O | The Online Writing Workshop for SF, F & H Newsletter, October 2005 W | http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com W | Become a better writer! | - - CONTENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - Workshop News: OWW blogs World Fantasy Convention November writing challenge Strange Horizons fund raiser Membership payment information - Editors' Choices for October submissions - Reviewer Honor Roll - Publication Announcements - Workshop Statistics - Tips & Feedback | - - WORKSHOP NEWS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | We apologize for the long delay in this month's newsletter. We'd like to pretend that FEMA was in charge of getting it to you, or claim that kids' costume preparations just took precedence, but really it was a perfect-storm combination of other pressing work obligations, travel, health problems, etc. But the month's not over yet and you still have a chance to kill Charlie -- for more details, check out the current challenge. OWW BLOGS We've noticed that many OWWers have started blogging in the past few years. In order to help members find each other's writing blogs, we've created a new field for blogs in the member information form. Just click on your info, update your member information, and add your blog! There's a large crowd of OWWers on livejournal (http://www.livejournal.com), which also has a community specifically for OWWblogs (http://www.livejournal.com/community/owwblogs). Kat Allen has even created the first OWW user icon. If you blog, you might want to check it out. WORLD FANTASY CONVENTION A large number of current and former OWWers, and OWW Resident Editors, are going to attend the World Fantasy Convention (http://www.worldfantasy.org/2005) in Madison, Wisconsin. Many of them are going to be on the program, including R. Scott Bakker, Elizabeth Bear, Mike Blumer, Leah Bobet, Samuel Butler, Jeanne Cavelos, Charles Coleman Finlay, Kelly Link, Joshua Palmatier, Sarah Prineas, and Paul Witcover. You can see the complete program here: http://www.worldfantasy.org/2005/program-sched.html NOVEMBER WRITING CHALLENGE Jodi, OWW Challenge Dictator, Unicorn Warlord, and general menace, writes: "This month I want to try something a little different. If you don't like it let me know and we'll go back to the normal topic/skill challenges next month. :) "Because I was teasing Charlie I would do this, November's Challenge is a 'finish this story' challenge. "Your first line is, 'It started the night they found Charlie dead.'" Remember: These are supposed to be fun, but don't forget to stretch yourself. If you normally write fantasy, try SF. If you've never tried space opera, here's your chance. It doesn't have to be great. It's all about trying new things. There's no word limit, no time limit, no nothin'. Just have fun. :) Please don't post your challenge pieces to the workshop until November first. Include "November Challenge" in your title so you can show off how fancy you are to all your friends. For more details on the challenges, check the Challenge home page at: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/Challenge.html STRANGE HORIZONS FUND DRIVE _Strange Horizons_ is winding up its annual October fund drive. If you read _Strange Horizons_, consider donating to them, the same way you might subscribe to another magazine you regularly read. _Strange Horizons_ has published many OWWers and been one of the pro markets most consistently open to new voices and new writers. And if that's not enough, they're giving away the usual assortment of cool gifts! For more information, go to http://www.strangehorizons.com 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, Karin Lowachee, 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: SORDANEON--CHAPTER 4 by Linda Steele Linda Steele's fourth chapter of SORDANEON has some meat on it. The novel seems to be a mixture of high fantasy and manners, a political story of intrigue and families that could be very captivating. By chapter four, I'd really like to see what's at stake for both the overall novel and the characters. It's not clear what Marc Frederick wants, and Dorilian's entrance is too brief for us to find out if what he wants matches what he needs. Marc Frederick is a monarch who appears to be sympathetic and an honorable man. But I'm not sure, yet, if I'm supposed to like him or not, if he's going to interfere with Dorilian's plans for vengeance, or if he's actually the protagonist in this very complex story. Marc's section, which forms the central part of the chapter, gives us insight into the man and his relationship with his wife, but there's so much backstory mixed with current story, I believe most of it could be spread out and pared down. Because there's no focus to this chapter -- is this chapter about Marc and his conflict, about Dorilian and his conflicts? -- the impact of everything is deflated. Choose the most important details to reveal to us at this time, weave in the other supporting bits, and lead the reader through the story. Try not to overwhelm us with so much information and we will suss out the truly shiny bits. The "what's at stake" question is missing from this chapter. There's