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| Publishing Questions and answers about the publishing industry, featuring answers from literary agents, publisher writers, and editors. |
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| Writer and blogger Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 8
| Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Hey all, I'm new to the forum and haven't dug very far through the mass of excellently informative posts yet -- so apologies if this has been covered before! Is it useful for SF/F novelists to write short stories in the genre? I'm thinking both in terms of writing practice (ie. does it build useful skills, or is it just too different from novel writing?) and in terms of writing credits (ie. will SF/F short story publications look good to an agent?) Whilst building up my collection of rejection slips for a fantasy novel, I've been working on various short stories for a range of markets. Most have been competition entries, and I have had a couple of placings with Writing Magazine (a 2nd and a 3rd place) and a couple of short-listings too. However, all those stories were "contemporary", non-genre, ones. I've had a go at various sci-fi short stories, and have really struggled -- I actually have yet to attempt a fantasy one as I think it'd be even harder! Somehow, the stories never seem to work -- there'll be a few ideas in there that I like, or an engaging character, but as a whole it falls flat. So is it worth pursuing, or should I stick with writing contemporary short stories and novel-length SF/F? Any advice or tips more than welcomed. :-) Best, Ali |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| weaver of the unseen Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 896
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Writing a novel is like stringing up those short stories one after another, a chapter after a chapter, creating a chain that flows throughout the whole course of the book. Do you have an idea that can last over two hundred fifty A4's or longer? Do you reckon that you could do that? If the answer is yes on both question, then go ahead and write a novel. It's a lifetime experience, that not so many embrace. Many tries, but they realise they don't have it in them, therefore they stop until they have shaped their novel in a publishable shape. It's a hard game, one of the toughest there is, but it's not unbeatable. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 9,468
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? I beg to differ. An episodic novel, or a picaresque, might be like stringing short stories together, but most novels don't work that way. They have a logic and structure of their own, and most need to be thought out carefully in advance, or you find yourself writing yourself into a corner very quickly. However, that said... it's been said (I can't at the moment recall who exactly) that a writer isn't writing one novel, or one short story, or one poem, or even one quatrain at a time -- he's putting his life on paper (at least in some senses)... meaning, in part, that whatever you write is good writing practice; it teaches you more about how to handle structure, character development, adumbration and foreshadowing, plotting, improving your use of the language for maximum effect with least waste, etc., etc., etc. And, from my understanding (we've plenty of professionals here who can correct me if I'm wrong)... yes, such sales do count, to agents, publishers, and readers as well. Also, by writing different types of things, you keep yourself from going stale or becoming entirely stereotyped. While that is, to some degree, swimming against the stream at the moment, the most successful writers with the longest staying power (both during their lifetime and after) were/are those that write a variety of things, from short stories to novels to essays to (if they have the ability) poems to anything else they can. If you doubt this, consider: Isaac Asimov, Brian W. Aldiss, J. G. Ballard, Michael Moorcock, Fritz Leiber, Ursula K. LeGuin, Tanith Lee, H. P. Lovecraft, Neil Gaiman, Clive Barker, George R. R. Martin, James Tiptree, Jr., J. R. R. Tolkien, Harlan Ellison, Robert Silverberg, Joanna Russ...... |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 710
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Actually, I have been pondering a simular question. I am short on time and have many competing ideas. I was thinking that perhaps writing a few short stories would both increase my chances of completing something in a reasonable ammount of time and allow me to get some of these ideas out of my system. I would then have finished work to look back upon to see what I did right and where I need work as well as reducing the urge to include a hundred different ideas that do not necessarily fit together into a single story. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Triceratops Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 144
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Actually short story writing, in the same genre as your intended novel, can be a nice little boon when an agent is considering you as a client. It does provide a small platform and can give you that "known quantity" status. I know that my little list of short stories sales in the SF genre helped to convince my agent that I'd been in the trenches for a bit. It was not, by all means, the deciding factor. It just gave me an extra push. I do believe they helped cinch the deal. And...there are a lot of awards that can be gleaned in the competitive short story market. They are also very easy to send out and enter into the contests. I made finalist in the L. Ron Hubbard WOTF contest, and certainly put it in my bio. I would have loved, loved to have won. J. D. (upstream) is correct, in that your best spec writers are varied and all over the publishing topography. Makes for a well-rounded, versatile craftsman. I did sell numerous short stories before I hit novel publication. There was something about the instant gratification about the process that served my writing ego well, and goaded me to continue on and pursue greener hills and pastures. Tri |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 55
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? In general the answer is, I think, yes. This will of course vary for writers; some can't write a short story to save their lives - their natural length is over 100k. But if you feel comfortable with short fiction then do it. It provides good training in many of the disciplines of writing. It can add colour and understanding to use your novel characters in a shorter work. If you can get other people to publish your work (preferably for money) then it gives you an answer when that little voice at the back of your head says "I'm crazy, my work sucks and I'm wasting my time trying to get anyone to look at this novel" As for impressing editors and agents, IMHO you have to be selling work to the very top level markets for them to really notice you. Most editors/agents are unaware of the lower echelons of the short story market. And at the higher levels you are competing with people who have novels out, or are at least agented - which, in fact, is exactly the competition your novel faces to get picked up by a publisher. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,028
