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T-zero Xpandizine
The Writer's E-Zine

 

Produced and published by the members of Writers' Village University since 1998    ISSN 1521-2639       
20 November 2008
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Craft of Writing

Elaine Shelton

What’s in a Name?

Pen names are a personal choice. What makes one author write under an assumed name, while another proclaims his work from the highest mountain? And just how, exactly, do you choose a name to write under?

Why write under an assumed name? There are many reasons, and they are as varied as the writers who use them. Stephen King used the pseudonym, Richard Bachman. Although the books written under the name Bachman have been reissued with King’s name as he became a household name, the market, at the time, could not withstand King’s tendency to be prolific.

Another reason that an author may use a pen name is that he is switching genres, or types of books within a genre. Your name when you write acts as branding—just like Pepsi® and Coca-Cola® are brand names. An author who is known for writing Christian romances would probably want to use a different name to publish a steamy romance. Her core audience would be offended, which would lead to decreased sales. Even if they were not offended by the content, they may not like the new style the author is using. Romance writer Nora Roberts writes mysteries under the name JD Robb. This keeps her romance fans from becoming frustrated at buying a book that is a mystery. At the time, it also helped her break into the mystery market—she broke in at a time when female mystery writers were rare.

Choosing a pen name is a very personal task. You are renaming yourself, giving “life” to a fictitious entity. Some points you may want to consider:

1. Avoid using the full, legal name of a person you know. It creates confusion.
2. Feel free to mix things up: your favorite aunt’s first name, your mother’s maiden name.
3. Don’t count on a pen name to keep your anonymity. There are too many variables, including promoting your book, pictures either with your by-line or on the back of a book jacket.

Finally, if you are going to use a pen name, keep it simple. Use a name that you can remember and that will resonate with your audience.


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Craft of Writing

Ann Armstrong

Back to Basics

As with any occupation, writing has its own jargon. Some terms are easy to decipher while others confuse the new writer. In this article, we will be looking at some of the basic terminology and how it applies to the writer.

FNASR: First North American Serial Rights. When you sell these rights, you are selling the right to a magazine (or serial publication) to be the first place where your article or story can be read. While it is permissible to resell the article, it is not okay to sell it to a market where it will be published before it appears in the first magazine or to post it in its entirety to your website.

Reprint Rights: These are the rights that you sell after you have sold FNASR. Congratulations!

SASE: Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope. Editors will use this to respond to your request. Often a #10, business-sized envelope is used (see below).

Disposable Manuscript:  The manuscript can be thrown away instead of returned. This saves the writer an enormous amount on postage as a #10 envelope can be used with only one stamp (in the United States). In the age of home computers and laser printers, this is often more cost effective.

IRC: International Reply Coupon. If submitting to a foreign country, supply the editor/agent with IRCs in place of a SASE.

Unsolicited Manuscripts: complete manuscripts (short story, article or book) that have not been requested in their entirety by the editor/agent.

Slush Pile: Where all the unsolicited manuscripts languish. Don’t despair; many books have been picked from obscurity in the pile and made it to a bookstore near you.

Left Justify: A word processing function, this lines up everything on the left margin, leaving the right margin jagged. A good example of left justify is the format of this article.

Genre: What type of story you are telling. Some standard genres include: inspiration, romance, fantasy, science fiction, horror, mystery, military.

Query: What the writer uses to sell his/her novel idea to an editor or agent. Comprised of a cover letter, outline, synopsis and sample chapters.

Cover Letter: Short introduction of who you are and what you write. Include any publishing credits if you have them.

Outline: Often written in the present tense, it tells what happens in your story and why. Note: This is not the sort of outline you were required to write in school. It is often told in prose form.

Synopsis: About three paragraphs of what the story is about. Think of what is on the back cover of your favorite novel, and you’ll have an idea of what the editor is looking for.

Sample Chapters: Most often the first three chapters or a predefined number of pages. Check the writer guidelines to see which is preferred. Sample chapters must always start with chapter one and go consecutively.