plenty of history and commentary on the blood relations of characters we haven't really seen yet. This, too, is problematic unless the novel is actually a "novel of manners" such as Jane Austen perfected. But I think SORDANEON is not exactly that kind of novel with its scathing social commentary on gender roles and classism. We saw earlier that Dorilian's quest for vengeance drives him, but without something to balance that, he appears only to be a spoiled prince longing for bypassed glory. The novel's "what's at stake" is unclear here -- but there are hints and allegations. A timeline was viewed by a Austell, a Wall Lord -- what makes one eligible to be a Wall Lord is unclear -- whose "mind was broken" by what he saw. The enigmatic Wall and its relative Rail are "magical" entities the humans and others use. This is rather intriguing and I wished there was more about the Wall and the people who are able to come in contact with it rather than the seemingly unnecessary diversion into politics. Bringing these two large portions of the novel together, linking them with the "what's at stake" will definitely make this chapter stronger, and in the end pull the reader deeper into the plot. As many of the commenters said about this chapter, the overabundance of names and places is confusing. We should not need a family tree or map to see who is talking and the subject to which or who they refer. The overwhelming amount of information is complicated by references to things not supported by context -- I'm not sure what makes one Highborn, noble, or human. Clarification of the context is important for guiding the reader through this somewhat complicated political structure. Quite possibly, it's not complicated at all and the exposition just needs to be pared down. Keep in mind that sometimes less is more. The same can be said of the names -- unless there's a reason why we need to know someone's first and last name, place of birth or country of origin, there might not necessarily be a need to see it in this chapter. Is Marc Frederick his full name? Is he going to be referred to as "His Majesty" or "Your Royal Highness" or some other title, which seems to be missing here. He calls and is told by his manservant that "Your Queen," his wife Apollonia, wants to talk to him, but she never refers to him as "her King." The titles are unique (no Lords or Vicounts here), but with all the references to class hierarchy, I'm not seeing the difference as one might with Lord, Count, Vicount, Baron, etc. Should the titles be based on a different scale -- merit, birth, family standing -- we'd need to see that in context. I really wanted this chapter to be about Dorilian since it opened with him and the exposition of the Wall. I wanted to know more about the Wall and see some hint of its purpose tied with the characters, that greater "what's at stake." Marc Frederick's introduction could have its own chapter and would be a great place to show us more about this rich world. There's also plenty of descriptions of clothing, but it doesn't really give us anything else to sink our teeth into --I'd like to see something that will really place the reader directly into the action and bring the characters and conflict to technicolor brilliance. Using descriptions from that tight 3rd person point-of-view will also help the reader to gain some understanding of the characters. Soil, wind, air, building, scents, textures, weight, and so forth all can add elements to the visceral feeling of the world. Try using some of those descriptives rather than always going for the clothes, because unless the fabric and cut are foreign and part of the overall "what's at stake," I only need to see the bare minimum to get the maximum impact. This story has great potential, but its slightly overwritten style and lack of focus are weakening what could be a compelling read. Give us that "what's at stake" and keep it in the forefront of the plot. Everything these characters do, say, and react to should lead the reader down the path towards the "what's at stake" answer and the events that unfold because of that answer. --Jenni Smith-Gaynor Former editor, Del Rey Books Editor's Choice, SF Chapter/Partial Chapter: GENESIS RENEWED - CHAPTER 1 by Rick Shaw This is a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by an unknown plague. The survivors are somehow immune and range from a father with two remaining children to a military officer and her sister. Introducing a sense of family early on gives the reader something easy to identify with -- in such a situation, one's family would be the primary concern. The situation is presented briefly, like a news broadcast, which worked for a way to recollect the events before drawing the reader in more deeply with the characters. However, the brisk style did carry through and I think was ultimately detrimental to involving the reader in the horror of the situation and desperation of the characters. I'd like to start with some technical suggestions. Watch the use of commas and inserting too many adjectives. "Vibrant" and "towhead" can imply beautiful, and "sprawling" for a tree implies that it's old. Compare: "Four days ago he buried Michael, a