are there families on board, or only scientists? Who sent them, and what was their political situation when they left Earth? Again, I'd like to see the prose tightened. You can't afford clunky sentences in a short story. There's some extremely nice writing here, but there are also sentences like this one: "The volume and the violence of it made it feel like a terrible crisis, but it just went on and on." Why not just "The roar went on and on."? The roar is followed by snapshot parallel sentences of various characters fidgeting or staring intensely. Again, stick close to one point of view. Show us Roxanne, through Olga's POV, and you can show us, quite economically, that both women are anxious. The reader wants telling, specific, unusual details that ring true. I know that's asking a lot of a writer, but writers need to train themselves to know when they've found that telling detail, and learn to do it over and over again. Take a look at the next paragraph: "The trance was broken when Roxanne announced, in a conversational tone, that the streamers were deploying. The ship lurched distinctly as they unfurled, the first of the series of airbrakes and parachutes that were intended to keep the ship aligned in the atmosphere, and control its velocity. The sky of bright stars had the pale, blue tinge of dawn." That first sentence is clunky, and terribly passive. This works much better: "'Streamers deployed,' Roxanne announced, in a conversational tone. Olga's trance broke. The ship lurched distinctly as the streamers unfurled. . .," etc. The rest of that paragraph works very nicely. The description of the stars is beautiful. As I said earlier, the writing really comes to life whenever there's a chance to describe Lupin, and there's something very appropriate about that. Lupin is what Olga and her crew have pinned all their hopes on. It's the thing that might get snatched away from them. The next few paragraphs are lovely, too: "The stars were still visible through the thin gauze of stratosphere when the small pilot-chute went out, followed a few minutes later by the first main parachute. The ship suddenly had a down, what had been the walls were now floor and ceiling." "Suddenly, Olga felt far away from the noise and motion. She was struck by the fact that she was leaving space and space-travel behind, probably forever, and her fear made way for a nostalgic melancholy. She looked up at the ceiling, which had been the wall, and in her mind she said goodbye, although she wasn't sure to what, exactly, she was saying it." "Through the window, now transformed into skylights, she saw the main ring parachutes fill with air; around them was the violet-blue sky of Lupin." The writing here is strongly intuitive. First we have a the beautiful description of the stars and the sky, and then Olga's farewell to her journey, and then Lupin again. That circular journey is excellent. What I'd like is to see all of the prose work at this level of description, character, and voice. Consider sentence rhythms: when the crew goes outside to wait for the Lupine settlers, we are told that Olga and 15 other crew members suit up. "The number was chosen because there were only fifteen firearms aboard." The problem with that sentence is that it doesn't tell us who chose the number. That sentence doesn't flow. Instead, breaking it up gives more punch to the information you want to convey: "The number had been chosen carefully. There were only fifteen firearms aboard." Take a look at this paragraph: "The interior of the ship became increasingly hot. The thermal stresses made bulkheads suddenly ring like steel drums. The air became close, and smelled of sweat and ozone. The ship began to shake and groan in earnest." Look at how it can be rewritten, to emphasize tension, with short, direct, clear sentences: "The interior of the ship became increasingly hot. The bulkheads rang like steel drums under the thermal stresses. The air was close. The cabin smelled of sweat and ozone. The ship groaned." My last complaint has to do with the title, which seems dreadfully unfunny. A good story deserves a good non-jokey title. On the other hand, I like the ending of the story a great deal. The problem at hand has been solved, but the situation on Lupin is nicely complicated. If you're willing to invest a bit more time in making your characters come to life, then it seems as if you'll have plenty of new problems to enmesh them in. --Kelly Link Editor of TRAMPOLINE and co-editor of YEAR'S BEST FANTASY & HORROR http://www.kellylink.net/ Editor's Choice, Horror: no review this month. | - - 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, 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 December nominations beginning January 1. Here are two advance highlights from this month: Reviewer: Heather Marshall Submission: The Butterflies Smell Like Cigarettes by Holly McDowell Submitted by: Holly McDowell Nominator's Comments: Heather showed me the flaws, big and small, of my chapters and wrote so eloquently about them that I instantly understood. Her comments covered everything from pacing to logic, to voice, to character and on and on. She also tempered it with the right amount of encouragement by telling me what worked for her and how she interpreted the story. This review put a giant smile on my face because it showed me exactly how to improve my chapters and inspired me to keep going with the novel. Thank you so much, Heather! Reviewer: M Thomas Submission: I Am Gramelian (Part 2) by Wade White Submitted by: Amos Peverill Nominator's Comments: I thought