Archive for the ‘Publishing’ Category

Publication News: Friends Edition

March 5, 2010 - 7:09 pm 2 Comments

The lovely Miss Rose Lemberg has had announced a sale at Strange Horizons (which for those unawares is really epic and awesome and I love this market).

Also, Christie Yant has made a pro sale! I cannae say the market, because it is a sekrit at the moment, but let it be known that it is Truly Legitimately Awesome.

And last but biggest is that Wendy Wagner has gone and sold a novel! When I see her, I’m going to throw glitter square in her face.

Metacognition and Self-Publishing

January 29, 2010 - 6:32 pm 8 Comments

There have been two recent events that contribute to this blog post.

One of the events, which becomes two events if you slice it right, is the creation of a “self-publishing branch” by two professional publishers, Harlequin and Thomas Nelson. These events have caused a lot of drama (warning: epic thread is epic, and massive timesink of external linking). To sum: RWA, MWA, and SFWA have dropped both publishers from their lists of acceptable publishing credits. The well-respected publishing watchdog Writer Beware has relatively scathing posts about these two moves. WB is definitely not an alarmist blog, and is very careful about the language used concerning publishers, due to living under persistent threat of lawsuit. So if WB calls you out in unequivocal language, son, you done fucked up.

The other is that I rediscovered this article. Which is a lot less to read than the above.

If you ever hit up any of these “self-publishing” sites for testimonials (more on the scare quotes later) you’ll see hearts like cups filled with effervescence, spilling over in their joy of having Their Story in book form, surrounded by stock photos of Not The Actual Author Because They Can’t Smile Quite As Disarmingly As This Soft-Focused Photo Of A Woman Done In Pastels.

These publishers, in their efforts to entice you, will engage in a persuasive speech of the downtrodden author, kept down by “the man” as embodied by traditional publishing, mocked openly by the gatekeepers who presume to call themselves literary agents, the verysame agents who go on to demand a sizable portion of your hard-won advance for doing something so simple as passing your manuscript to an editor. Their arguments are propped up by strawmen at best, and like all modern persuasive speeches, they’re going to net only Kool-Aid drinkers and the uninformed. The rest of us know better.

But I’m not really interested in persuading the Kool-Aid drinkers to change their ways. I’ve said it before, I’m saying it again, and I’ll keep saying it: I’m selfish, my time is valuable, and I’m not going to waste it. If anyone should be enticed by dreamily-painted arguments instead of numbers and fact, then I don’t mind seeing their wallet molested because they feel Night Travels of the Elven Vampire “deserves to be read.”

As far as convincing those who are unaware of this world? There are many other places that can help them far better than I can. WB as listed above, AbsoluteWrite, and the still-useful Snarkives do this and I’m not a fan of doubling work.

Aside: Before I get into what I wanted to discuss, I’ll clarify those scare quotes. Self-publishing and Vanity Publishing are two different things. Self-publishing is where the author owns the ISBN and the product. Vanity publishing is where the author does not. They both require out-of-pocket expenditure to have the final product of a sheaf of paper with a glossy page on either end, both will not likely land in bookstores, and both require authors to bust their asses to get people other than close kith and kin to buy the books. But self-publishing tends not to lie about what it is. Vanity does. Especially on the points I listed.

Aside, continued: Legitimate self-publishing is, in my opinion, pretty awesome. It lets you bind your family history in a book. It lets you collect grandma’s recipes to hand to your kids and their kids. It helps make your niche paper on the parallels of microorganism reproduction and Internet memes accessible to the public. It doesn’t get your book mentioned on Oprah, but it gets your work out to interested audiences. And, you own said book. Not so with Vanity, which targets a different audience (hopeful novelists) with a different goal (you might get discovered this way and become all super-famous and shit).

Anywhoozle.

For those who didn’t want to read the article I linked (that’s okay, it’s six pages for a small point) I’ll summarize it here, sloppily: people with self-control do better in life. For those of you who did read the article (good job): yes, a lot more than that happened in the article, but that’s all I care about, and I’d be very happy if you went along with me on that one point, thanks.