vibrant, intelligent, little towhead, wrapped in his mother's arms, at the foot of the old, sprawling, Valley Oak the beautiful four-year-old boy loved to climb." To: "Four days ago he'd buried Michael -- a vibrant, intelligent little towhead who was now wrapped in his mother's arms at the foot of the sprawling Valley Oak the four-year-old had loved the climb." Or consider: "Will and Pat were amazing -- so completely in love" Amazing is one of those throwaway words that don't really say much in a narrative. Why not just "Will and Pat were so completely in love"? And: "He hurt for his brother; feeling the anguish he knew Will was enduring." The last half after the semi-colon is redundant. On the other hand, some of the writing is spot on. Consider: "The numbers dropped cruelly after the fifteenth. First not to answer the phone were Dave's parents in Oceanside, then Kate's mother, her brother's family in Ohio, and her sister in Seattle." Though these details are perfunctory, they convey the brisk nature of this disease and the helplessness of hearing nothing but silence on the other end of a line. I'd also like to focus attention on the dialogue tags. For example: "Do I just sit here... waiting to die?" Will asked, thinking out loud. There's no need to break up the dialogue with that tag, as it's obvious he's thinking aloud. Or consider these three examples: "You have to, Will. It's what Pat would have wanted; Mom and Dad too," Dave tried to encourage his brother. Will changed the subject; "You remember Danny's birthday is in three days, right?" "Yeah, I know. I'll do something. Hell of a way to turn sixteen. Your whole world dies, your mom and brother a week before, and it's your birthday..." Dave changed directions, "I need to call Colton. All right? You stay positive. Call me later if you want to talk," Dave offered. The tags on the dialogue are redundant. It's implicit within the words that he is trying to encourage, that Will changed the subject, and that Dave made an offer. It's important to tag dialogue so the reader doesn't get lost as to who is speaking, but repeating information weakens the immediacy and power of the writing. For longer tags, describe how things are said, or attach action or gesture to it that the characters might do as they are speaking. Have faith in your dialogue. Now, on to the heavy bits -- the rape of Dana and Jessie. Writing about rape is a risk for any writer, but I have a several specific concerns here. First, the story jumps into the rapists' headspaces. Why? It becomes voyeuristic at that point. Victimized women in this situation seem all too easy a plot device and the true consequences of such awful acts aren't given much contemplative room, so the women are reduced to objects. The rapists obviously see them that way, but we don't want the readers to view them the same. Treating rapes as an incident to incite story without giving the proper weight to it will alienate or even annoy readers. It's a sensitive subject and any writer has to be careful not to treat it so lightly. Second, the scene is cut perfunctorily, as well, and leaves the reader feeling as if the scenes are just tossed in there as easily as the women are tossed about. Finally, introducing Dana as a competent officer in a crisis doesn't meld with her disregard for safety at the mall. Wouldn't she be aware of the threat once she's outside the base and not be so easily trapped? Military people, especially at this point perhaps, would have an in-built paranoia in desolate situations. In other words, she is taken too easily. Especially with her sister with her, you'd think she'd take even more precaution once outside the base. It doesn't make sense that she'd approach the situation so naively. Overall, a plague situation, survivors, and -- one assumes from the title -- some kind of renewal of the species is a tried and true idea in future fiction. The writing here is competent, though a tad too brisk and empty. Slow down the narrative a little and steep the reader in the horrors of this post-apocalyptic world. Spend more time involving the reader in the physical landscape of the places here, from the suburban desolation to the wider one of a mall or a highway or a military base. Recall films like "28 Days Later" or other plague-blighted worlds -- the images of somewhere large being so empty are inherently horrifying. Paint those kinds of pictures to flesh out this situation and it will draw in the reader to the characters' plights and give this opening chapter the full power inherent in its premise. --Karin Lowachee Author of BURNDIVE and CAGEBIRD http://www.karinlowachee.com Editor's Choice, Short Story: "The Stud" by Lizzie Newell This is a nicely written draft of a promising science-fiction story which reminds me a little of the work of Ursula Le Guin and Eleanor Arnason. The dialogue is strong, and the descriptions are vivid. I'm going to quote the entire first paragraph of the story, because it's such an excellent example of the sort of first paragraph which will hook an editor: "For the three years between the conjunction of the two moons, my father Teakh had prepared for his imminent marriage: planning, lifting weights, and practicing