O | The Online Writing Workshop for SF, F & H Newsletter, January 2006 W | http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com W | Become a better writer! | - - CONTENTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - Workshop News: 2005 in review February writing challenge Market information Membership payment information - Editors' Choices for October submissions - Reviewer Honor Roll - Publication Announcements - Workshop Statistics - Tips & Feedback | - - WORKSHOP NEWS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2005 IN REVIEW 2005 was the best year ever for OWWriters as a group. The following OWWers sold novels in 2005: Elizabeth Bear (two books to Roc/Ace and two books to Bantam Spectra), Mike Blumer (Windstorm Creative), Sam Butler (three books to Tor), Cat Collins (Five Star), Chris Dolley (Baen and the Science Fiction Book Club), Ilona and Andrew Gordon (two books to Ace), Simon Haynes (Fremantle Arts Centre Press), Tamara Siler Jones, Dena Landon, Sandra McDonald (two books to Tor), and Joshua Palmatier (three books to DAW). Other current and former OWWers had books published in 2005: R. Scott Bakker, Elizabeth Bear, Charles Coleman Finlay, Karin Lowachee, and Karen Miller. Karen Miller's novel was a #1 fantasy bestseller in Australia. The following members made their first sale to a professional market in 2005: Sam Butler, Chris Dolley, Way Jeng, Amanda Oestman, Joshua Palmatier, Marguerite Reed, Debbie Smith, and Jeremy Yoder. We're sure there are more, but they just forgot to tell us. OWW members had sales to _Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine_, _Asimov's_, _F&SF_, _Interzone_, _On Spec_, _Realms of Fantasy_, _Sci Fiction_, _Strange Horizons_, _The Third Alternative_, and dozens of other magazines and anthologies. Well over a dozen members were selected to attend the professional summer writing workshops at Clarion, Clarion West, Clarion South, and Odyssey. And OWWer Leah Bobet, OWW admin Charles Coleman Finlay, and OWW Resident Editor Kelly Link all had stories appear in Year's Best collections. In 2005 award news, OWWer Benjamin Rosenbaum was nominated for the Hugo, Charles Coleman Finlay for the Spectrum, and Karen Miller for the Aurealis. They were almost outnumbered by the award winners: Catherine M. Morrison won the 2005 Darrell Award for Best Midsouth Short Story, John Schoffstall won the Grand Prize in the Writers of the Future Contest, and Elizabeth Bear won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer! To top it off, OWW Resident Editor Kelly Link won the Hugo Award. Given that kind of year, you think OWW staff would be pretty satisfied to rest on our laurels. Instead we made quite a few small improvements in 2005: moving the workshop to a dedicated server with more frequent backups and hardware/software improvements, adding the word count feature to the submission list, expanding the submission selector to include subgenres and readerships, and redesigning the member directory listings, including adding links to blogs. More importantly, at the end of the year we launched a wiki for members--the OWW Writer Space--and opened the workshop to children's speculative fiction. Oh, and we made OWW t-shirts and other fun OWW stuff permanaently available through CafePress. We've got more in store for 2006 -- and we hope you do too! Here's wishing all OWWers the best in the new year. FEBRUARY WRITING CHALLENGE Jodi, OWW Challenge Dictator, Unicorn Warlord, and general menace, writes: This challenge is from Celia, our former Challenge Dictator-- "The hazards of inter-species dating." Just in time for Valentine's Day! 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 February first. Include "February 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 OWW Writer Space at http://sff.onlinewritingworkshop.com/tiki/tiki-index.php?page=Challenges or the Challenge home page at: http://www.thermeon.net/checkered/Challenge.html MARKET INFORMATION OWWer (and Managing Editor of _Abyss and Apex_) Wendy S. Delmater sends us this anouncement: Did you know that last year four _Abyss and Apex_ stories received honorable mentions in Year's Best anthologies? _Locus_ is begining to mention our fiction, and last year our genre poetry captured the SF Poetry Association's highest award, the Rhysling. A&A is having a fundraising drive -- with a twist. You can make a one-time donation. But, starting in January, we've also set up a business Paypal page to take $5 monthly automatic withdrawals. Donors who give this small amount on a monthly basis will receive a thank-you gift book after three months of giving. Authors who wish to donate a book as a donor premium should contact the editors. Only 30 auto-donors are needed to fund us for a year. Please give what you can so that we can continue to publish the best in speculative fiction! For more information, visit: http://www.abyssandapex.com/support.html 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: MIDNIGHT MIRACLES CH 1 by Roger Davey Roger Davey's MIDNIGHT MIRACLES caught and held my attention with a nicely detailed POV character and a situation that made me want to continue reading. This first chapter in the second book of Davey's three-book series could be lengthened to address the tension imbalance. Coming to this chapter cold, without having read book one, does not seem to be a roadblock at the moment, but this chapter was so short it was difficult to know how the story linked to the first book. The chapter opens with the apprentice, Nicholas, closing up shop and then receiving a "gift" from his master, which turns out to be a man's arm recently detached from the torso. It's a very good