storysinger wrote:Who will turn the page?
And another earworm!
dr-phil wrote:Has anyone ever done a doctoral dissertation on the contest? There's gotta be good things in the data or even this forum to mine for research.
I mean thirty years. That's over half a million dollars in prizes for WOTF and IOTF, which doesn't cover the costs of the event and workshops. This is a significant thing in the SF/F world.
Dr. Phil
Holly Heisey wrote:Or even a documentary would be awesome. Has that ever been done? At all, let alone by an outside source?
Actually, I'd love just a documentary on the SFF literary scene as a whole. I'd see the contest figuring prominently in something like that.
Martin L. Shoemaker wrote:austinDm wrote:Jibber Jabber - Q1 - 29
Postby gower21 » Tue Sep 13, 2011 11:00 pm
Does anyone else think it's crazy that this thread was started over three years ago!!
That gower21 is obviously a troublemaker...
gower21 wrote:Martin L. Shoemaker wrote:austinDm wrote:
That gower21 is obviously a troublemaker...
This thread shall live!!! It is my lifeblood.
hazlett wrote:You guys are slacking.
It's been almost two weeks since someone has posted something on this thread.
You're welcome.
bobsandiego wrote:When did I become the kind of writer that wastes 1100 words at the start of a short story on atmospheric scene setting and description?
I used to get dinged by readers for a lack of detail and description because I was so focused on my plot and this past week at my writers group meeting I read out 1200-1300 words from the WIP and discovered as I was reading it that not a god damn thing was happening.
It was all cityscape, weather, and mood.
Have I gone artsy-fartsy?
when did this happen to me?
amoskalik wrote:I used to write 100 word stories. Then maybe a page or two. I couldn't seem to write anything longer than that and have it come out coherent. Then I buckled down and wrote the first draft of a novel, 100K+ words. I worked in all sorts of subplots, themes, world building, a large cast of characters, etc.
Now I can't write a story under 8K words to save my life. My current WIP is a case in point. It started with a very simple idea I had while daydreaming at work. I figured I whip it into a nice little light-hearted 3K word story and move on to other projects I had planned.
That was over four months and 14K words ago. I really like the story I have so far, but it was never supposed to be as complex as it turned out to be.
E.CaimanSands wrote:amoskalik wrote:I used to write 100 word stories. Then maybe a page or two. I couldn't seem to write anything longer than that and have it come out coherent. Then I buckled down and wrote the first draft of a novel, 100K+ words. I worked in all sorts of subplots, themes, world building, a large cast of characters, etc.
Now I can't write a story under 8K words to save my life. My current WIP is a case in point. It started with a very simple idea I had while daydreaming at work. I figured I whip it into a nice little light-hearted 3K word story and move on to other projects I had planned.
That was over four months and 14K words ago. I really like the story I have so far, but it was never supposed to be as complex as it turned out to be.
Yup, I'm finding much the same. All my stories were initially between 500-4000 words long. Anything longer would degenerate into incoherence and confusion. Now that I've studied plotting a bit, and story, I can't seem to write anything short at all. Which is a problem seeing as all my four sales have been under 4000 words...What chance my longer ones have I couldn't say. Being both longer and more deliberately plotted they are probably also becoming less literary and more commercial, which might be good for WotF, but bad for most other places I know of. I might have to concentrate more on self publishing, or even think of writing a novel (shocker!)
amoskalik wrote:I feel you. I used to write 100 word stories. Then maybe a page or two. I couldn't seem to write anything longer than that and have it come out coherent. Then I buckled down and wrote the first draft of a novel, 100K+ words. I worked in all sorts of subplots, themes, world building, a large cast of characters, etc.
Humboldt Steve wrote:amoskalik wrote:I feel you. I used to write 100 word stories. Then maybe a page or two. I couldn't seem to write anything longer than that and have it come out coherent. Then I buckled down and wrote the first draft of a novel, 100K+ words. I worked in all sorts of subplots, themes, world building, a large cast of characters, etc.
I find the 100 word stories force you to concentrate on the meaning of every word and prune to essentials. It's a good exercise. Just had one published in the North Coast Journal's 99 word story contest.
Holly Heisey wrote:Flash on your phone! That's brilliant!
I have yet to conquer the drabble. I'm getting closer, though. I wrote several pieces of actual flash this year. I only had to start with a 250 word limit, and I ended up at 700 or something. Maybe if I start at a 25 word limit I'll end up at 100?
As someone who routinely churns out 240K novels, this is a whole nother ballgame. I love the challenge, though!
Ishmael wrote:I did once turn a flash into 10K plus because I thought it was such a good idea. Problem: I'm still waiting for an editor to agree.
Ho hum!
Holly Heisey wrote:Ishmael wrote:I did once turn a flash into 10K plus because I thought it was such a good idea. Problem: I'm still waiting for an editor to agree.
Ho hum!
That must have been quite an idea! Some ideas definitely require a full fleshing out.
Hmm. Turning things intended to be small into larger things seems to be a trend. I am not alone!
I haven't tried a flash series yet. That would be really fun.
E.CaimanSands wrote:I have vague plans of writing a series of stories set in my two universes and then linking them so I have two novels by the end of it. I'm sure this is a bad idea of course, it'll never work. But I'm too lazy/intimidated by the prospect of starting a real novel.
LDWriter2 wrote:Come to think of it I do have a flash story that turned into five stories with a total of around 56,000 to 58,000 words.
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