Simultaneous Submissions: When you send out a query or manuscript to more than one publisher or agent at a time. While some do not mind this, others do. Make sure to check the guidelines where you are submitting.


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Craft of Writing

Lucy Rankin

Five Ways to Increase Your Chances

Setting your writing apart from the rest is not always about style, or even content.

Many manuscripts are tossed before they are even read. Why? Because the author neglected to follow a few simple steps that could have allowed the writer to rise to the top. Most editors will not read, let alone accept, manuscripts that do not follow the following five guidelines.

1. Proofread before sending the manuscript out. Make sure that it is free of grammatical and spelling errors. Editors and agents will often toss a manuscript that has more than three errors in the first page. If the story is polished to a high shine, you are helping them get to page two.

2. Read the guidelines for submission format. If none are given, an industry standard is 1 ½” margins, top, bottom, left and right. Your name, address, phone number, email address, and word count should appear, single-spaced, in the upper left-hand corner of the first page. The title of the story should be about five lines down, centered on the page, followed by the next line with the words By: Your Name. When sending to a print publication, body of text must be double-spaced and left-justified (ragged right side, with all of the left side lining up). Your last name and the page number should appear in the upper right corner on all subsequent pages. At the end of the story, write THE END.

3. Print on good quality white paper. Use only one side of the page. If a page gets a coffee ring on it before you send it out, reprint it. Remember, this is the only shot you have at an interview with the editor.

4. Include a SASE (Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope) when using the mail system. To cut down on shipping costs, mark the manuscript “Disposable” in the cover letter and include a #10 SASE.

5. Be professional. This includes the cover letter or any emails that you send. You are asking the editor to buy your words and to enter into a professional relationship with you. The letter that you write is your interview.

If you want the sale, use these five easy steps that separate the amateurs from the professionals.


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Birdie's Quill The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Birdie's Quill

Birdie

Conflict, Tension, and Resolution

You stare at the potential masterpiece on your screen. It’s complete with a beginning, middle and end, but your muse clucks its tongue quietly and tells you that it can be better. You agree; something is lacking. What do you do when inspiration strikes, pen meets paper and the story doesn’t engage on an emotional level? What good is a story if it doesn’t make us care or demand our attention? Better yet, what does it take to engage readers on an emotional level? You need to make them wonder what happens next. How? Make sure to include conflict in your storyline.

Conflict
What is conflict? It’s an essential element when writing fiction, the opposition between two simultaneous but incompatible feelings. I’ve actually read guidelines reminding writers that conflict does not equal a fight scene. Approach the concept by considering your character’s weaknesses. For the sake of this article, I’ll choose a lonely divorcee. Her vulnerable spots include loneliness, a desperate desire to find Mister Right, poor self-image, and lack of self-confidence. When the divorcee meets someone in an online chat who wants to meet her face-to-face, her loneliness drives her to accept the invitation, but her lack of self-confidence and poor self-image are in conflict with her decision. (As a side note let me say from the start that resolution to conflict is equally important and necessary. If you introduce conflict without resolution, it leaves the reader unfulfilled.)

Tension
Conflict engages readers and tension keeps them involved. Tension is a balance between interaction of opposing elements or tendencies. The use of tension connects readers to agree or disagree with the character's decisions; it draws them in because they care.

Real life delivers different circumstances every day even amid a life of routine. Stress is a real part of life. When the stressful ordeal is over it makes interesting telling. It’s no different when writing. Without tension the story reads flat and less interesting like a list of facts. Readers learn information but aren't emotionally engaged.

Strive for balance in your writing because constant tension is no better than no tension. Readers need a break, a time to relax and absorb the details. Constant tension dulls readers' perceptions as they become desensitized to the emotional and physical strain endured by your characters. It becomes mundane and loses the desired impact.

Although the element of tension propels the story forward, it’s much like riding a wave carrying readers to the top and gently dropping them on the other side ready to pick up a new wave. One scene should flow into the next as you travel to meet the big wave—the climax.

