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'10 Authors Insider Tips
Cooking Up A Storey by Donna George Storey Have More Good Sex I Can Do Better ... Trying to Get the Feeling Plotting and Planning Character Profiles Discovery Draft Be Bad to Be Good E-Book Revolution Naked for Halloween Sex With Pilgrims FictionCraft by Louisa Burton The Music of Words The Balancing Act Your Fictional World Backstory & Foreshadowing The Fine Art of Submission by Shanna Germain Nailing the Query Letter Banish the Boring Bio Becoming a Market Master Become a Market Master, 2 Backstory & Foreshadowing Enticing An Editor, Part 1 Enticing An Editor, Part 2 Contracts, Money & More Serious about Smut by Vincent Diamond No More Horsing Around Short Stuff Selling Short Stories Editors' Pet Peeves Settings: Beyond Time & Place Beating Up Your Scenes Selling Your Books in Person Staying in the Saddle The Write Stuff by Ashley Lister Broken Rainbows Talk the Talk Equations 10 Commandments for Writing Plotting to Avoid Cover Story Rewriting '10 Smutters Lounge Ashley Lister Submits by Ashley Lister St Valentine's Day Renaming Body Parts Sex, Cigarettes & Erotic Fiction Between the Lines with Ashley Lister C. Sanchez-Garcia Emerald Kathleen Bradean Lucy Felthouse Neve Black PS Haven Tracey Shellito Tresart L. Sioux Cracking Foxy with Robert Buckley Plenty of Miles Left Don't Worry, Be Happy Fly the Unfriendly Skies Coffee Time Castrated Words Virtual vs. Actual Romance Bait The View from Gallows Hill Get All Worked Up with J.T. Benjamin The Fashion Industry The Same Old Same Old Writing Porn About the Closet ... About Spirituality Making Sense of Religion Worked Up About Monogamy What's Next All Worked Up About Nature Still All Worked Up... Sex Is All Metaphors by Jean Roberta Holiday Ghosts Love and Romance An "Interracial" Epic Trying to Make It Go Away Sexual Etiquette Sex and Children People Against Bad Things Virtual Acceptance His Cold Eyes, His Granite Jaw A Flash of Northern Light |
Serious about Smutby Vincent Diamond
One challenge to the author-editor relationship is this: at this stage, your "baby" has moved from the realms of art to the realms of commerce. And commerce means money and schedules and deadlines. Yes, your editor wants your story to be its best, but your editor also wants to make his/her boss happy and meet the required deadlines. There's often a push-pull between the two areas. If you aspire to be a professional writer then you need to act like one, so take a look at some of the species on display here at the Pet Peeve Menagerie: The (un)Reality Rat- characterized by its blatant disregard of facts, fictional or otherwise, this pet makes editors want to scream. C.B. Potts, the editor of The Journal of Nursing Jocularity and she's edited fiction anthologies as well. She says, "Pay at least passing homage to reality. I don't care if it's physics, politics, biology—huge, glaring, basic factual errors throw me so far out of a story there's no getting back. This isn't "Oh, in 1435, they didn't wear BLUE billabongs upon their head, they wore only green!"; it's "Oh, in 1435, I drove my Porsche to India from Nebraska to Colonize the Wild Frontier." And before you say, "No one is that stupid," let me assure you that yes, yes they are. Ask some of my esteemed colleagues one day where Kentucky is. If you are writing about a location you do not live in and know as intimately as you know your undergarments, look at a map before you arbitrarily place things right, left, north, south, etc." In addition to the issue of reality, another frequent resident of the Pet Peeves Menagerie is Ernestine, the Email Egret. Characterized by nearly invisible plumage and resultant empty Inbox, Ernestine isn't able to respond promptly (and professionally) to editor requests for edits, forms, information, or to even acknowledge receipt of same. KIL Kenny, Senior Editor at Torquere Press, has this say about the Email Egret. "Please acknowledge my e-mails promptly. Especially when I have attached an edit or a form to be dealt with. E-mail is not failsafe. I can't assume you've gotten it." Of course, we understand if you truly had an emergency to deal with. A Day Job issue, a sick family member, an unexpected trip, of course, these will take precedence over a story. But, it takes thirty seconds to compose a brief email explaining the situation to your editor and offering your own deadline on when you can respond to the editor's request. In one notable example I experienced myself, an author ignored my email with an edited file attached then blithely wrote back two weeks later that she'd be unable to meet the deadline due to her class schedule. This was for a contracted piece with a scheduled publication date! By that time, the proofer's job was affected, and when you get the whole domino effect happening with schedules and dates, you've created a real problem for your publisher. Let me just say: her credibility with that press plummeted, and if and when she gets the project done, she may or may not have a spot in the release schedule. This is the Email Egret species at its worst. Another species that makes an appearance in this menagerie is Harold the House Style Hamster. Harold doesn’t think that house style guides should apply to him because he's brilliant. Or he's Australian. Or, um, well, just because. Most publishers have a standard guide that helps them have a consistent editorial tone, formatting, and overall "feel." Some presses are comfortable using British or Australian spelling (favor versus favour, for example), and some presses are stringent about applying American English rules to their books. When it comes to a house style guide issue, Harold the Hamster spins his wheel, asking endlessly about this already-decided issue. Harold needs to learn to let it go and not get bogged down with small things like