the reviewer did a fantastic job at looking at the internal consistency of the story. The story was very well written, and the natural tendency is to overlook these issues when the writing is smooth. M Thomas is a great reviewer, and I'd be pleased to have M tear up my chapters any day. :-) Reviewers nominated to the honor roll during November include: Gill Ainsworth, Kathryn Allen (3), Treize Aramistedian, Sheridan Baz, Elizabeth Bear, Aaron Brown, Susan Curnow (2), Linda Dicmanis, Brian Dunn, Rhonda S. Garcia, Elizabeth Hull, Esme Ibbotson, Vylar Kaftan, Jeffrey Kuczynski-Brown, Dena Landon, Heather Marshall, Pamela OBrien (2), Daniel Sackinger (3), Jone Sterling, John Tremlett (2), Sandra Ulbrich, Alex Van Rossum, Walter Williams. We congratulate them all for their excellent reviews. All nominations received in November can be still found until January 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. Nigel Atkinson's short story "The Interstellar Public Health Inspector" is included in the DEEPER MAGIC anthology recently published by Amberlin Books, available at Amazon.com in the US (http://tinyurl.com/4dodb) and UK (http://tinyurl.com/46emj). We notice chance (a.k.a. Catherine M. Morrison) in the list of authors for the latest issue of _Say...have you heard this one?_ Hannah Wolf Bowen sold workshop grad "Vision" to _Say...have you heard this one?_ She informs us that it's a sequel to "Steal a Heart," forthcoming from _Alchemy_ and adds a possibly vigorous, though under-punctuated, "Huzzah." Marlissa Campbell sold a reprint of "Germ Theory" to _Periodot Books_ (http://www.peridotbooks.com/)! She informs us that "it's scheduled to appear in Vol. 23, Jan 1, 2005. It was one of the first stories I ever wrote (before I joined the workshop), and it originally appeared in the online magazine _HMS Beagle_ in March 2001." Wendy Delmater's workshopped story "Retaliation" was a semi-finalist in _Futures Mysterious Anthology Magazine_'s "Slsar Twist" contest, a competition of Hitchcockian-style stories with surprise endings. See http://www.fmam.biz/contests/twist.html for more. The indefatigable Mark Fewell has a story, "China's Song," in the December _Astounding Tales_ (http://www.astoundingtales.com/vol1_iss3/china.html). He informs us that the story "was workshopped at one time on the horror workshop before the workshops merged." Charles Coleman Finlay sold workshop grad "Moons Like Great White Whales" to _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com). Jennie Goloby sent us two for the, and we quote, "Woo-hoo Files." She says that "Story House Coffee just published 'Coo,' the one about the woman with a pigeon for a father. They're a great market--it's really fun to get a can of coffee with your story printed on it. And the coffee's good, too!" She also sold "A Man and His Son" to _Night to Dawn_ for the October 2005 issue. We are exceedingly happy to announce that Ed Hoornaert's science-fiction novel THE TRIAL OF TOMPA LEE, the opening chapters of which were critiqued on OWW, has been accepted for publication by Five Star Speculative Fiction. We'll be publishing more news here as we get it. Sandra McDonald sold her story "Constituent Work" to _Say...have you heard this one?_ (http://projectpulp.com/item_detail.asp?bookID=-1039498082). Ruth Nestvold has sold "Happily Ever Awhile" to _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com). She tells us that "The story was up on the workshop in October as 'Ever Afters.' I got great suggestions from Wade White, Elizabeth Bear, Linda Dicmanis, Daniel Sackinger, Vylar Kaftan, and Kevin Miller, all of which helped me to whip it into shape." Sarah Prineas'a story "Liberty Pipe" will appear in _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com). She adds, "My third story sale to SH, a personal goal!" If that weren't enough, her dark fantasy story "The Dog Prince" appears in the Winter issue of _Talebones_. Jaime Lee Voss, who gets top-billing because she e-mailed us with the news, and John Borneman sold "Minotaur" to _The Magazine of Speculative Poetry_. The section Jaime wrote is written from the perspective of Queen Pasiphae and how she pities the Minotaur, and the section John wrote written from the perspective of King Minos, and how he envys the Minotaur. Jaime adds "_The Magazine of Speculative Poetry_ was the fourth market we tried." | - - WORKSHOP STATISTICS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Number of members as of 12/20: 658 paying, 68 trial Number of submissions currently online: 495 Percent of submissions with 3 or more reviews: 68.9% Percent of submissions with zero reviews: 2.8% Average reviews per submission (all submissions): 4.86 Estimated average review word count (all submissions): 646.79 Number of submissions in November: 356 Number of reviews in November: 1504 Ratio of reviews/submissions in November: 4.22 Estimated average word count per review in November: 680.6 Number of submissions in December to date: 206 Number of reviews in December to date: 911 Ratio of reviews/submissions in December to date: 4.42 Estimated average word count per review in December to date: 740.1 Total number of under-reviewed submissions: 90 (18.2% of total subs) Number over 3 days old with 0 reviews: 6 Number over 1 week old with under 2 reviews: 29 Number over 2 weeks old with under 3 reviews: 55 | - - FEEDBACK - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 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 2004 Online Writing Workshops - - - - - - - - - - - |
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