specimen for dissection, which Halston, the master surgeon, orders Nicholas to study after dinner. The conversation at dinner reveals the beginning of a mystery -- the Grand Duchess is ill and her physician is a decrepit man rumored to be impotent against whatever ails the woman. Halston seems to know more than he reveals, but sends Nicholas back down to the surgery for his lesson in dissecting and sketching. While there, Nicholas is visited by an unseen and unnamed spectre that leaves a message in blood on the wall. The small details worked for me, grounding me in that place. For an opening chapter of a second book that does not go into a summary of the first book or feel like we entered in media res, I thought these details were solid cornerstones. "Nicholas followed his master to the storeroom, where the various specimens floated in jars of preserving fluid, and old Bonesy hung loose-jawed from his ceiling-hook." Bonesy is a great name for something so minor. It helped me sense how Nicholas -- as the POV character -- feels about his surroundings without long-winded exposition (which helps keep reader attention and can show growth of character through unfolding events). "Nicholas tried not to look at the discolured fingernails; a dead person's fingernails were always so human. To Nicholas, no other part of a corpse said, 'I used to be alive', quite like the fingernails." I really liked this bit, but still wanted to know more. How were the nails discolored and what about them made Nicholas think of life -- this could have been expanded to start showing more depth of character (is he a rationalist, a poet, a dreamer, etc.). It's a good start, I just wanted more sensory details to fully show the scene. "Another winter's evening was setting in, all cold grey gloom and dripping thatch. Even as Nicholas watched, a lone trudger-by lost his shoe in the sucking mud. What a lousy evening to be out." These are great details at the beginning and then partway through the opening to help me see the place. I would have liked a little more description of the building -- mud just outside the window makes me think the surgery is on the ground floor of a multi-story (at least two) building (since they go up into the kitchen for dinner), and that Rumbossa is larger than a farming village to impose a curfew or be in need of a surgeon. I also think, based on the conversation of the Grand Duchess, that Rumbossa is large enough to host a palace and a river. But most of these assumptions aren't based on actual content, so I recommend adding a small bit of exposition for setting. Another good scene from this chapter was the conversation with Fran, the housekeeper. She's described by Nicholas as having "Wisps of steel grey hair dangled from beneath her woollen hat, and her plump cheeks were red in the firelight" but she was timid. "She had something to say. Nicholas loved Fran, but couldn't understand why she was quite so timid. Halston was a proud man, but he was never violent; besides, she was a servant, not the man's wife. Fran was a timid soul." I like this bit, which serves to show both some characteristics of Halston and Fran, but I'm missing the point connecting timidity and being a wife in this culture. Obviously, we can't read a long explanation of the gender culture in Rumbossa, but this sentence could be clarified to give us both a stronger impression of how Nicholas thinks Halston treats women and the culture in which they all live (even if all of that were described in the previous book). This would also help set up the mystery of the Grand Duchess's illness, which seems to have some great importance for the surgeons. "'There are seven physicians in Rumbossa, including Doctor Darius Grey.' Halston turned to Nicholas, and smiled. 'Leo's old teacher, did you know?' A memory flashed into Nicholas's head: stumbling across a pale corpse on the stone floor of St Elmo's Priory...Was it only eighteen months since he'd arrived in Rumbossa to begin his medical studies under the famous Brother Dromwell? It felt like yesterday. That was the shock that changed everything for me, Nicholas thought. My chance to enter the medical profession died with Brother Leo, and now look at me -- in this house, apprenticed in the surgeon-barber's trade." This is great background information, but it's unclear how Nicholas feels about his new profession. I get a whiff of uncertainty, perhaps unhappiness, but it's far too subtle. Clarify how Nicholas feels about his situation and this bit about his past might have more impact. I also wanted to know the difference between a "physician" and a "surgeon-barber" in this world. The difference seems to be important. The imbalance of this chapter comes towards the end when the unseen unnatural force invades the surgery where Nicholas is studying the severed and dissected arm. A cryptic message appears in blood on the wall, and gust of wind blows papers and knocks over containers. The introduction of the arm at the beginning of the chapter combined with Halston's unspoken interest in the Grand Duchess's illness make me think one or two of those things are connected. With the arrival of the unnatural force (ghost? magical wind?), I keep expecting to see some hint or two about this book's overriding plot arc. What exactly is this book going to be about--the Grand Duchess's illness? A necromancer? A fight between the physicians and surgeon-barbers? Clarify what the central conflict might be--alluding to it here, which is what I think Davey tried to do, can set the plot-wheels in motion and pull the reader right into the next chapter. And the next. The momentum of this chapter was stopped too abruptly, and