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Issue 2.3 to Print!
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Monday, 11 August 2008

ImageIt's done. Issue 2.3 was put to bed last night, or I guess I really should say this morning, at 1AM. Thank ya Lord is all I can say about that. The cover is awesome, the content is awesome, it's all awesome. 

So since we're all tired (but good tired, not bad tired) and all, instead of listening to me ramble on incoherently, why not go read Michael Snyder's really nice post about us over ChristianWriters.com ? It's pretty neat! 

 
Path to Publication, Closing: Nuts N’ Bolts Part One
Written by Kevin Lucia   
Friday, 08 August 2008

 ImageAnd Now...How?

Say you’ve committed to writing for publication, chosen your market, ordered sample magazines, and studied their writing. 

You’ve opened yourself to critique, taken advice, and locked in for the long haul. You suspect you won’t get published right away, but you’re committed. You’ve got a plan, made crucial decisions concerning your schedule and personal habits, have clear focus on what you want to write, and an idea where to submit.

So now, you ask …how?

Let’s assume you dabble in short fiction—although as I’ve said, these steps can be adapted to different genres and markets, although publication for novels, non-fiction books, children’s illustrated books or poetry chapbooks follow slightly paths.

In any case – where to start? Well, you need to determine the genre.  Let’s say, (showing no personal preference), you’ve decided on horror/dark speculative fiction. You could type “horror fiction/dark fiction magazines” into Google, and come up with hundreds of results. Herein lies an important question, immediately: where do you ultimately want to go?

Potential Destinations

First of all, there are many different payment scales, but rather than use labels like “token payment”, “non-payment”, “contributor copy payment”, “semi-pro” and so on, let’s break it into four categories:

  1. “4theluv”, non-payment, non-exposure: these journals are run by folks with little publishing experience or background, featuring little exposure. Often, these are online “ezines”, and the only contributor copy you receive is a .pdf.  Anthologies printed through Lulu.com often – but not always – fall into this category.
  2.  “token payments”: magazines and ezines that offer flat payment for fiction, ($5, $10, $25), or offer payment per word – say, .005 cents – but still have a payment plateau.
  3. “semi-pro and above”: magazines that offer at least .01 - .02 a word and don’t have payment cap but rather a word count cap, or anthologies that offer at least $60 - $80 per story.
  4. Reputable magazines and anthologies, regardless of payment: Certain magazines are run by knowledgeable people, featuring well written material, that simply can’t pay every contributor in cash, and usually pay with contributor copies, or feature cash-prize contests. These magazines often have decent circulation and are well regarded. Their claim of “exposure” and “publication credit” actually holds merit.

Relief and Coach’s Midnight Diner fall into this category, (again, no bias), as do most college literary magazines – depending on the size of the college, and the nature of the publication.  Last year, I was a reader for my grad school’s literary magazine, The Harpur Palate , which pays contributor copies, but has received critical acclaim, and holds several notable, well-paying contests. A note: most college literary magazines don’t accept genre fiction, and those that do usually gear towards fantasy and science fiction. A good example is The Fairy Tale Review, a co-publication of The University of Alabama Press.

One genre magazine that’s fairly reputable and only pays in contributor copies is The Ghost Story Society’s All Hallows magazine, which I find interesting, because the website itself isn’t that impressive. However, I’ve heard many good things from notable writers. Also, Morpheus Tales, a new magazine in the UK, has featured many interesting writers who’ve done well, and Fear and Trembling Magazine – though only offering token payment – shares the corner market on Christian horror with Coach’s Midnight Diner.

Why cover this first? Honestly, because I wish someone had done the same for me three years ago. If you’re choosing this route to publication, consider your list of credits as a writing resume. Even though the quality of your writing and story, the needs of a publisher, your professionalism, and God’s Will are the ultimate factors determining publishing success, there’s much to be said for “reputation by association”.  Who you hang out with, associate with – who you’re published by and with – can make an impact.