spelling. Focus your discussions, if any, about truly important story issues. One of my least favorite species in the menagerie is Sally, the Slacker Snake. Sally shows up in authors who write consistently for a publisher, and the issue with Sally is this: she doesn't even try to improve. Say for example, Book One of a series has dialogue tag issues, POV slip-ups, and issues with scene setting. Despite having these problems pointed out repeatedly in a manuscript, Sally doesn't make the effort to deal with these issues for later stories. Book Two of the series has exactly the same problems, the same revisions are needed, the same slacker writing is on the page. This is an immensely frustrating animal to deal with, and ultimately, discouraging. An editor who tells an author over and over to learn proper dialogue tagging (and who even shows you in a story), and then gets another story with exactly the same problem is going to feel ignored and useless. Remember, publishers pay editor to make stories better, but not for ghostwriting. Learning the basics of fiction and applying those tenets in a more sophisticated manner with each submission will show editors that you're trying to improve. Don't try to improve and don't be surprised if your contracts dry up. KIL Kenny tells of another species she dreads dealing with—Fanny the Fussy Finch. These authors, she says, "…treat the editing process as the opportunity to start their second draft. And the proofing process as the opportunity to start their third draft. I had an author not too long ago who sent me revisions after I had told her the manuscript had been submitted for production. "IMHO, an author should not sub a story until the author is satisfied that the story is in its best, final form. Editing should be a process of polish, not reshaping the substance. I've heard the argument, "But I've learned so much since I subbed that story, and my thinking has changed!" Then write a new damn story to show off your new thinking. "Of course, there are occasions when a submission is disastrous and the editor is going to ask for very substantial rewrites. That situation should be the exception, and should be driven by the editor's requests, not the author's second thoughts." Most editors want to work as a team with an author; it's not in our interest to have huge conflicts and issues in working with writers. An author who responds promptly to questions, handles edits and revisions in a professional manner, who submits with the house style guide in mind, and who makes the effort to improve from one story to another is a beast who will be gladly welcomed into the editor's personal zoo. This is a writer we don't mind feeding, watering, and tending to! Vincent Diamond
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Copyright © 1996 and on, Erotica Readers Association, Inc. |
'10 Book Reviews
Anthologies Apocalypse Sex Review by Ashley Lister Bare Souls Review by Ashley Lister Best Women's Erotica 2010 Review by Jean Roberta can’t help the way that i feel Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...C. Sanchez-Garcia Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...M Christian Review by Kathleen Bradean Coming Together...Remittance Girl Review by Kathleen Bradean Erotic Brits Review by Lisabet Sarai Fairy Tale Lust Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a God's Kiss Review by Kristina Wright Like a Sacred Desire Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a Veil Review by Lisabet Sarai Making the Hook-Up Review by Ashley Lister Orgasmic Review by Kristina Wright Peep Show Review by Kristina Wright Please, Ma'am Review by Ashley Lister Spark My Moment Review by Ashley Lister Three In One Blow Review by Shanna Germain Unleashed Review by Ashley Lister Erotic Novels Backstage Passes Review by Kathleen Bradean Dommemoir Review by Ashley Lister Fire in the Blood Review by Jean Roberta Freak Parade Review by Jean Roberta I Came Up Stairs Review by Jean Roberta Marianne! A Journey... Review by Lisabet Sarai The Marketplace Review by Lisabet Sarai The Memorial Garden Review by Lisabet Sarai On Demand Review by Ashley Lister Once Bitten Review by Shanna Germain Rock My Socks Off Review by Ashley Lister The Tower and the Tears Review by Lynne Connolly Sensual Romance Coin Operated Review by Lynne Connolly Control Review by Lynne Connolly I Spy a Wicked Sin Review by Harriet Klausner Libertine's Kiss Review by Lynne Connolly The Master & the Muses Review by Lynne Connolly Naked Review by Lynne Connolly Rampant Review by Lynne Connolly Sinful Review by Lynne Connolly Tangled Web (MM Romance) Review by Vincent Diamond Tucker's Sin Review by Lynne Connolly Victor Review by Harriet Klausner Gay Erotica Best Gay Erotica '10 Review by Vincent Diamond Best Gay Romance 2010 Review by Vincent Diamond Biker Boys Review by Jay Lygon Necessary Madness Review by Kathleen Bradean Personal Demons Review by Lisabet Sarai The Royal Treatment Review by Kathleen Bradean Silver Foxes Review by Vincent Diamond Sodomy! Review by Jay Lygon Special Forces Review by Vincent Diamond A Sticky End Review by Jean Roberta Wired Hard 4 Review by Lisabet Sarai Lesbian Erotica Best Lesbian Roamnce 2010 Review by Jean Roberta Fast Girls Review by Ashley Lister Girl Crush Review by Jean Roberta Sometimes She Lets Me Review by Jean Roberta Non-Fiction Best Sex Writing 2010 Review by Ashley Lister A Brief History of Nakedness Review by Rob Hardy Condom Nation Review by Rob Hardy Dictionary of Semenyms Review by Donna G Storey Doctor of Love Review by Rob Hardy Florida’s Purge of Gay & Lesbian... Review by Rob Hardy John Holmes Review by Rob Hardy How Sex Works Review by Rob Hardy The Orgasm Answer Guide Review by Rob Hardy Screening Sex Review by Rob Hardy Sex at Dawn Review by Rob Hardy Whip Smart Review by Rob Hardy |
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