it suffers because of it. Overall, this chapter has a great foundation. Davey is doing a very good job using grounding details to show character, setting, and backstory. The chapter is a bit uneven because of its abrupt ending, which I think could be lengthened to heighten tension and set the stage for the book's overarching conflict, and some setting details at the beginning can help place these characters in the city, even just as a reminder to the readers returning to the series. I very much liked the way Davey did not go into lengthy details recapping the events of the previous book, but using small bits of exposition to weave together the two books is also necessary (depending on the kind of series he's writing). This is a promising start, and I wish Roger Davey the best with book two. --Jenni Smith-Gaynor Former editor, Del Rey Books Editor's Choice, SF Chapter/Partial Chapter: MORTIFIED, CHAPTER ONE by Kim J Zimring I've actually clumped the Prologue and Chapter 1 in for this selection because the Prologue was short enough. The first thing is I'm not so fond of the title, but those are always open to change, especially once the book is completed. The opening paragraphs of the Colonel grieving over his son, with the connection to the wormhole, immediately give the impression that this will be a character-driven tale. The confusion and sense of numbness make him identifiable. All of the questions he has about why his son suicided embed in the reader to ask the same questions, which is good for the beginning of a book as it plants curiosity, something that will drive the reader to turn the page. "That was grief at the edge of the normal space, maybe; the equations were unequal." Connecting the science to the emotion is beautifully done. It makes a metaphor of the situation set up here in the prologue, that the rest of the novel will expand on. Writing this way in "tiers" instead of just something plain and plot-driven makes the world resound a little deeper. The break at the end of the Prologue was jarring, though, as what followed is only a couple lines. I would suggest flowing it all together with a connecting thought, something like: He wished he wasn't going to wake up again tomorrow and put his uniform on and play colonel like it was possible to start another day. But of course he did, he started again, and two weeks later the Io station was attacked by an unknown enemy, coming though the wormhole and putting a bolt-blast through its side. This doesn't allow the reader to pause on the thought or the emotion already introduced. The very last line of the Prologue is powerful emotionally and stands well as a temporary "conclusion." The first chapter segues nicely, carrying over all the questions. The reader quickly makes the connection between the Colonel here and the one in the Prologue, even before it's said explicitly, because the set-up is all there. The prose reads very easily, the internal voice of Stephen a light one that gives a little of his personality, but it may have gone a little too overboard (see further down in my comments). Though he doesn't know what's going on, he's got some sort of instincts about the situation. We only know barely more than he does, so the discovery is in tandem. I especially enjoyed his astute observations that allude to an alien presence, and the discomfort he draws from it. "It felt alien, Stephen decided, and not just because he didn't recognize anything. It was the scale of the place: the aisles were too wide, the readout panels too low, as if built for the convenience of something smaller and broader than a human. The air was thicker than normal, too; musty and organic, with a metallic tang hinting at an atmosphere of somewhere not-quite-Earth. "He shivered, more from a bone-deep feeling of the creeps than from the cold. The tanks on either side of him were sealed, and Stephen wasn't sure if he wanted to know what, or who, was hidden down inside them. They looked uncomfortably like coffins, arrayed upright in rank and file formation as if for some strange post-humous review." This is a tight third-person, and filtering the descriptions through his eyes creates suspense and a way to drop clues that may either be undercut or fully explained later. If the character is ill at ease, this alerts the reader to be as well. I find the short paragraphs to be a little too breezy, however. What does the Colonel look like from Stephen's point of view? What of the other people standing around him, not that there needs to be a truckload of description but picking one or two faces that he might focus on just to further enhance his sense of dislocation and confusion? "Wake up with alien machinery in every orifice and no memory of what happened to you and all of a sudden you're an object of suspicion." The blase observation seems out of place, considering the fact he's surrounded by military men and he has no real idea what is going on. It also directly conflicts with the tone set up in the Prologue. It becomes kind of jaunty and devil-may-care, which one could chalk up to Stephen's personality, but it doesn't sit well with the apparent situation. When Redlake introduces himself to Stephen this also seemed unusual; Redlake was just given an order by his Colonel, it seems unlikely he would volunteer a connection beyond what his orders were. When it becomes apparent that Redlake is more of a biologist than a soldier, his behavior still seems too cavalier. There should be some sort of decontamination and seclusion procedure for a specimen found in an alien tank, and certainly a mild interrogation of what Stephen might remember that would be more formal, especially considering