Circumstances intrude on well-laid plans even in fiction because it mimics real life. Character reaction to these circumstances builds tension as they work to solve problems either mental or physical. For example, let’s go back to our divorcee protagonist. She meets a potential date on line and he asks her to consider meeting him face-to-face. Her internal conflict deals with the issue of honesty or her lack of self-confidence. Tension mounts as she works through the decision process. Should she send her suitor an up-to-date photo? Will he mind that she is twenty pounds heavier than the photo she originally sent? Will she be rejected? What kind of guy wants to meet at a truck stop diner? Is it safe? These questions reflect internal conflict and build tension.

External problems include things like getting a flat tire on the way to meet her date making her late, or even getting greasy with dirty smudges across her red dress and a big hole in her nylons. Conflict and tension go hand in hand and neither is effective without resolution.

Resolution
Imagine the overweight, middle-aged divorcee trudging up the ramp to the truck stop diner in her dirty red dress. Headlights spotlight her as a black pickup truck comes to a halt behind her. She turns and squints into the headlights. The driver of the truck rolls down his window and stokes his full tobacco-stained beard like a pet. He says, “Hey little lady, looks like you could use a helping hand.”

She nods without a word and breaks into tears. He throws open the passenger door and tells her to climb in. She slides into the big cab and hides the unattractive hole in her nylons with her palm. A smile spreads across her face. After all that trouble it worked out, she had herself a man.

How many times have you been disappointed with a book or movie asking yourself, “That’s the end?”

The above example leaves many unanswered questions. How did the protagonist know that was the man she was supposed to meet? Was it the man or someone else? What about her apprehensions? Based on her internal conflict, there’s no way she’d get in the vehicle with a stranger. Questions like this result from unresolved conflict.

Conflict should interlace throughout a story, with tension ebbing and flowing as characters strive toward a goal of some sort. In this instance, the woman’s goal is to meet the man from the chat room in hopes that he is Mr. Right. Ultimate resolution (finding a solution to the problem) will be nestled near the end of the story where it brings all the loose threads of the plot together and ties them in a tidy knot. Minor aspects of resolution should be sprinkled throughout the story to lessen tension at the points where you offer readers time to breathe, absorb and ponder the possibilities.

Mingling inner and outer conflict builds tension until it culminates at the climax. The trick is to bring readers from the climax toward the conclusion in the same way—a wave at a time. Even as you head toward the end of the story, tension is a necessary ingredient. It’s the bait that keeps readers wanting to know what happens next. On the way to the conclusion, check to see if you have resolved each conflict woven into the storyline. Dangling details or unanswered questions leave readers wondering if they missed something.

Write everything for a reason. If it doesn’t move the story along, eliminate it. Don’t get sidetracked by unimportant details, which water down the tension. Expand pertinent information to keep the pace moving. Reach for the goal, an entertaining story complete with conflict, tension and resolution.


About the Author
Author and freelance writer, Donna Sundblad, resides in Georgia with her husband, Rick. Her creative writing book, Pumping Your Muse, is available in paper or ebook format. Check her website for more information at www.theinkslinger.net. Donna also edits for and co-owns Team Spirit Critique and Editing, LLC.


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Fiction Short Story The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Fiction Short Story

by Bill Larson

Fresh Flowers

"Can't you just smile one time, Harry?" When Stephanie put her hands on her hips, Harry knew it meant lecture. "We're in Haifa at the Don Carmel. Would it hurt you to smile? Can't you try to enjoy this luxurious hotel?"

"We live in Miami. Why do we need to come to Israel? Tell me, Stephanie, is the Mediterranean out there any prettier than our view of the Atlantic? All I'm saying is why did we need to come over to Israel with all this killing and bombing?"

"You watch too much cable news, Harry. Have you heard one bomb explode? Has anyone shot at you? Why are we here? We're Jewish, Harry. This is Israel. Half our synagogue is here, for heaven's sake. We'll probably never get a chance for a tour like this again. Can't you just for one minute stop worrying and enjoy this beautiful hotel and the breathtaking view?"