The Marshmallow Experiment. You set a marshmallow in front of a child. Tell them if they don’t eat it for fifteen minutes, then they get a second marshmallow. Some children are able to resist. Others are not. The children who said no to the marshmallow in favor of two marshmallows have, across the board, done better in life, because they were able to weigh short-term gain and long-term gain.

You see where I’m going with this.

Vanity presses are the now-marshmallow. It’s the one sitting on your desk, teasing you. Give in and you’ll have that book in your hands tomorrow! Professional, traditional publishing is the later-marshmallow. Why wasn’t your novel published? Well, because it sucks and you need to work on that. Maybe your characters are flat. Maybe your prose is dead on the page. Maybe your story isn’t compelling. You’re trying to sell your book to people who love books, both pre- and post-publication. The masses who pick up DaVinci Code are not your audience. The people who just “pop in to have a quick look” and walk out with an armful of new titles because omg I didn’t know he’d just released a new book, and I’ve heard a lot about this series I should check it out, and I totally love her medical mysteries and she blurbed this other author’s medical mystery so I want to read that, and… you get the idea. This is your audience. And these people? They’ve read a lot. A lot. They’re going to be harder to convince of how awesome your book is.

Writing is hard. Your first draft needs work. Your first novel isn’t likely to get published (but zomg it took a year to write!). But if you work at your craft with your eye on the distant prize of being a Professional Author instead of just a hobbyist and ignore the temptation of just having a book in your hands with your name on it, you’re going to be a fair sight better off.

This is the metacognition part. Think about how you think about publishing. Do you think being published is a human right, alongside clean water and a Louis Vuitton bag? Well, it’s not. Never was. It is the result of hard work, diligence, and a creative streak, and in this like all things the world owes you nothing. If the temptation of Vanity presses prove overwhelming, play metacognative tricks. Ignore the low-hanging fruit which is rotted at the core. Pretend it doesn’t exist. Play with your stories, worlds, characters. Read more. Go to conventions. Blog. When a Vanity press creeps into your periphery, turn your head and focus.

And if you honestly hate working at the craft of writing, find something better to do. Painting, interior design, blacksmithing, I don’t care. If you really want to write stories but don’t want to deal with serious publication, I suggest posting online and pursuing fanfiction. Scratches the writing itch, you get to share your work, and there’s no cost out of pocket. Just don’t waste your time doing something for the wrong reasons that makes you unhappy. You time is as precious as mine is.

Say no to the Now Marshmallow. Find your Later Marshmallow and go get it.

SF in SF — VanderMeer and Browne

November 16, 2009 - 8:29 pm No Comments

Before I open with this post, I would like to recommend against using the Add an Image button in Wordpress admin if you’re running Chrome. The whole process crashed, and something has been fractured on a very basic level. I cannot type in web addresses anymore. It attempts to search for everything. Getting back to the Add New Post page was a hassle on its own.

That said, I had an image to post for the goings-on this Saturday. You’ll have to wait until my memory kicks in outside of work. Probability of this happening is low.

Emily and I trekked on up to the city for SF in SF, primarily because Jeff was going to be reading from FINCH (which he did wonderfully, and I need to go read it already, because I’m terrible). (Also, that’s a lot of links.) Wound up also liking Scott Browne’s book BREATHERS enough to trust his suggestion that I read more Palahniuk (I’m not linking Palahniuk, he doesn’t need my help, and there’s enough links up there anyway).

Briefly…

FINCH is the fifth and “last” novel in the Ambergris series. Finch is a detective working to solve a double-murder in the true fashion of a noir novel, but set in an Ambergris now ruled by the sinister Greycaps, a completely foreign species who subjugate the people, their actions driven by misunderstanding and malice. Would appeal to fans of noir looking for something with an edge of horror (memory spores?) and the fantastic, or to fans of urban fantasy who miss the genre when it wasn’t paranormal romance rebranded.

