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Short Stories: April 21, 2010 Issue [#3688]

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Short Stories


 This week: Go Ahead, Put the Cart Before the Horse
  Edited by: Ben Langhinrichs
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

It is to be absolutely automatic, the slave of the mathematician carrying out his orders and relieving him from the drudgery of computing.
         Major-General H. P. Babbage, 188, in a paper describing his father's Analytical Engine


Greetings! I am one of the editors for the Short Stories Newsletter, and I hope to share some of my thoughts on writing short stories, and perhaps about writing in general. I suggest you treat these not as pearls of wisdom dropped from on high, but rather musings of a fellow writer, written to inspire, provoke or stimulate your personal muse. I welcome your thoughts, feedback and suggestions.
Ben Langhinrichs


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Letter from the editor

VIGOR'S HORSE-ACTION SADDLE

Which not only provides, as Dr. GEORGE FLEMING, C. C., writes, "A PERFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR THE LIVE HORSE" but acts so beneficially upon the system as to be of almost priceless value.

         Advertisement, Country Life Illustrated, 8 Jan 1897


Research: Feel Free to Put the Cart Before the Horse

Too often, we all think of research as the dry, boring work which went into writing research papers in high school or college. Research often meant searching through lots of irrelevant material trying to find the facts to back up a thesis. To make matters worse, we had little control over the thesis, much less the sullen facts doing their best to blend in so as to be difficult to find.

But we are writers, not students (although some of you may be both). We are not simply in search of facts; we are in search of story!

With this in mind, think of research as the source of motivation and inspiration, rather than a tiresome chore. If you are researching when streetlamps became common on the streets of London, by all means find out, but don't miss the wonderful side material and stories which seek to obscure your facts. Besides providing color to your story, sometimes these can seize the story and shake it up.

I am working on a steampunk romance novella, and so am trawling through Wikipedia and other such reference material for information about Victorian England and Babbage's Difference Engine and Analytical Engine (look thgem up--fascinating stuff). But I am also scanning Twitter and blogs to find less official sources, such as Caroline Rance's marvelous The Quack Doctor  . Ms. Rance is the author of [Order from Amazon.Com] , a novel set in an 18th century hospital with all the grim horrors that entails. The site, clearly a byproduct of her extensive research, is a wonderful, entertaining and eclectic collection of advertisements and commentary on medical and homeopathic devices, powders, and patent medicines.

Of course, this has little to do with my steampunk romance novel, or it would have had little to do with it if I hadn't found the site. Now, I am starting to look for ways to add a medical subplot to take advantage of the research, thus putting the cart before the horse.

I have no professor breathing down my neck and telling me to stay on-topic. I have no final research paper to be graded by gimlet eyed examiners. Instead, I have readers. If a branch of inquiry leads me astray because it is just so darn entertaining, it might entertain my readers as well. After all, have you ever read a story in which a horse-action saddle played a role? Yet that was the stuff people in Victorian England read about in their newspapers, so mightn't it make an interesting story.

Let your research drive your story once in a while. You might like the places it takes you.



Editor's Picks


Motley selection of steampunk-related stories on WDC

 Invalid Item  []

by A Guest Visitor


 Cast off  [E]
The privateer airship Rogues Redemption prepares for battle...
by AndrewGirle


 Invalid Item  []

by A Guest Visitor


 Kthudagon  [E]
a hybrid cthulhu/steampunk story
by bski


 Invalid Item  []

by A Guest Visitor


 Invalid Item  []

by A Guest Visitor


 The Vicar's Daughter PART I  [E]
Torn between a lover and her parents, what is Esther to do?
by VictorianWriter


 Echo  [13+]
Every thought you have leaves a trace, an echo of yourself.
by A. J. Crugnale


 Thief's IceCream  [E]
An atmospheric and almost tangential solliloquey of a heist.
by Infy



 
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Ask & Answer


Feedback from readers

LJPC - the tortoise Hi Ben! I enjoyed the newsletter and the items that you picked to highlight very much. Many venues have different submission guidelines. Submitting requires thorough reading of all their rules. I still remember when Ariana was kind enough to explain to me how to do footers and headers with my Word program. *Laugh* -- Laura

The key is that "thorough reading" as you should never assume that one site has the same rules as another.


The rhapsodic dreamer Thank you.

You're welcome.



AliceNgoreland I have to tell formatting in such a way I find difficult. I am a bit put off by trying readjust this and that. I do it. I all too often struggle with it.

I go back and check each guideline several times. Every zine seems to have different requirements and I want to give my story its best chance to be considered.

Thank you for selecting one of my tales for the this weeks newsletter. It is flattering.


         Readjusting is a pain, but easier than dealing with rejection *Wink*.


Doug Rainbow Submitting material for publication sounds a lot like submitting a brief to an appellate court: (1) Get a copy of applicable formatting rules; (2) Read those rules; and (3) Follow those rules. Make sure you get a copy of the right rules.
Doug Rainbow


         Very much the same.


Vivian The editor/publisher is always right ... Don't argue. Don't object. Excellent advice. ~ Viv~

         Thus speaks the publisher, and we author-want-to-bes need to listen.


Items submitted by readers

 Today I Will Fly  [E]
a young native american boy dreams of the day he will soar with the eagles.
by mother's stories

         does the transition between the events flow easily enough for a child to understand?

         Any thoughts, my good readers?


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