"Okay, okay, I'll enjoy. Just stop harping on it. I'll smile already."

"Look, Harry, beautiful fresh flowers on the dinning table. Here's a card. 'Mr. and Mrs. Harry Perleman. The staff of the Don Carmel extend our good wishes for a wonderful time.' Isn't that classy? These flowers are especially for us. The tour people were right. This is certainly a first class hotel. Aren't you glad we came, Harry? Now hurry and get changed into something less wrinkled. Our group is meeting in that nice restaurant right on the water. We've only got about an hour, so hurry."

"Okay. I'm hurrying. Couldn't we have just one evening to kick back and maybe read the paper or watch some television? Room service would be nice."
 
"I can't believe you, Harry. We come all the way to Israel, and what do you want to do? Stay in the hotel, order up room service and watch television. I don't know whether you realize it, Harry, but you do that every night at home, except that I'm the room service. Humor me a little. I work hard keeping up our home so you'll be comfortable. Would it begrudge you to try to get into the spirit of things? You know, maybe have a little fun and enjoy ourselves?"

"There, I'm smiling, I'm changing my clothes. How's that? I'm having a good time."

"I'd like for you to actually mean it, Harry."

"I mean it. I mean it." He pulled his lips back and grinned like a Cheshire cat.

"That's more like it. We're here, and we're going to have a good time. It won't kill us, you know."

"Will this restaurant have anything I like?"

"How should I know, Harry? I've never been there. It's supposed to be a five star restaurant. It has to have something you like. Besides, if by some chance you don't find anything on the menu that looks good, you can order up from room service when we get back. Room service is open all night."

"Why don't we save ourselves all the trouble of changing clothes and going out? Like I said, we can just order up from room service and enjoy our evening."

"Harry, you're exasperating. I told you; we're going to have a great time. We'll be with good friends in a great restaurant. How can we not enjoy our evening? So, do us both a favor, stop with the room service and the television."
 
"Don't worry, Stephanie. I'll have a good time. I'll like the food. I'll smile. I'll be nice to our friends."

"I'm counting on that, Harry."

"Don't you love the name of this place, Harry, Palms by the Sea? It's such a beautiful restaurant. I don't have to eat; I can just sit and stare at this place. I've never seen anything like it. I'm so glad we came on this tour. Now really, Harry, aren't you glad we came?"

"Yes, Stephanie, I'm glad we came. Do you see anyone from our group?"

"There they are. It looks like we're eating al fresco this evening. What an ornate terrace, and look at that view of the Mediterranean. Hey, there're a couple of seats across from Helen and Stan. Oh, this is nice. Have you guys been here long?"

"We just arrived. I had to practically drag Stanley. What a party pooper."

"I know what you mean, Helen. I had to beg Harry to come and have a good time. What's wrong with them? If we take another tour, it should just be for the women. We know how to live."

"Look, Stephanie, we're on opposite sides of the table, and we all have a view of the sea. Isn't this a snazzy place?"

"I just love it, Helen. Oh, have you seen Joyce and Marvin? I thought if you were up for it, we'd ask Joyce to join us for a little shopping tomorrow morning and top it off with some lunch. We could leave our husbands to fend for themselves."

"I'd love to do that. Joyce and Marvin are at that table over by that fountain. We don't have to worry about the husbands. They have television."

"That's the truth, Helen. What do you think? Meet in the lobby about 9:30 in the morning, shop till we drop and then catch lunch down here by the sea."

"I'm in, Stephie. Let's go over and recruit Joyce."

As the ladies moved toward the table where Joyce and Marvin sat, a cute little boy selling flowers came in from the beachside, and walked up the three brick stairs onto the terrace. Harry noticed him, waved and beckoned for him to come over.

"I've really been giving Stephanie a hard time. What do you say, Stan? Shall we buy the girls some flowers and show them we're pretty nice guys after all?"

"Good idea, Harry."

"Show me what you got, kid. Hey, I like those red carnations. What about you, Stan?"