graceful movement in the hangar between the flying machines. His fellows in the clan coastguard had ribbed him for dancing in anticipation of the spawning moons when women conceive children. This marriage would produce me, his eighth son." What's so successful about this paragraph? Its compression, for one thing. The writer has established not only character, but setting, culture, what genre we're reading, and who is narrating the story to us. The details are also telling -- deeply individual and just a little quirky. We know what Teakh does for a living, and we also know what kind of person he must be. In the next few paragraphs, Teakh is blindfolded, which means that we get a great many sensory details about the place where Teakh has been brought. The description of Teakh's wedding finery and jewelry -- "Gold beads, pearls, sequins, and tiny jasper fish were braided into his hair. The jewelry looked a hell of a lot like fish lures and salmon eggs or maybe herring roe." -- rings true as detail, and are nicely worked into descriptions of the smell of fish guts and sound of scaling knives and men at work. I would work a little more on the parts where we find out why Teakh is so valuable as a husband. "He'd heard it all before how he had the genetics of the perfect father: loving, altruistic, and devoted. Despite his much-touted predisposition for devoted monogamy, he had married seven times and if all went as planned, he had fathered seven children who would all be as devoted, loving, and altruistic as he supposedly was. Disgusted at the farce of it, he pshawed. Altruism was learned behavior. He acted in his own self-interest to please himself." As exposition goes, this feels a bit canned, a little bit easy. The sentence "Disgusted at the farce of it, he pshawed" is clunky -- old-fashioned, and also out of place. And the story itself suggests that Teakh is something out of the ordinary. It might be interesting to go into the idea of altruism a bit more deeply. You could mention folk stories in Teakh's culture of heroes who behaved altruistically, or give Teakh the memory of an altruistic action which is his touchstone for behavior. Later on, we're told that "Teakh demanded both loyalty and high status in his brides." But what does "loyalty" mean in these circumstances? What benefit has Teakh gained from his other marriages? A bit later, we're told that Teak has searched for his children and has also courted some of the women he's married. But since the marriage that the story is centered around is one in which husband and wife spend a single night together, and the husband remains blindfolded throughout that night and might never learn anything about his bride, the way that his other marriages (and courtships) have worked is unclear and contradictory. You'll need to elaborate a bit more on different kinds of contracts and formal arrangements, and also make it clear what rights husbands in this culture commonly possess. As the story goes on, things begin to feel a bit rushed. Plot begins to overwhelm character, and unlikely but convenient things happen to advance the plot, such as Teakh overhearing the conversation about fidelity and marriage between his bride and her sister. I might believe this more if Teakh realized that he was meant to overhear this conversation, or if the overheard conversation was interesting for other reasons, but not quite so pertinent! And it undercuts the somewhat elegiac and romantic and funny tone of the story, which is being told by an extremely proud child about how his parents met. Much better if the first thing Teakh heard his bride say was something witty or strange, ferocious or mysterious. On a related note, I would suggest cutting the asides from Teakh's point of view, as his aunt and his bride's mother talk about the marriage arrangement. These asides may feel like an ingenious way to pass on information about Teakh and his culture to the reader, but instead they feel out of place and oddly enough, they make Teakh seem less likeably and intelligent as a character. There's too much head-tossing and sulkiness, and as far as character development goes, it would be far more interesting if Teakh attempted to ignore the conversation by reciting poetry to himself, or thinking about types of fishing lures. Don't rush this story, and don't feel that you have to explain everything from Teakh's point of view. After all, we're actually being told the story by Teakh's child, although sometimes the story seems to forget this. It's not so likely that Teakh has gone into great detail about everything he thought while his aunt was extolling his virtues. It's far more likely that he would tell his child how he used to silently recite whatever form of dirty or uplifting verse his culture practices. I would also be careful about making the distinction between Teakh's avuncular love for his nieces (at another point, mysteriously, it's just one niece) and the love he longs to lavish on his children. Unless the reader can see examples of how much he loves his nieces as individuals, we're not likely to be convinced that he'll be a good father to his own children. Instead his longing for them comes across as