BREATHERS is a novel about zombies and their plight as sentient beings in the unaccepting world of the living, the narrator a zombie with a persistently detached dry humor. Would appeal to fans of Palahniuk who want the guy to take himself less seriously.

Here’s my tip to you: don’t show up to these things late. Emily and I scooted in t-minus one minute before the reading proper was to begin, and we stood in the doorway awkwardly. Then we were informed “There are seats in the front.” Rows upon rows of plush seats not unlike a movie theatre were packed full, but we trusted the words whispered to us and shot off for the front row.

And yes, there were seats. On folding chairs set maybe a foot back from the authors’ table. I could have set my water on there. Instead I just leaned in awkwardly and stared at Jeff.

Another tip to you: don’t do that. The awkward-lean thing. You get branded, poorly.

Afterwards a good lot of us toddled up to The View for drinks, and if you haven’t been there, it’s not unlike standing on the viewing deck of the Death Star, overlooking the San Francisco skyline on either side. The booze is overpriced and underpoured (I asked for a Jameson sour and got a twelve-dollar lemonade) but you’re there for the view and I was driving back to south bay anyway. And if that was the cover charge, totally worth it to hang out with Emily, Jeff, Jean (EIC of SF/SF ezine), and new friend Espana.

No music post today. I’m just tapping my toes to some Mountain Goats. I’ve mentioned their song Lovecraft in Brooklyn before (link is actually a remix by Aesop Rock). Today it’s This Year.

Publication News, Friends Edition

October 7, 2009 - 9:42 pm No Comments

This is a fantastic thing to read when crawling out of the secure lab.

Hunger Mountain announces the winners of the first Katherine Paterson Prize for Young Adult and Children’s Writing!–September 2009

Emily Jiang of Palo Alto, California has also won an honorable mention for her young adult novel excerpt “Paper Daughter,” which begins on August 12, 1940 when “sixteen-year-old Jing-Mei must lie through her final Angel Island interrogation before escorting her two cousins to America.”

link

Hooray to Emily!!

Publication News, Friends Edition

August 26, 2009 - 1:46 am No Comments

Isaac Espriu has gone and made a sale to Electric Velocipede. He was taking bets on how many rejections it would take for him to sell. The end result? Forty-one.

I like the contest idea. It take an otherwise tough thing and gives it a little more excitement. Double thumbs-up for Isaac, one for making the sale (and to such a solid market, no less), and one for being just so awesome about the path.

ToC Wankery: The Mamoth Book of Mindblowing SF

August 3, 2009 - 10:27 pm No Comments

Today, SF Signal — one of the better scifi blogs, if you ask me, certainly leagues above io9, but I digress — posted a ToC from The Mammoth Book of Mindblowing SF.

Here it is, in case we lose the post:

  1. “Out of the Sun” by Arthur C. Clarke
  2. “The Pevatron Rats” by Stephen Baxter *
  3. “The Edge of the Map” by Ian Creasey
  4. “Cascade Point” by Timothy Zahn
  5. “A Dance to Strange Musics” by Gregory Benford
  6. “Palindromic” by Peter Crowther
  7. “Castle in the Sky” by Robert Reed *
  8. “The Hole in the Hole” by Terry Bisson
  9. “Hotrider” by Keith Brooke
  10. “Mother Grasshopper” by Michael Swanwick
  11. “Waves and Smart Magma” by Paul Di Filippo *
  12. “The Black Hole Passes” by John Varley
  13. “The Peacock King” by Ted White & Larry McCombs
  14. “Bridge” by James Blish
  15. “Anhedonia” by Adam Roberts *
  16. “Tiger Burning” by Alastair Reynolds
  17. “The Width of the World” by Ian Watson
  18. “Our Lady of the Sauropods” by Robert Silverberg
  19. “Into the Miranda Rift” by G. David Nordley
  20. “The Rest is Speculation” by Eric Brown *
  21. “Vacuum States” by Geoffrey A. Landis
  22. * = New story written for this anthology

    As I said in the comments:

    Well, there’s the joke that SF is dominated by old, white men. If you take that perspective, this ToC is quite certainly representative of the genre.