"They look like winners, Harry."

The little boy flashed a disarming smile and his dark eyes danced as he handed two large bunches of blood red carnations to Harry.

The explosion decimated most of the terrace. Harry didn't hear it.


About the Author
Bill Larson does his writing on the southwest coast of Florida.  He has been published in Palm Beach County Magazine in 1988 and in a local magazine, Images, on two occasions in 1992. After a self-imposed sabbatical, he began writing seriously again and has had several short fiction pieces published online from 2003 to 2006. Bill is working on two novels, one of which he hopes to finish this year. He makes his home with his wife, Janice and son, Jeffrey, in Cape Haze, Florida.


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Poetics Presents The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Poetics Presents

Liz Shine

Liz Shine resides in California where she teaches high school English and yoga. She is a master of sneaking in time to write and says, "You have to always have paper and pen on you. I once wrote a poem on the back side of pale yellow hall passes while assisting the proctors of the high school exit exam. Being a parent has taught me loads about being creative with time." Long distance running is her preventive approach to writer's block.

Poppies in May

Tall, pale green awkward stems,
one propped up with a stake stretched thin
like an addict,
but ah...the plump oval bud bursts open,
the blood red petals
darkest at the center, edges paler
reveal themselves rice paper thin.
Stamen and petals covered--
fine, soft, yellow dust.

In two days or three the petals will fall;
Beauty lies dormant for another year.

Copyright © 2006 by Liz Shine




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Poetics Presents

Bruce Boston

Bruce Boston has received the Bram Stoker Award, a Pushcart Prize, the Isaac Asimov's Readers' Award, and the Grand Master Award of the Science Fiction Poetry Association. He is the author of forty books and chapbooks, most recently the collection Flashing the Dark: Forty Short Fictions (Sam's Dot, 2006). Bruce lives in Florida, with his wife, writer-artist Marge Simon.

A Voice from the End of the Bridge

Like wandering through
a gallery and fastening
on a particular painting
and letting it become
your universe for
seconds at a time,

like flipping through
the pages of a novel
until a certain passage
claims your attention,
its sense and illusion
spilling into your mind,

like meeting a stranger
at a cafe or airport
and feeling a sudden
rapport that has no
explanation beyond
the shared moment,

a poem is a voice
from the end of the
bridge that leads
to the other side,
speaking in tongues
of blood and laughter,

flesh and lightning,
revealing the selves
we harbor and define.
And now this crossing
has been completed
and can be left behind.

Copyright © 2006 by Bruce Boston




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Submissions Guidelines The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Submissions Guidelines (Updated)

Until further notice, only plain text submissions in the body of the email will be considered.
NO ATTACHMENTS.

What We Pay For

Fiction: Stories should be of interest to writers in general, not just a narrow group.

Fiction should be submitted to fiction@thewritersezine.com. Payment starts at $15.00.

If considered for publication, you will be asked to return an email agreement including your name and address.

Craft Features: Queries about Craft features should be sent to nonfiction@thewritersezine.com.

Payment starts at $15.00, and, if considered, you will be sent an email agreement to fill out and return.

Poetry: Due to the large number of recent poetry submissions, a temporary hold on further poetry submissions is in place until early 2008.

Please do not email us to ask what we pay for in other categories. When we can add to our list, we will include it in these guidelines.

What We Publish

Original short fiction, poetry, and non-fiction, particularly non-fiction related to the craft of writing and interviews.

For fiction we prefer something with a plot and resolution. If we like the main character, we are more likely to accept the story. If the main character has a problem to resolve or has to make a choice, that's conflict, and we love conflict! Too many writers confuse conflict with fight scenes. Don't be one of them. Give us a protagonist who acts, makes choices no matter how hard they are to solve his or her dilemma, not a wimp who drifts along and has to be rescued.

Non-fiction should be related to the craft of writing or be good resource material for writers. Accuracy and originality are vital. No reprints. If it has already been published somewhere else, our readers will spot it and let us know.