daydreams of the things that are just out of his reach. Why hasn't he kidnapped his son Gadid and gone off to live in the wilderness? How likely is it that Gadid's mother will sell her son, in any case? It takes more than money to buy a child: surely both sides have to be willing. Surely even contract husbands can buy black-market tokens or reports of their children: it would be good to see Teakh cherishing something of this sort. And make the reader care about Teakh's eldest son, Gadid, as something more than an abstraction. The ending of the story, which feels more than a little abrupt, doesn't even tell us whether Gadid was ever rescued. The description of the consumation of the marriage is well-done. It's hard to write a good, strange sex scene, but this one is both. On the other hand, I find it very hard to believe that Teakh only has sex once every three years, and that before he sees his bride naked, illicitly, that he's never seen a naked woman before. Really? Does his culture only allow sex for procreation? Again: really? And are men really kept so far away from women? Why? This is stretching the plausible limits of fiction a bit far, based on what we know so far from the story, but I suppose that if you go back and rework things so that we can see Teakh's world a little more clearly, and if you provide enough telling details, anything goes. Good luck with the rewrite. Teakh is, for the most part, an extremely likeable character, and this story compelled my interest from the very first paragraph. --Kelly Link Editor of TRAMPOLINE and co-editor of YEAR'S BEST FANTASY & HORROR http://www.kellylink.net/ Editor's Choice, Horror: "The End of the World, On CNN" by Sachin Delacroix We've all seen the world failing before, but this version, with its television newscaster interludes, feels fresh enough to keep me reading. And the story builds toward a satisfying, if unhappy, emotion at the end. The setting is science-fictional -- a series of disasters is destroying the world, one person at a time. As the rest of the world falls apart, Garret White falls sick to a mysterious illness but tries to hang on long enough to see his son graduate from high school. Garret's son, Danny, has problems of his own, but Garret avoids dealing with those problems just surely as he's in denial about his own disease. This creates incredible tension between them just when they both need the support and comfort of each other. It's been argued that science fiction is a setting, and horror is a mood. It's also been argued -- recently, at Context, on a panel I shared with F&SF editor Gordon Van Gelder and Stoker-winner Gary Braunbeck -- that SF and horror are incompatible. The panel disagree, and this is the sort of story that disproves the argument. The mood of this story is definitely horror, and the SF elements all work toward creating that mood of helplessness, hopelessness, and despair. The second scene is a good example of what works best, on an emotional level, in this story. Here's the opening paragraph: At dinner, Danny is quiet as I prattle on about work, mortgage payments, summer jobs and other tiresome inanities. Quiet, and then when there is a brief lull in the one sided conversation, he unleashes a cryptic statement that does much to increase my sense of unease: "Dad, I have to tell you something." The waiter brings us a bottle of Pinot Grigio, and I pretend not to notice the small bluish blotch on this young man's neck that looks like a hickey, and pretending not to notice becomes a way of life after a while, one that most people have had very little trouble slipping into. "Danny, you look good today." Combining Danny's comment in the same paragraph with Garret's response, and surrounding it with both the "tiresome inanities" as well as the "small bluish blotch" sets up the contrast between the ordinary and everything that's wrong. The way Garret ignores his son's statement reveals his deep investment in pretending that everything's normal when it's not. I also admire the courage of the longer sentences in this story. I found this one very effective for communicating the accumulation of problems: And that's not all that matters to me and I'm looking at him now, and I'm trying to think of something to say that will shatter this wall that's been laid down between us, brick by brick, layer by layer, over the course of the last ten years, something that will somehow allow us to talk to each other like normal people instead of walking on eggshells, afraid of hurting each other's feelings all the time, and all I come up with is, "You look sharp today, Danny. I like your shirt," and he nods slowly and then he looks like he's about to weep, and before I can call him on it the expression vanishes, and he's this apathetic, unfathomable stranger who's been living under my roof for eighteen years, and who I don't know a goddamn thing about, and then he gets up and goes upstairs, and I hear a door close followed by an audible click. The relationships -- between Garret and Danny, Garret and Brianna -- feel both touching and true. And the details of the disaster, from the creepy flower in the yard to the creeping fungus in the final scene, add to both plot