Stepping Back From Short Fiction
November 15th, 2018First, a progress report on the novel…
The manuscript for my next novel is now in the hands of beta readers and editors. I’d originally planned to re-read and do a light edit before sending it out, but decided against it. Better to hear the criticisms first, address those, and then do the final polish.
In the meantime… that short story I’ve mentioned before still needs to be written. I’ve got all the elements — characters, story world, plot, theme, emotional arc — I just need to sit down and do it.
I’m stepping back from short fiction.
This story will be the last short story I’m planning to write for the foreseeable future. I think I’ve done some good short fiction over the past several years, but I’ve reached the point where the creative effort needed for each story far exceeds the returns — both emotional and financial.
Despite the short length, every story is a lot of work. Two fairly recent ones — “Diamond and the Worldbreaker” and “Longing For Earth” — plus the one I’m working on now, have led me to create entirely new future worlds.
Three new story worlds, that I may never write in again! That doesn’t seem very efficient.
I may get one more story out of the “Longing For Earth” story world, since I have a 9,000-word draft sitting on my computer that I may finish someday. That was my first attempt to write something for the Infinity’s End anthology, but the story grew too long, so I had to start over.
Anyway, even though I’ve been writing only one or two stories a year, it still feels like a distraction when I’m trying to get the next novel done — and of course the income from it isn’t much.
All of this would still be okay if short story sales helped me to sell more novels, but in my experience and that of other writers I’ve talked to, that is not the case. Many of you who read my novels like to read the short stories too, but very few of those who meet me through the short stories go on to look for the novels. I think short story readers are mostly a separate audience without a lot of crossover.
Given that I’m so far behind with the novels I want to write — the two I’m working on now, a military novella, and another near-future epic that’s hardly more than a vague thought balloon drifting on the horizon of my writerly ambition — I need to get serious about focusing my efforts. Once I get this next story done, it’s going to be all long-form, all the time.
Hey, unless maybe I decide to write that screenplay. 😉
Wish me luck!
Posted on: Thursday, November 15th, 2018 at 3:37 pm
Categories: Short Stories, Work-In-Progress Reports.
November 15th, 2018 at 6:07 pm
OK then — Good luck!
Looking forward to the next novel. (And … screenplay? You jest?)
November 16th, 2018 at 9:48 am
Mostly a jest. 🙂
December 1st, 2018 at 8:47 am
Over on Goodreads I had a question about how one becomes a beta reader. I thought I’d crosspost my answer here:
I usually ask other writers to act as beta readers because they’re familiar with story structure from a technical perspective and how to pinpoint issues. Depending on circumstances, I also people I know who specialize in some aspect related to the story. For example, my son-in-law was a first reader for The Red so I could take advantage of his army infantry experience.
“Early readers” are something different. With The Last Good Man I put out a call for people interested in reading an advance copy of the finished book, with the request that they contribute a reader review when the book was published. That was the first time I’ve done that. People seemed to enjoy it, and it worked out. I’ll probably do the same thing with this new book.