his discovery comes after an alien attack on a human space station. Though these details might disrupt the story as it is being told, they are practicalities that might raise unwanted questions in the reader when the reader ought to be concentrating on what is actually going on and what might happen. "What you don't know, you can't report, Stephen thought, feeling a sudden rush of gratitude to Redlake. Maybe he had one ally in the room." This especially is highly unusual. Something wrong in Stephen can jeopardize everyone in the company and hardly something someone like Redlake would overlook for the sake of Stephen's feelings. It's difficult sometimes to be very accurate when dealing with specific professions (military, scientific, etc) but any genre writer has to be careful of the professional bounds and expectations because there will always be readers who will know the difference. One also just wants to be as accurate as possible for the sake of the story. "Just keep on being a perfectly normal human being." How does Redlake know that when he's done no conclusive tests? Just by appearances? The release of the alien without any actual caution or protocol doesn't seem realistic. By this point the reader has lost faith in the details of the story and its revelations, because they seem to be serving what the writer wants to get out rather than the internal logic of the plot or characters. Redlake becomes the focus when the initial interest was firmly on the Colonel because of the Prologue. Stephen's point of view is quick and light, yet the situation is severe. The contradictions provide an unease and unbelievability in the reading, in addition to the character decisions and procedures that don't quite ring true. Still, there is interest in really what is going on, so the underpinnings of the plot, the idea and the characters, are all there in order to tell a good story. When using "bug aliens" and invasion, which has been done a bazillion times before in science fiction, the story reallly then has to rest on execution of details and believability of characters, the things that will set your work apart from its precedents because it is in your voice. --Karin Lowachee Author of BURNDIVE and CAGEBIRD http://www.karinlowachee.com Editor's Choices, Short Story: "Fire in the Mountain" by Matthew Herreshoff This was a pleasant and fairly gentle picaresque tall tale about a young man named Ralphie who is "haunted by barbecue." We follow him as he drives across the country and back again, stopping whenever he comes across gentlemen barbecuers. He provides beer, tries the different styles of barbecue, listens to some tall tales, and tries to pinpoint the current location of a legendary barbecue master named Mr. Otis, who is supernaturally old, possibly otherworldly, and who seems to be followed by fire and birds wherever he goes. In the end, of course, Ralphie finds Mr. Otis, samples his barbecue, and discovers a firebird's egg in Mr. Otis's firebox, which promptly hatches and sets fire to the mountainside -- although this doesn't seem to upset Mr. Otis too much. There's not much to the story, but the voice of the story is tremendously appealing, and the characters are all amiably sketched people; throughout, the dialogue is homespun, witty and well chewed. For example, the following exchange: Mr. K looked up from his grill as Ralphie got out of his truck. "The boy who loved barbecue," he greeted Ralphie. "Care to join me?" "Pleased to, Mr. Knauer," Ralphie said. "Pull up a piece of grass," the old man said, and Ralphie did. "I figured I hadn't seen the last of you." "And I was worried you might have forgotten me." "Of course not. What brings you by?" "The pleasure of your company?" Ralphie said, smiling. Mr. K smiled back. "It's a sin to tell a lie, Ralphie." "That's more of a fib than a lie," Ralphie said, "as I do enjoy seeing you again. Would you believe I stopped by because I was hungry?" "A man can be hungry for many things," Mr. K said. "For food, for sex, even for righteousness like the Good Book says. Man is a hungry animal, Ralphie, and you are a hungry man. I'll believe that much." I don't have any major fixes to suggest, but I do have some minor comments. For one thing, I would cut "Don't stop" from the second (first long) paragraph in the first section: "You take the four-lane to the two-lane. Keep going. You'll pass a field full of boulders, some the size of houses, some the size of barns, sitting there as though they were set down by some ancient god. Don't stop." For one thing, it breaks the flow. For another, it doesn't feel exactly in the voice of this story. This isn't a story where people come to abrupt stops. I'd also suggest cutting the last paragraph in this section, the one in italics: " As Ralphie Adams thought about the trip ahead, he found himself retracing the journey he had already taken." There's no need to set up the ending so plainly. Instead, this section just jumps me right out of the story. It feels like a piece of scaffolding that needs to be taken down now that the story is complete. The other thing that I would suggest thinking about is Ralphie. Why has he chosen now to go in search of barbecue? We're told that he's a young man, but we don't know anything about his life in between the first time he tries his neighbor's barbecue, and his sudden return for seconds. As far as protagonists go, he's footloose and fancy free. He seems to have no obligations, and although that makes for an attractive character, it also means that the story has slightly less weight. So I'll ask one more time: where is he coming from? What does he want in his life (other than good barbecue?) Is