What We Won't Publish

Anything that inspires "hate," is defamatory or is pornographic.

Simultaneous submissions.

Material that has appeared elsewhere (reprints).

Seasonal material submitted during the same month (i.e., a Christmas story in December). Our lead time is short compared to print publications, but we do need time to edit, html and proof submission. A good guideline is to submit the manuscript by the first of the preceding month (i.e., submit a Christmas story before November 1st).

Length Recommendations

  • For Fiction, under 1500 words is preferred. We will consider excerpts from longer works.

  • Poetry should fit on one printed page if possible. A maximum of five poems may be submitted at one time (when the hold is lifted).

  • Non-fiction or Craft features have the most leeway in word count. In general these manuscripts should be 750 to 2,000 words. We like to take advantage of the hypertext capabilities we have available and link to charts, graphs, lists and so forth. Thumbnail versions may be included in the body of the article.

Rights

All rights other than first electronic, non-exclusive 'anthology' (for collections of T-Zero: The Writer's Ezine works only), and non-exclusive archival rights (we keep back issues online) are and remain the sole and exclusive property of the author.

Formats We Will Accept

Plain text in the body of an email.

T-Zero: The Writer's Ezine is an HTML publication. This gives us access to a variety of options but it is also a limiting factor.

  • Underlining is used exclusively for links in HTML. Please do not underline in your manuscript. It you are including a link to a webpage for reference, please mark the link the following way: (WEB LINK) http://thewritersezine.com (END WEB LINK).
  • The less than (<) and greater than (>) signs are used to enclose HTML encoding. If you need to use brackets, please use the square [ ] ones instead.
  • Paragraph indentation requires time consuming insertion of multiple HTML symbols. Please separate paragraphs by inserting a hard, blank line between them.
  • Fonts need to be simple. No multiple fonts. We prefer standard fonts such as Times New Roman, Courier or Arial set at 12 point. If your subject matter requires something else, ask us first.
  • The curly (smart) quotes, apostrophes, the em dash (two hyphens together) and ellipsis … (three periods) become strange and exotic characters when copied from your word processor into email. Check your preferences or options to see if you can use straight quotes. 
  • Text formatting such as bold, italic, centering, bullet list, etc., should be noted in the text by using all caps in parentheses. For example, if you wanted to italicize the word submission, you would type: (ITALICS) submission (END ITALICS).

Editing

We expect you to run spell-check and to check your grammar and punctuation before submitting. We will not reject a submission for a few typos or errors, but will if there are an excessive number of errors.

Note: Since our reading audience is international, we do not require a specific version of English. Use the spelling appropriate to your region.

We will automatically correct obvious typos such as “ton” for “not” and may correct simple agreement problems. For anything beyond that, time permitting, we will return the submission to you with a request for corrections.

Getting to Know You

Fiction and Craft features published in T-Zero: The Writer's Ezine include brief third person biographical notes on the writers. For all submissions, please compose your own bio and include it to save our editors and yourself time later if/when your piece is accepted for publication. We suggest sharing a little about your background, occupation, geographical location and what inspired your story.

How and Where to Submit

We do not accept submissions via US mail. Email submissions only, to the appropriate department, in the body of the email. No attachments accepted.

Fiction should be sent to fiction@thewritersezine.com.

Craft Non-fiction should be queried first. Send query to nonfiction@thewritersezine.com.

Poetry: Due to the large number of recent poetry submissions, a temporary hold on further poetry submissions is in place until early 2008.

Include the type of submission (fiction, non-fiction) in the subject line.

Be sure to include your name and email address in the body of the email.

If you do not receive an acknowledgement that your submission or query was received within a week, please send a follow-up query with “Did you Receive?” in the subject line. In the body of the email, please include your name and email address, the title of the work submitted, and if different, the email address sent from. Do not resend the submission unless we request it.

Good luck!


T-Zero: The Writer's Ezine
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Copyright 1998 - 2007, Writopia Inc. All Rights Reserved

 

© Copyright 1998 - 2007, Writopia Inc. All rights reserved