2007 in Review

January 2, 2008 in General Topics

At this traditional time of reflection I’ve looked back over 2007, which will forever stand out as the year I got truly immersed in the world of writing fiction. This led to a mixed bag of blessings and disappointments, and upon review, I realized I still have some way to go before I’m firing on all cylinders in this ideal career of mine. I’ve also become somewhat disillusioned with various things I’ve seen within the fiction-writing community itself.

I learned that humility isn’t at all predictable. I guess the biggest lesson I’ve taken from this year is to watch out for cults of personality. The people in the center tend to get wrapped up in themselves. And that’s unfortunate. It’s counterproductive to the very thing we’re all supposed to be doing – getting more readers interested in speculative fiction.

As disappointing as a few stand-outs are, most of the community is honestly good people. I found myself pleasantly surprised at the demeanor of quite a few authors, whom almost always seemed warm and welcoming. Really, with the exception of a few bad eggs, the entire lot is pretty decent. Everywhere I went, I found that the truly gifted were often the most laid-back and humble; the least pretentious. You can’t teach professionalism, but these folks seem to have self-schooled themselves. It’s no surprise that many of them achieved great success over this past year (and I’ll give you a hint — I’ve linked to many of them).

Of course, I made quite a few mistakes myself. I learned the value of double-checking the impression a comment might give — before hitting “post”. I learned not to benchmark my successes against the achievements of others. Jealousy tried to creep in, so I stifled it.

My fiction writing itself went well this year, though not as well as I’d have liked. I achieved four additional sales, and some of those were to fairly prominent publications. There’s also one that came in very recently (I’ll fill you in on a later post), which will be number five if everything with the contract works out.

Looking at this one way, it’s a disappointment, as I had targeted ten fiction sales this year. On the other hand, my momentum really picked up from fall onward – November and December were strong months for me, in particular. I don’t know whether to take heart from the growing momentum among my fiction sales, or chalk it up as coincidence.

I do know that I am determined to tackle next year with renewed intensity. Too many times this past year I skipped days writing, or only got by with a few hundred words per session. That hurt my output, and tempered my ability to make a few tales as intense as I wanted, at least on the first drafts. As an example, I’m still sitting on three tales I intended to have edited and in the wild before 2008 smacked me in the face.

This isn’t entirely due to circumstances in my control. The workload at my day job really spiked this year which, although bringing accolades and rewards I was very grateful for, really cut into my writing time. It’s doubly hard to find the enthusiasm for sitting in front of a computer when you’re coming off a fifteen-plus hour day of having already done the same. To top it off, I’ve been battling some other personal stumbles that have been anything but conducive to regular dances with words. I can’t tell you what they are, but if you knew, you’d understand.

Luckily I have the support of a wonderful wife, a caring family, and my faith. It’s not I that’s achieved anything. Praise belongs solely to these positive influences.

I am determined to regain my footing in 2008. I’m resetting the score card and targeting at least ten sales again. And this year, I’m going to try and nail one of those elusive pro-market sales.

As always, I thank everyone out there for their support along the way. Happy New Year, and good luck.

The multi-million dollar book

December 13, 2007 in General Topics

This is proof positive that J.K. Rowling’s work created a phenomenon that we’ll probably never see again in our life time. Not bad for a woman that wrote most of the first “Potter” book during her daily rail commute.

But if the end result of all this is that more kids everywhere are reading, and more are connecting with their parents over the material, then you won’t be hearing me complain.

By the way — work steadily progresses on the final of the last three tales I’m writing this year.

Moving Along

December 10, 2007 in General Topics

So scratch another draft. Two down, one to go. See? I told you I could do this.

The Dry Spell

December 3, 2007 in General Topics

I suppose everyone has bad streaks. I need somewhere to vent, so it might as well be cyperspace that hears my lamentations.

Right now I am besieged by frustration from two stories I’ve dubbed “the evil twins”. The two tales — one in the third-draft phase, the other in the first-draft phase — have several things in common:

  • They are both horror stories.
  • Both have novel concepts.
  • Both are tightly protagonist-based.
  • Both are frustrating the hell out of me.

I have been plagued by how to end these two stories. In both cases, I had the two stories outlined well in advance of writing them. However, despite flying well, I can’t seem to stick their landings. And it’s sapping my enthusiasm.

Worse still, this had bled-over into my ability to work on a third science fiction piece that I should be salivating over. The problem is, I’m negatively associating my frustration over tales one and two with this third effort.

I don’t know how to get my enthusiasm back. Long hours at work and the demands of the Christmas Season have sapped my time and led me to crave relaxation to the point of slacking off even during my normal writing times. Instead of writing during lunch, I’ve been browsing the web. I’ve been lucky to get north of 500 words a day lately, and some days I haven’t done any.

I remained determined. I have to kick myself in the butt and get in gear. I have self-imposed a deadline to get all three tales out before the year is over. That means I have to correct the first story, finish off the second and move it through the normal draft and first reader cycle — then do all the same with number three.

All over three weeks.

Think I can do it? I promise. I expect you guys to hold me to it.

From the customer’s mouth

November 27, 2007 in General Topics

Thank God for Technorati, lest I miss little gems like this, from Mari Adkins, one of the editors over at Apex Digest:

Every slush reader on the planet has a list of “woes”. I admit, after almost two years of wading through Apex Digest slush, I’ve been slow to create mine. Here, though, are my top six in no particular order.

* “It was as if” – No, it wasn’t. Either something is or it isn’t
* Cover letter trying to be humorous and failing badly – Personally, I don’t feel humor has any place in a professional cover or query letter
* “Suddenly” – My eyes and ears bleed
* Poorly addressed cover letters – ie, those submissions which come to a specific editor – When you submit directly to a specific editor, your submission is forwarded to the actual submissions pool.
* No cover letter – I get these quite often, the rogue submission with no cover letter whatsoever, and I’m always left going, “HHmmm.

Helpful stuff. I’ve always hated “Suddenly” myself, and try to avoid it, but it probably appears once or twice in a given tale. “It was as if” makes sense. E.B. White would scream if he saw it.