this just a road trip, a one-time adventure, or is there something more at stake? Is Ralphie choosing between two kinds of lives? Is he running away from something? What has happened to set the story in motion, and what will Ralphie go back to (or not go back to?) When he shows up at his childhood neighbor's house, Mr. Knauer, what about Ralphie's actual childhood house? What about his parents? Do they still live there? Are they alive or dead? Why is Ralphie more focused on barbecue than on the house where he was a child? My last question has to do with the very ending. There is a firebird, and the mountain is going up in flames. Ralphie is driving away. Behind the firebird (what does it mean, exactly, when you say "behind") is "Mr. Otis, larger than life, standing like a titan amidst the flames." It's hard to know whether the reader is supposed to take this literally -- yes, Mr. Otis is larger than a human being and yes, he is standing in flames without burning - or whether the description is more figurative than literal. I'm not sure how much it matters, but it might be useful to know that it isn't clear. More importantly, what does is mean that Ralphie is driving away? It's an exhilarating ending, but I'm not sure where Ralphie is going, or whether he finally found the thing that he needed to find. Mr. Otis has given him some advice about barbecue, but it might give the story more of a satisfying feeling if there were a way for the reader to map that advice onto Ralphie's life and his future as well. Good luck with this. I'm in North Carolina at the moment, and the barbecue is fantastic. --Kelly Link Editor of TRAMPOLINE and co-editor of YEAR'S BEST FANTASY & HORROR http://www.kellylink.net/ "Sister of the Benevolent Gods" by Regina Patton This was a strong although problematic early draft of a story about a mortal woman who was once a god, and how she goes back as an old woman to the mountain where the gods live to see her family one last time and witness a wedding. The narrator, Addie, upon discovering that her nephew, a god, is about to wed a mortal woman, interferes with this arrangement, because she believes the bride will not be happy. Addie challenges various members of her family, and also (for reasons which seem confused and poorly thought out) eats an apple which makes her a goddess once more (although at no point does she appear to want to be immortal again). Although her plan to thwart the wedding is thwarted in turn, the bride (and new goddess/family member) arranges for Addie to return to her husband again, and the story ends. The story is told in first person, present tense, and I don't have too much trouble with either of those things -- in fact, at the beginning the narrator's voice is tremendously appealing. There's an excellent insight into the difference between gods and mortals right away, as the narrator's husband asks if she is bringing a gift. "[He knows] I rarely think of such things. I was raised with the gods, and we don't give gifts; we are the gift." That's a wonderful and true-feeling aside, and I read the story hoping for other insights into the difference between mortals and gods, but as the story goes on, we don't get much more in the same vein. Instead we get a lot of plot complications and tantrums from Addie, without ever really understanding why she ever fell out with her relatives and rejected immortality in the first place. Let's start with the relative ages of Addie and the other gods. We're told that Addie rejected immortality when she was twenty. We're also told that her nephew Kratus, the groom, was a toddler the last time that she saw him. All of Addie's brothers don't seem to be that much older than she is - only shinier and more immortal. Addie's father, we're told (far too late in the story) is retired, and now lives in a mirror. He seems to have given up any power than he might once have had, as Addie easily bests him and her mother by trapping them in a shard of the mirror, and threatening to smash them. So how are these gods and this wedding, and Addie's reunion with her family, really any different from an ordinary family reunion in which the narrator has been estranged since early adulthood? Why are all these gods so young? Why are they all so close in age, and why is Addie (newly restored to godhood) so much stronger than her parents? And most importantly, why did she give up her family and her immortality when she was twenty? What was the thing that drove her away? The interesting thing here is that Addie forces the mortal bride, Berdina, to learn why Addie left her family behind. But she does this in such a way that Berdina, and not the reader, comes away with a fuller understanding. My thought here is that if it's important for Berdina to know, then it's important for the reader to know as well. If you really want to keep Addie's reasons obscure, you'll have to work a lot harder to make the story cohere in a satisfying way. Overall, Addie behaves in the story as a spoiled adolescent girl would behave, and not as an older, mortal woman. She doesn't go to see her mother or her father when she arrives. She doesn't talk through her concerns about the marriage of Berdina with Berdina's mortal family (who may or may not be on the mountain - it isn't clear, though it needs to be.) She eats an apple which the reader knows will give her immortality, and even this comes across in a way that reflects badly on Addie. I can't believe that she's such an idiot that she doesn't understand the warning that her brother gives her, and so I end up thinking that she wants her immortality back, but wants to pretend to herself that she hasn't made such a choice. Then