and mood. But at this point the story doesn't work because of the opening scene, which is clumsy and cliched and, up to the final couple paragraphs, ineffective. Here's the first sentence: "You are Garret White, fifty-two years old, Caucasian male, five-foot-eleven, two hundred and thirty pounds, blood type A." It gives us a convenient description of the protagonist, but there's no reason for her to recite this information at the beginning of a doctor's visit -- it's either on the chart, or, with height and weight, something they'll check while he's there. Similarly: "You have one son, Daniel White, eighteen years old," the Doctor says. It's clear why the story wants us to know this information, but there's no reason for the doctor to ask this way. In the end, Garret's age, race, height, weight, and blood type are irrelevant to the outcome. He could be any age old enough to have a son, any race, any height, any weight, any blood type -- the disaster affects everyone. And there's no reason to introduce his son this way when he can show up just as easily in the internal monologue. The whole list of symptoms might be used to create a feeling of being overwhelmed, but they don't pop up again in equal force in the later descriptions of his illness. Until this opening scene is pared down to the essentials, I wonder if slush readers are going to get to the good parts. I would start with "Have you noticed any skin discolorations on your body?" since that's the symptom that comes up so often in the story. Then mix in the internal exposition with just a few more questions, and cut to the paragraph where she tells him what happens if his blood test results are negative, and he thinks about why he's holding on and what he's holding on for. Give the opening scene the same focus and power the rest of the story has, and the whole thing will improve to another level. Have faith in the reader to catch on to the other details as the story progresses. Good luck with this one when you send it out after revisions. --Charles Coleman Finlay Author of THE PRODIGAL TROLL and WILD THINGS http://home.earthlink.net/~ccfinlay/ | - - 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 October nominations beginning November 1. Meanwhile, here are two advance highlights from this month: Reviewer: Ursula Warnecke Submission: The Astrologer's Death by Barbara Gordon Submitted by: Barbara Gordon Nominator's Comments: "The encouragement and positive remarks were appreciated - of course! But the specifics about unclear sentences or paragraphs, places where the pacing slowed, and other points where things could be tightened or clarified were the really valuable parts of this review. Because I'm using some archaic words and syntax, it's much more valuable to me to get 'this sentence is confusing' than a general observation about period language being overdone." Reviewer: Douglas Kolacki Submission: A Case Of Identity by Paul Comstock Submitted by: Paul Comstock Nominator's Comments: "As I write more and more, I realize how little I know about the art. Every once in awhile, an epiphany strikes which propels you to a higher level of writing skill. No amount of reading or analyzing can do it for you, it just has to happen, or come from an outside source. Doug's review pointed out a flaw in my thinking about dialog that I believe has propelled my writing in just such a way." Reviewers nominated to the honor roll during September include: Anthony Addis, Amy Alger, Kathryn Allen, Marlissa Campbell, Alex Deitsch, Rebecca Domenico (2), Mike Farrell (2), Margaret Fisk, Michael Goodwind, BR Hollis, Patty Jansen, Heidi Kneale, Martha Knox, James Lemacks, Marshall Payne, Aimee Poynter, Nathan CW Smith, Michael Staton, Linda Steele, Ian Tregillis, Zvi Zaks (2). We congratulate them all for their excellent reviews. All nominations received in September can be still found through October 31 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. OWW Staff Sales and Publications: Kelly Link's novella "Magic for Beginners," which appears in her new collection of the same name, may also be found in the October/November issue of _Fantasy & Science Fiction_. Charles Coleman Finlay's collection WILD THINGS is finally available in stores. He had a book launch for it at Bakka-Phoenix books in downtown Toronto on Saturday, Oct. 22, where he saw current and former OWWers like Leah Bobet, Karin Lowachee, Derek Molata, S. K. S. Perry, and Helen Vorsters. And his short story "The Moon Is Always Full" appears in the Oct. 31 issue of _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com/). OWW Member Sales and Publications: Elizabeth Bear has had a very good few weeks, selling a pseudo-Victorian vampire detective novella, "Lucifugous," to _Subterranean_, Czech translation rights for HAMMERED, an as-yet-unnamed short story collection to NightShade books, and a novelette, "Gone to Flowers," to the anthology EIDOLON I. Not to mention the sale of "Los Empujadores Furiosos" to _On Spec_. Wow. Mike Blumer signed a 5-book YA contract for The Secret Books of Gabendoor. Book One is THE BOOK OF SECOND CHANCES, workshopped, of course. He tells us "Now I have to create: Reader discussion guide, trading