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? First, writing short stories is probably harder than writing a novel. So if you think you can knock out a couple in order to boost your profile... well, it's not that easy, sadly. And you've also got to sell them. While there are plenty of magazines, print and on-line - check out Ralan and Spicy Green Iguana - they all receive huge numbers of submissions. It's a difficult market to break into, and requires perseverance as much as talent. In that respect, it's excellent training for novel-writing... |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 552
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? I agree with Ian, short story writing is a very different skill, than writing a novel. They also need as much attention, with regards to editing, as a novel. Also, most good Mags, izines etc are swamped with submissions. But when you sell one it really does feel rather good! Especially when you know that the editor chose yours from among quite a few hundred submissions. |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| resident pedantissimo | Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? I know this might be an excessive simplification, but do you have any ideas which want to be short stories, whose natural length falls in that region? (I know I frequently do) If so, write them, as compactly and precisely as they need to be. As short stories, not as fragments that might be stuck together into a novel (yes, I too have read novel-length books which were essentially collections of shorts glued together to make something saleable) The good short story has a long and honourable history is SFF, some of the createst classics arrived in that form. Not easy, no, and difficult to place, but – who here doesn't have a couple of shorts nestling among their favourites of all time? |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Stephen J Sweeney Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 124
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? How long is short stories, typically? I'm not sure I could manage it, myself. Not sure I could write a story unless it was 25,000 - 30,000 words. Last edited by Scarfy; 26th February 2008 at 12:15 PM.. Reason: typo |
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| | #11 (permalink) | |
| weaver of the unseen Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 896
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Quote:
Providing answers is good, but if you provide something that one can develop from, then I see it better. How many people has been put off, because they are scared about the amount of writing you have to do, before the people can pick your book from a commercial bookshelf? How many of them are s**t scared of writing anything longer then thousand words? I know so many people who don't want to do writing, they want to do everything else but writing. | |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,028
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? The SFWA definies the various length as follows:
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 9,468
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Quote:
It's a seemingly hard-nosed attitude, and I didn't begin with it. But long observation and experience (as well as listening to both published and non-published writers) has taught me that it's pretty much the truth.... | |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| weaver of the unseen Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 896
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? Very well said, I agree on every word, but it doesn't stop me from talking to the people and provoking them to write, when I know they can write. Sometimes these people are university students, who try to figure out what to write about their graduation jobs. Other times, they might be engineers, who need to write a document on a system they had just build. Fear is fear. Some people willingly jump out from a speeding plane to trust on a piece of fabric that is hold together with a flimsy ropes, and some people has to be forced to do it. When I read this forum, I see people after people after people, all in the same situation. All facing a gaping hole on the side of the plane, some willingly going through it, and jumping into a lifetime long experience, and some staring it as if it would be the last thing they would in their life. I'm just the next guy in the line, willing to help the geezer on the hole to trust that he can do it. |
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Pantechnicon.net Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 230
| Re: Writing SF/F short stories - useful for novelists? I cannot overstress the importance of writing short stories. You don't have to sell them, although obviously the trial and error will help you get used to how the whole submissions process works, and how it can vary from one publisher to the next. Writing is a craft. If you practice writing short stories, you will get better at it, but you will also learn valuable tools that can help you produce longer work (or, heck, even shorter work, such as flash fiction). Short stories force you to pay close attention to encapsulating characters in as few words as possible without losing impact, creating powerful dialogue that does the job with three words that you might otherwise spend twenty on, controlling the pacing within your story, and spotting plot problems. You can apply what you have learned in writing short stories to writing novels. ctg is correct when he suggests that writing a novel can be like writing a series of short stories, and I don't believe he meant that as literally as it appears to have been interpreted. When you come to write your novel, you generally have two options: You can either sit down and start writing straight away, letting your novel meander and evolve as you think of new things, or you can plot it out beforehand and give yourself a roadmap. Short stories are useful if your approach is the second one. It can be daunting to think "Hell, I have 180,000 words to go," but easier to think "Okay, at 8,000 words per chapter, I have 6,000 left to go on this one." It's also nice and easy to let a "short story" chapter spill out onto the page, within your roadmap, without feeling as though you're losing sight of your target. And if you do change plot mid-chapter, it's easy to go re-write your roadmap. What I'm not suggesting is that each chapter in a novel is a short story. It clearly isn't, otherwise what you have is an anthology, not a novel. But short story writing techniques are as valid to novel chapters as they are to the short story format itself. Frankly any writer willing to overlook exploring a potentially useful tool is a headcase. Even if you don't take to short stories and feel that you learn nothing from the experiement, you'd be a fool not to at least try it, because turning your back on anything that can help you grow is just sheer craziness ![]() Similarly there are novel-writing techniques that any short story writer could use to develop and grow, but that's a whole 'nother thread |
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