she takes her parents hostage and makes a scene at Berdina's and Kratus's wedding and in effect tells her brother that "you're not the boss of me." It isn't necessarily the worst thing to have an impetuous and trouble-making point-of-view character. But it's probably a good idea to give them moments of insight into their own character, and points at which they behave reasonably as well as badly. Addie seems to be angry at her family because they're chauvinistic and condescending, but we really don't ever see this. I like the idea of benevolent gods who have flaws as well, but we don't really see the flaws. And we don't get the pleasure that most family reunion stories offer: Addie and her family never have one of those comfortable scenes where we see the good aspects of family life, the good things that Addie chose to give up to become mortal. At the moment this story feels too rushed. Slow it down a bit. Show us Addie with her mother, and Addie with some of her other brothers. Tell us how hard the climb up the mountain is, and what the climb was like when she first came down from being a goddess. Tell us something about her other visits -- how often, and does she always pick fights? Has she brought her children before? Do her benevolent god family watch after her and her mortal family? What does Addie do in her mortal life? What is her relationship with her mortal family like? Has her relationship with her children changed the way she sees her own family? Are her own children married? Why did they move far away from the mountain and her? When Addie throws the cup of wine in Math's face and storms off, why doesn't anyone follow her? Her mother? One of her other brothers? And has someone taken over the duties that Addie used to have as a god? As the narrative builds, I become less and less engaged. Addie's behavior becomes more extreme, and more foolish, and I understand less and less of the rules of this story -- why her parents are powerless in their mirror, why they aren't at the wedding instead of in the cave with Addie, why Addie faints when she eats the apple, whether or not putting her memories into the pool means that she no longer remembers why she decided to leave her family -- and why anyone would bother to keep their memories in a pool in the first place. It seems like an odd place to keep them. Finally, why hasn't Addie simply asked her family to make Petr, her husband, immortal as well? Why did she give up her immortality as well as life with her family? Why didn't she just run away to be immortal somewhere else? What is it that the mortal life promised, and was that promise kept? Judging from her behavior at the wedding, I don't think it was. Why does Addie feel betrayed by Berdina's choice to marry a god and become a god? "Betrayed" is a very odd word to use. I'm not going to give you too much feedback on the sentence level. There are a lot of typos and other minor catches, but I see that you've already gotten a lot of useful feedback on the sentence level in the critiques. (And because it came up in the critiques, I'd like to add my two cents' worth: speech tags really aren't that annoying. In fact, I find them much less annoying than going out of the way to avoid using speech tags by replacing them with minor, fiddly identifying character actions like shrugging or various kinds of grimacing or having characters pick up things and put them down.) I might think twice about telling us that Berdina is from Ethiopia - as far as settings go, it makes this one too much from this world, and yet these aren't a pantheon of gods that I recognize. I'd also look out for more contemporary slang like "Hail, hail, the gang's all here." That doesn't ring right. One last thing: the ending is cute, but it doesn't quite satisfy. If I were someone's husband and my wife came home immortal, beautiful, young, and also missing an eye, I wouldn't immediately attempt to make love to them. I'd want to know the story. I'd ask how they lost their eye. It's a more satisfying ending if Petr asks Addie to tell her story than if we fade out on their lovemaking. And frankly, it says more about their marriage as well, and why she chose him. Good luck with this. You've got a lot of interesting and original material to work with, and I found Addie's voice compelling even when I thought she was being an utter idiot. --Kelly Link Editor of TRAMPOLINE and co-editor of YEAR'S BEST FANTASY & HORROR http://www.kellylink.net/ Editor's Choice, Horror: "The Scream" by Nancy Fulda "The Scream" is a creepy and compelling story about a pumpkin that releases a horrific scream when a boy, Kody, cuts into it. The scream is then trapped inside Kody, whose behavior becomes erratic and irrational, and it is up to his brother, Pete, to attempt to understand what has happened and help Kody. Nancy, you do a great job of planting critical information early in the story without drawing attention to the information. You establish that the pumpkin farmer's son died of a crazy fit, yet we don't jump on that fact as a clue to the mystery -- if we did, we might guess the answer to the mystery. Instead, you focus our attention on the fact that Kody himself suffers from some mental instability, so we think about Kody rather than the farmer's son. This sort of skillful misdirection of the reader's attention is critical in a story that ends with a surprising revelation, as this story (and much horror) does. It allows the reader to be truly surprised, yet at the same time to accept the truth of the revelation, because the supporting evidence has been established earlier. The story also contains some strong description, such as Pete's account of the