Another year, another glance over my shoulder at the trail of chaos and confusion in my wake.
Last year, I didn't set myself a target of a short story submission a day, so there's no shame in only managing 206 in 2019. As regards results, the year saw seven acceptances, 162 form rejections, and 29 with something nice to say alongside a firm 'no'. Twenty-eight remain out in the ether, a herd of editorial Schrodinger's Cats, with an unusually high proportion (six) of 'held pending consideration', although I doubt more than a couple will bear fruit.
So, on the face of it, a good year, and the primary target of three pieces sold achieved in spades. But, when you consider what those pieces were and where they went:
Two drabbles, three pieces around 1000 words, and only two proper short stories. All new material, granted, but that's still barely 11,000 words in a year. Hardly Proust. And, having written ten stories in the year, I'm still selling them slower than I'm writing them.
Plus, when looked at through the prism of my acknowledged need to get published in more professional, higher paying, greater circulating, more prestigious places - with all respect to the semi-pro venues listed here - it's not been a roaring success.
As part of that strategy, feeling that I at least had a sense of what the Writers of the Future were after, I went all out after that glittering prize, garnering two silver honourables, and two unplaced. One of the latter pair really stuck in the craw, as I felt it architect-designed for them, but them's the breaks...
In addition to those above, 'The Loimaa Protocol', sold in 2018, appeared back in the Spring. And 'May Nothing But Happiness Come Through Your Door', also sold in 2018, remains slated to appear on Abyss and Apex sometime this year - and caused a minor ruffle when they chased for a signed contract, with ominous tones of 'if we don't hear from you rapidly', a year after I'd actually returned the paperwork.
Three other targets: to sell a novel, write a novel, and publish a novel. In roughly that non-intuitive order. Might as well sell what I've already written whilst writing more. Right?
Less said the better on all fronts. Irons remain in the fire on my YA Harry Potter-meets-Doctor Who novel, which I just want someone to love as much as I do, but that hasn't shown any signs of life in a while. It remains out with a small number of agents and publishers - here's hoping that somebody lifted it off the slush pile whilst in a good mood this Yuletide.
As for my dark sci-fi thriller 'Toefoot', it's drifted along from 18,800 words to 33,000 words. I'm in that long dark tunnel known as act two with little sign of any light at the end. Ideas for short stories are too frequent and too enticing, and I keep reverting to the short form. That or working for money, which is also a constant fly in my ointment.
And, as for taking the easy way out and publishing direct to Kindle, I'm still clinging to the hope that somehow a proper imprint will come along and save me from being my own publisher.
I can dream, can't I? It's that time of year.
Last year, I didn't set myself a target of a short story submission a day, so there's no shame in only managing 206 in 2019. As regards results, the year saw seven acceptances, 162 form rejections, and 29 with something nice to say alongside a firm 'no'. Twenty-eight remain out in the ether, a herd of editorial Schrodinger's Cats, with an unusually high proportion (six) of 'held pending consideration', although I doubt more than a couple will bear fruit.
So, on the face of it, a good year, and the primary target of three pieces sold achieved in spades. But, when you consider what those pieces were and where they went:
- 'Camponotus Vampiricus' and 'Tesla luvs Waymo 4Ever', two drabbles to Black Hare Press. I'm not even sure whether these have appeared anywhere yet.
- 'The Artist and the Magician', which will appear later this month in the anthology Pride, also from Black Hare Press.
- 'The Root Canals of Mars', Harbinger Press, which hit your screens in October 2019. I'm glad to see this personal favourite, and one over which I still await a kill fee from Carrie Cuinn, has finally made it out there.
- 'A Room With a View', in the anthology Five Minutes at Hotel Stormcove from AtthisArts, published in March.
- 'How Did They Get You?' in James Gunn's Ad Astra #7, which came out two days short of 2020, and
- 'The Fool', in issue 9 of The New Accelerator.
Two drabbles, three pieces around 1000 words, and only two proper short stories. All new material, granted, but that's still barely 11,000 words in a year. Hardly Proust. And, having written ten stories in the year, I'm still selling them slower than I'm writing them.
Plus, when looked at through the prism of my acknowledged need to get published in more professional, higher paying, greater circulating, more prestigious places - with all respect to the semi-pro venues listed here - it's not been a roaring success.
As part of that strategy, feeling that I at least had a sense of what the Writers of the Future were after, I went all out after that glittering prize, garnering two silver honourables, and two unplaced. One of the latter pair really stuck in the craw, as I felt it architect-designed for them, but them's the breaks...
In addition to those above, 'The Loimaa Protocol', sold in 2018, appeared back in the Spring. And 'May Nothing But Happiness Come Through Your Door', also sold in 2018, remains slated to appear on Abyss and Apex sometime this year - and caused a minor ruffle when they chased for a signed contract, with ominous tones of 'if we don't hear from you rapidly', a year after I'd actually returned the paperwork.
Three other targets: to sell a novel, write a novel, and publish a novel. In roughly that non-intuitive order. Might as well sell what I've already written whilst writing more. Right?
Less said the better on all fronts. Irons remain in the fire on my YA Harry Potter-meets-Doctor Who novel, which I just want someone to love as much as I do, but that hasn't shown any signs of life in a while. It remains out with a small number of agents and publishers - here's hoping that somebody lifted it off the slush pile whilst in a good mood this Yuletide.
As for my dark sci-fi thriller 'Toefoot', it's drifted along from 18,800 words to 33,000 words. I'm in that long dark tunnel known as act two with little sign of any light at the end. Ideas for short stories are too frequent and too enticing, and I keep reverting to the short form. That or working for money, which is also a constant fly in my ointment.
And, as for taking the easy way out and publishing direct to Kindle, I'm still clinging to the hope that somehow a proper imprint will come along and save me from being my own publisher.
I can dream, can't I? It's that time of year.
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