cards, maps, bookmarks, door hangers, and a ton of other stuff." Poor fellow! Kimberly Colley's short story "Kiss, Jack" appeared in the October 2005 issue of _The Harrow_ (http://www.theharrow.com/). She also sold her short story "Unrequited Frost" to _Aoife's Kiss_, tentatively scheduled for publication in Sept. 2006. Cat Collins' story "Breia's Diamond" was accepted for an anthology forthcoming from Daw. She says: "I don't know any dates or details yet, but the theme is 'Places to be; People to kill.' I'm mildly ecstatic, to say the least. Cheers, and thanks to you all!" Mark Fewell's story "The Woman In The Mirror" has been published in _Dark Recess_ (http://www.darkrecesses.com) issue #1. The magazine can be downloaded in .pdf format. Adrian Firth wrote: "Kill the fatted calf, light the frankincense and myrrh, and dance in the streets. I made my first short story sale! _Reflection's Edge_ (http://www.reflectionsedge.com) accepted 'The God of the Gaps.' Should be up in October. A googleplex of thanks to the OWW team, and to reviewers Michael Merriam, Carlos Jimenez-Cortes, Paul Lister, Jeanne Haskin, Lawrence Payne, F.R.R. Mallory, and also some people whose names I've lost. You know who you are! Thanks again." Donna Johnson sold her sword and sorcery flash "In Chains" to _flashme_ for their October 31 issue. She says "I should thank everyone who patiently helped me with it here and elsewhere, especially Elizabeth Hull, Christine Hall and PA, Bob Allen, Teresa Thorne and members of DII -- Thanks a bunch!" Kevin Paul Jones sold his story "Curiosity," workshopped a couple of times last year, to _The Harrow_ for publication sometime next year. He says, "I'd like to thank everyone who offered advice and crits, I'd thank you all by name, but I lost the individual crits to a dying computer :)" Martha Knox was published last month in _Chick Flicks_ (http://www.chickflicksezine.com/current/issue_home.html). She told us that "the story is a SF story, 'Prima,' that I posted on OWW and received many helpful crits for--thanks!" Michael Merriam's story "Rija's Tale," which was workshopped on OWW, appears in the fall issue of _Gryphonwood_ (http://www.gryphonwoodpress.com/). As if that's not enough, he also sold his short story "Rainfall" to _Deep Magic_. He would like to thank workshop members Alan Johnson, Becca Patterson, Jodi Meadows, Amos Peverill, Karen Swanberg, and Dena Landon for their helpful reviews and suggestions, adding "I could not have done this without them!" Egg-on-our-face dept.: Last month we forgot to mention Regina Patton's first genre publication! Her SF short story "A Speck in the Universe," which she workshopped at OWW last fall, was published in the August/September anniversary special issue of _AlienSkin_ (http://www.alienskinmag.com). John Schoffstall sold his short story "Fourteen Experiments in Postal Delivery" to _Strange Horizons_ (http://www.strangehorizons.com). It will probably be published around March, 2006. Calie Voorhis sold her first short story, "Afternoon Download," to _Deep Magic_. She sends "Many thanks to SFF in general and my reviewers in particular! Special thanks to Mark Reeder!" Jeremy Yoder's true story "King of the Bus" sold to a bus anthology called _Where Do We Get Off?Ê Armed Bandits, Angry Roosters And Other True Tales of Global Bus Travel_ (http://www.windowseatpress.com). | - - WORKSHOP STATISTICS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Number of members as of 10/31: 590 paying, 61 trial Number of submissions currently online: 457 Percent of submissions with 3 or more reviews: 75% Percent of submissions with zero reviews: 4% Average reviews per submission (all submissions): 4.96 Estimated average review word count (all submissions): 643.70 Number of submissions in September: 344 Number of reviews in September: 1666 Ratio of reviews/submissions in September: 4.84 Estimated average word count per review in September: 725.22 Number of submissions in October to date: 339 Number of reviews in October to date: 1325 Ratio of reviews/submissions in October to date: 3.91 Estimated average word count per review in October to date: 712 (Note: publication date was 10/31) Total number of under-reviewed submissions: 39 (11.6% of total subs) Number over 3 days old with 0 reviews: 2 Number over 1 week old with under 2 reviews: 10 Number over 2 weeks old with under 3 reviews: 27 | - - 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. We're STILL offering two copies of Kate Wilhelm's book STORYTELLER, along with red pencils (of course!) as prizes for the most helpful tips/hints/advice submitted for the next newsletter, on the subjects of: --writing --workshopping --getting published Look in our tips area (button on lefthand nav.) to see what we've already got... good ideas that are already covered will not win a prize! The best entries will be published in upcoming newsletters. Until next month -- just write! The Online Writing Workshop for Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com support@sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com | - - Copyright 2005 Online Writing Workshops - - - - - - - - - - - |
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