scream: "The bone around my eyes and forehead resonated -- a violent, unearthly hum, as though my skull was about to shatter -- and objects in the room seemed to waver, stretch and distort." You also do a good job of slowing down important moments by using lots of description. That helps heighten intensity and suspense. I do feel there are several weaknesses in the story that can be improved with revision. One is the narrative voice. The story is told from Pete's first-person point of view, so the voice should be his voice, using his vocabulary. Pete is looking back on events, but not from far in the future. The end of the story, where you shift from past to present tense, seems only a month or two after the rest. But the voice throughout the story seems very mature, too mature for Pete. A narrator who says, "I'm a creature of incurable habit," sounds more like Sherlock Holmes to me than a teenage boy. Similarly, "I'm more of a traditionalist myself" sounds very adult and either from a foreign country or an earlier era. If you can find a boy of Pete's age and Pete's intelligence, and tape a conversation with him, you can listen over and over to his voice to help get it into your head as you revise. This could be very helpful. Another weakness is that the solution to the mystery is not presented in a convincing manner. One reason is very simple -- the explanation is given in the wrong order. The order in which you give information -- within a story or within a paragraph or within a sentence -- is very important. The solution to the mystery is that the scream is passed from one carrier to the next. The farmer's son apparently had the scream inside his head and clawed himself to death. He was buried in the pumpkin patch, and the pumpkin vine pierced his skull, transferring the scream from the skeleton to the pumpkin. Kody's knife pierced the pumpkin, transferring the scream from the pumpkin to Kody. The explanation has three steps (the previous three sentences), and they need to come in chronological order for us to make sense of them. Here's the way you explain what happened: "Kody knifed into the pumpkin. The vine dug into the skull. Heaven knew what plant or animal the poor little boy might have injured in his play." Your explanation is backwards, in reverse chronological order, which makes it extremely difficult to follow. I had to read it over several times and think it over for a while before I figured out what you meant. You want the reader to be amazed by the revelation rather than confused, so you need to clarify this. There's a further difficulty with getting the reader to accept the solution. It seems to explain some of the facts, but not all of the facts. What stands out for me as Peter discovers the skull of the farmer's son and solves the mystery is that the farmer's son is buried in the pumpkin patch. This doesn't seem the normal place to bury a child, and he apparently has no coffin or headstone. I immediately think that the child was murdered and his body was hidden. This doesn't make sense with other things you've told me, but the other evidence you've offered was hearsay, whereas this is hard evidence, so I trust it more than anything else. Your solution doesn't offer any explanation for this, so I don't really accept it. The solution feels imposed by the author. I don't have an easy fix to offer here; I think you need to rework the evidence and the explanation so they work together better. The final weakness I want to mention is the ending. I think the last scene should be cut. You seem to want to tie a neat bow on the ending, when instead you should leave us horrified. The story seems finished to me when the second-to-last scene ends. The one thing you need to add in that second-to-last scene is a stronger description of Kody, just a moment where we see that he has regained his sanity. You don't quite do that now. If you do that, then you'll have a strong, vivid ending without the last scene. I hope this feedback is helpful. You're a strong writer, and this is an involving story that with some revision would make a good candidate for publication. --Jeanne Cavelos Editor of THE MANY FACES OF VAN HELSING 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, 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 January nominations beginning February 1. Meanwhile, here are two advance highlights from this month: Reviewer: magda knight Submission: Eudora's Song by PJ Thompson Submitted by: PJ Thompson Nominator's Comments: "Magda not only made some helpful hints regarding cutting down this story, she suggested a simple but elegant fix for a problem with it that's been bothering me for quite a while. Thanks!" Reviewer: Aaron Brown Submission: Kiss - Chapter One by Holly McDowell (w) Submitted by: Holly McDowell (w) Nominator's Comments: "Wow. I have been boggling over this first scene for months, and Aaron has come in and pinpointed exactly where it needs help and how to fix it. He has reworded things for me to make the beginning tighter and hookier, and he has given me specifics on where to add dialogue and why. What great insight! Thanks, (A)aron!" Reviewers nominated to the honor roll during December include: N Chenier, Jeanette Cottrell, Mike Farrell, Margaret Fisk, Barbara Gordon (2), Patty Jansen, Leonid Korogodski, B.E. Laing, Kevin Raybould, Gene Spears, Michael Staton, Linda Steele (2), sharelle toomey. We congratulate them all for their excellent reviews. All nominations received in December can be still found through January 30 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: Charles Coleman Finlay sold "An Eye for an Eye," the story he read at World Fantasy, in which the audience's groans acted as an impromptu critique. Thanks to everyone who showed up to listen to it. OWW Member Sales and Publications: Aliette de Bodard sold her short story "The Triad's Gift" to _Deep Magic_ (http://www.deep-magic.net). She sends "My thanks to all of those on the workshop whose reviews kept me going as a writer!" "The Prank at Dragon Mountain" by Eric Joel Bresin appears in the latest issue of _Beyond Centauri_. Rae Carson's story "A Wish in the Old Hotel Lourdes" will appear in the Jan 31 issue of _Flash Me Magazine_ (http://www.angelfire.com/biz5/authors/flashme.html). She write: "Thanks go to...