I’ve seen lots of opinions, blogs, and rants on this topic – some of them pretty scathing, almost demeaning. A very good blog about this topic posted recently by Christian Horror Writer, (note: not writer of Christian Horror), Maurice Broaddus addresses this issue with candor.  Here’s my take: in the beginning, I don’t think it matters. During college, when you’re working for pennies in the dinning hall or at the supermarket, you’re not worried about your resume. You’re learning good work ethic, timeliness, responsibility, and earning enough to scrape by.

As you start to send fiction into the market, I think it’s the same way. Hitting a few “4theluv” markets in the beginning is more for your benefit. It boosts morale; you put process into effect, and refine it. At some point, however, an important question needs to be asked: where do you want this to ultimately go?

Why Are You Doing This Again?

If you’re writing for your own enjoyment, (which we all do to some extent), and have no career plans for writing, you can do what you like. However, if you’re interested in a career, you need to look closely at where you’re submitting work, analyzing the quality of their format, their writers, their circulation, and their pay scales.  If you’re in this bracket, the following three are huge priorities:

  1. You want to gain some “street cred”
  2. You want to gain some fans
  3. You want to get paid

For the most part, you won’t obtain these by submitting to “4theluv” and “token payment” publications. Honestly, I am extracting myself from #1 and #2, and applying myself to #3 and #4 (though you should  break these rules as you see fit) Say you submit a few older stories to ezines, simply to have links to stories from your website that browsers can read in a mouse click. Feel free. Say a close associate who runs a token payment anthology solicits a story, and you have no previous writing conflicts – why not? Be careful, though, and I write this warning as someone who, again, wishes I’d been counseled this from the very beginning.

So now – all that stuff is out of the way. You’ve finished your first story, typed ‘The End’, proof-read it to death, and learned how to recognize different types of publications. So where do you find them?  And how do you approach them? Tune in next week to find out.

 
Prayer For Cyber-Acceptance
Written by Monica Brand   
Thursday, 07 August 2008

ImageNot Exactly An "Acceptable" Request

When my pastor looked at the floor, I knew my prayer request wasn't what he wanted to hear.

It was Wednesday night. The night of the week when my church comes together for the midweek "Family Night" service. Kids tucked away out of sight in the basement for their programs; adults upstairs in a circle of chairs for Bible study.

At the end of the evening, Pastor asked for prayer requests. I had one – a pretty good one too. Or so I thought.

"I write for a couple of websites and I'm trying to figure out how to be a good witness"

I'd love to say Pastor jumped up with a shout of praise or a heart-felt Amen. "Way to go, Monica! What a great opportunity!" Nope. Nothing like that for me. Like I said, he looked at the floor, and one of the church deacons, sitting next to him, did the same.

Oops. Body language.

If you think that reaction was bad, it gets even worse.

"The evil on the Internet... '' Pastor ran a hand through his hair. That's about all I heard, cause the rest I didn't want to hear.

Let me just put this out there before I continue:

I love the Internet, with all it's social groups, Facebook, blogs, and StumbleUpon. The people I've met through blogging and Twitter I consider my friends, just as real as flesh and blood relationships. Hey, I'm a stay-at-home mom, don't forget. I need my water cooler time too. Online shopping makes Christmas fun. Suddenly writing alone at night isn't so... alone. Company is just a click of the mouse away. Often you must ignore it, or get nothing done.

Oh, and email. I love getting email.

A Different Generational Perspective

I understand where my Pastor is coming from, I'm sure he's dealt plenty with the dark side of cyberspace. The porn, the chat rooms with Lord-knows-what going on, the predators lurking, wanting to lure a child to harm. A few years back we had a guy in our congregation meet a young lady online, they married, but the marriage crashed and burned after a short run.

My Pastor is of a different generation, a grandfather. Perhaps if he were younger, he would see the Internet differently, like I do. He has a computer with Internet access in his office (with some sort of software to block naughty sites) that he uses for writing the sermon, email and research, but using the web for social interaction – I bet he thinks it's a waste of time.

Now that you know where I stand, I want to hear from you: Is the Internet the devil or your friend? How does your church use the web to its' advantage. And does your Pastor need to be baptized into the beauty of free high speed Internet and FriendFeed?

 
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