    :: sigh :: Oh, well. There’s another missed opportunity for SF to really show what it’s got.

    The shameful thing is that while these are all quite good authors, there’s so much more to the genre. I ever so like Clarke, and Di Fillipo, and Zahn, and others on the list. But there’s no Butler, Le Guin, or Moon, or Delany. And those are just the ones I can name off the top of my head.

    We can argue whether or not there’s an editorial responsibility to accurately represent genre when you label your collections as such. We can also argue whether or not the stories are mindblowing.

    However, I simply find it surprising that the names I listed weren’t on the list. They’re not exactly light steppers in the genre, and it’s not like they’ve never written a short story in their lives. Even then, they could have been approached to produce new stories, as the anthology obviously accepted new stories.

    It’s just a bit glaring, is all. Another little tickmark, along the lines of this bullshit with EA, which consistently shows that SF and genre and geekery in general are a place for the outcast to feel less alone and excluded and ridiculed, so long as they’re a male WASP.

    But like I said, :: sigh :: oh well. Mike Ashley just became one in a series, instead of taking a step towards standing out and being truly mindblowing.

Projects, Projects, Projects, and some Wankery

July 29, 2009 - 1:25 pm No Comments

It’s rare I kvetch about writing on here, simply because I’m still very much an amateur and thusly have little weight behind my words.

But this bullshit was pretty awesome. I missed all of this because I was at Comic-Con. But now I’ve caught up. It was delicious. Many thanks to Shweta for making me aware.

Anyway, I said projects in the title so I’ll flub about on those.

Current Novel is still untitled, but I’ve been calling it The Runner Novel, so I’ll keep going with that (though I’m looking for a good symbol for metamorphosis that isn’t a butterfly, if any of you can think of something…). I’m at a little over 60K, and considering I started in early April I feel that’s pretty good for a rookie.

Finished a short named Doll which I’m editing, currently at a little over 3K but I have a feeling I need to expand on one of my characters, and I think it’ll be brushing against 4K by the time I finish.

Lastly, I believe I have a friend who will be my artist-type for Steampunk Samurai Graphic Novel AKA Zodiac, which has me really stoked.

Oh, and I need to get back on editing the script for Wolf (comic), so I have something to show Dale Mettam for all my posturing.

That’s about all, I suppose. My own existence is largely uninteresting. Maybe I’ll be heading off to the Floating Market up in San Francisco, which Kat discovered just this past week.

Publication News, Friends Edition

July 7, 2009 - 2:05 pm No Comments

Awesome congrats to Isaac for his story in Bards and Sages Quarterly. But, damnit Isaac, why can’t there be an online version of this magazine, hm? I hope I can read it at some point…

And awesomeness for Shweta for making a sale at Realms of Fantasy. Her story is called Sultana Lena’s Gift, and I can’t wait to read it! And apparently her story “marks my first slush survivor accepted during the new regime” and for those uninformed that praise is rather glowing.

And I think I’ve got a name for the rampant “hooray for publications” posts. Because I think this is the fourth I’ve made in the past two months, and that’s rather frequent.

Still Need A Generic “Congrats to Writers” Title…

June 1, 2009 - 1:20 pm No Comments

And to Sharon for selling a story to Abyss & Apex! (I’ve been holding off on this because she’s been holding off on this but she finally said something so now I get to as well.)

Hooray! :D

I Need A Generic “Congrats to Writers” Title…

May 21, 2009 - 9:18 pm No Comments

Congrats to kaolin for his acceptance at @tweetthemeat, twitter horror fiction. Check it out here!

And Keffy’s first published story just came out today in Issue 6 of Sybil’s Garage!

Woohoo!

And I really need a generic type of title for this.