*deep breath*...Heidi Kneale, Amanda Downum, Martha Knox, Heather Marshall, Aaron Brown, Kevin Kibelstis, Joanne Anderton, Rabia Gale, Jeremy Yoder, Holly McDowell, and Jodi Meadows!" Wendy S. Delmater's story "Little Green Men" may be found in the latest issue of _Beyond Centauri_. And she also sold two poems to _Breath & Shadow_ to for their February 2006 edition. John Dodds sent us this note: "A story I workshopped in the workshop a couple of years ago, 'Crow Among the Starlings,' received an honourable mention in THE YEAR'S BEST FANTASY AND HORROR 18. It appeared in a UK magazine, _Horror Express_, earlier this year. Thanks to all who fed back on the original." And thank _you_ for letting us know -- congratulations! Rose Fox sold five poems to e-card site _BlueGreen Planet_. First time! Rhonda S. Garcia's first published short story "Douen Mother" is in the latest issue of _Abyss and Apex_ (http://www.abyssandapex.com/200601-DouenMother.html). Rhonda told the mailing list: "I'm just so excited to see my words in print, I can't seem to stop smiling, even though I have the most wretched cold and I'm freezing my butt off in the office." No wonder -- congratulations! Justin Gustainis has sold his story "damnation.com" to the SHADOW REGIONS anthology, to be published in 2006 by Cavern books (which also publishes _Surreal_ magazine). Christine Hall, publishing under the pen name of Rayne Hall, starts 2006 with a bang. Her short horror story "Black Karma" is published in the current issue of _Nocturnal Ooze_ (http://www.nocturnalooze.com/Screams2.htm); her short horror story "Burning" will be in the January edition of _Byzarium_ (http://www.byzarium.com/default.asp); and she's sold her short horror story "The Bridge Chamber" to the print anthology READ BY DAWN. All the stories were workshopped. She says, "I'm on a roll! Sincere thanks to everyone who helped me shape and revise these stories, especially Donna Johnson, Teri Foster, John Hoddy, Douglas Kolacki, Karl Bunker, Seth Skorkovsky, Kari Balak, Fiona MacDonald, David Emanuel and Phillip Spencer who supported me through several layers of revision." Christopher Kastensmidt sold Polish-language reprint rights to short story "Daddy's Little Boy" to _Nowa Fantastyka_. He says, "This is my first reprint and first foreign sale!" Awesome. Ann Leckie sold her short story "Hesperia and Glory" to _Subterranean Magazine_. She sent her "Thanks to everyone who has reviewed me, everyone I have reviewed, and everyone whose reviews I've read!" She was going to send us a complete list of names, too, but we said we'd point you to the Member Directory. Maura McHugh will see her story "In the Woods" in the next issue of _Cabinet des Fees_. She says it "was not put through the workshop, but it was written because I saw (_CdF_ Editor) Erzebet's call for submissions on this mailing list." OWW moves in mysterious ways. Michael Merriam sold his story "And A Song In Her Hair," which was workshopped on OWW, to _Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine_ (http://www.andromedaspaceways.com). Michael would like to thank workshop members Dena Landon, Fiona MacDonald, Jodi Meadows, and Rae Carson for all their help with this story. Marshall Payne's short story "Souvenir Ball" is now online in the Winter 2006 issue of _Nanobison_ (http://www.nanobison.com). He sends "thanks to all for the help." Where no OWWer has gone before: Jeremy Yoder sold short story "The Smallest Choices" to Pocket Books for their STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS 9 anthology. Jeremy told the ML, "I know many here will scoff at it being Star Trek... but I guess that's your problem. A sale is a sale. :) To those familiar with Trek lore, my story is about Spock and his previously betrothed wife, T'Pring, from the original series episode 'Amok Time.' Special thanks to Keith Robinson who read over it off-line before I sent it out." | - - WORKSHOP STATISTICS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Number of members as of 1/19: 601 paying, 55 trial Number of submissions currently online: 440 Percent of submissions with 3 or more reviews: 76.59% Percent of submissions with zero reviews: 3.18% Average reviews per submission (all submissions): 5.07 Estimated average review word count (all submissions): 658.54 Number of submissions in December: 303 Number of reviews in December: 1289 Ratio of reviews/submissions in December: 4.25 Estimated average word count per review in December: 706.25 Number of submissions in January to date: 198 Number of reviews in January to date: 813 Ratio of reviews/submissions in January to date: 4.11 Estimated average word count per review in January to date: 772.75 Total number of under-reviewed submissions: (9.3% of total subs) Number over 3 days old with 0 reviews: 2 Number over 1 week old with under 2 reviews: 16 Number over 2 weeks old with under 3 reviews: 23 | - - 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 2006 Online Writing Workshops - - - - - - - - - - - |
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