Wednesday, April 27, 2011

One Buck Horror ebook antho series

THE MARKET
  • Zine: One Buck Horror
  • Editor(s): Christopher Hawkins, Kris M. Hawkins
  • Pay Rate: 5¢ per word
  • Response Time: 1-2 months
  • Reading Period: Open
  • Description: One Buck Horror is an ebook anthology series dedicated to showcasing the best in horror short fiction from new and established writers. Each issue will feature four to six short stories, and will be available in a variety of formats (including Kindle, ePub and others) for the low price of one dollar per issue.
  • Submission Guidelines: www.onebuckhorror.com

NOTE: Author D.L. Snell conducted the following interview to give writers a better idea of what the editors of this specific market are seeking; however, most editors are open to ideas outside of the preferences discussed here, as long as they fit the basic submission guidelines.

THE SCOOP
1) What authors do you enjoy, and why does their writing captivate you?

Kris: My favorite authors are Isabel Allende, Neil Gaiman, Robin McKinley and Arturo Perez-Reverte. What I love about all of them is that the worlds each of them create feel so complete and immersive.

Chris: I grew up reading a lot of Ray Bradbury, Stephen King and Richard Matheson, all of whom have a gift for creating strong characters and making the most improbable concepts seem grounded and believable.

2) What are your favorite genres? Which genres would you like to see incorporated into submissions to this market?

Kris: I love fantasy, science fiction, narrative non-fiction, young adult fiction, and horror (of course). For this publication, I would really love to see refreshed classic horror themes that evoke a sense of nostalgia without being slavish to horror conventions.

Chris: Horror, naturally. But I also read a lot of fantasy and sci-fi. For One Buck Horror, the most important things are that a story be scary and that it be compelling. If you can accomplish that, then genre is secondary.

3) What settings most intrigue you? Ordinary or exotic locales? Real or fantasy? Past, present, or future?

Kris: I most love ordinary locales that turn out to be more than they first appear.

Chris: When I read for pleasure, I like to be transported, preferably to somewhere I've never been before. So the specific setting is less important to me than how well that setting is realized on the page.

4) Explain the type of pacing you enjoy, e.g. slow building to fast, fast throughout, etc.

Kris: I like a great hook at the beginning, slow character building in the middle with a breakneck finish. The books of Michael Crichton spring to mind when I think of this sort of pacing.

Chris: Great stories are like roller coasters: anticipation that builds and builds to a thrilling payoff that leaves you wanting more.

5) What types of characters appeal to you the most? Any examples?

Kris: I love characters that you have to spend time getting to know and end up enjoying despite their flaws or perhaps because of them. Steerpike from the Gormenghast books is one of my favorite examples of this character type.

Chris: I'm drawn to characters that are well-rounded, and feel like real people. The best characters are those that seem to have lives beyond the confines of the page.

6) Is there a specific tone you'd like to set in your publication? What kind of voices grab you and keep you enthralled? Any examples?

Kris: I'd be thrilled if our publication allowed readers to recapture the fun of being scared while enjoying some damn fine writing.

Chris: Horror should be fun. I think it's easy to lose sight of that when you get into darker themes and more and more extreme scenarios. I want people to come away from reading One Buck Horror feeling scared, but entertained. And hopefully with smiles on their faces.

7) What is your policy for vulgarity, violence, and sexual content? Any taboos?

Kris: All three are fine with me taken in context of a good story. I have no true taboos but I've found that a story will need to be otherwise flawless in order for me to get past strong themes of child abuse or sexual torture.

Chris: All of those things are fine as long as they serve the story, and not the other way around. If a story is shocking just for the sake of being shocking, then it's probably not for us.

8) What kind of themes are you seeking most in submissions to this market? In general, what themes interest you?

Kris: Classic horror all the way. While I love fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction and alternate history, I really want the dominant theme to be classic horror.

Chris: I'm open to all themes, as long as the writing is good and the characters feel like real people.

9) Overall, do you prefer downbeat or upbeat endings?

Kris: I absolutely despise forced upbeat "Hollywood" endings. I would much rather see a scorched earth ending that feels authentic than have to endure a happy ending that's been tacked on.

Chris: Downbeat or upbeat…either one is fine as long as it's true to the characters involved in the story. Authenticity is more important than outcome.

10) Any last advice for submitters to this market? Any critical do's or do not's?
Make sure you're presenting your work in the best possible light. Use proper manuscript formatting, check your spelling, and make sure you've read our submission requirements. You don't want anything to detract from the quality of the work, so make sure you're giving your work a chance to shine.



For more scoops
, go to
www.dlsnell.com.

D.L. Snell writes with Permuted Press. He edited Dr. Kim Paffenroth twice, John Dies at the End once, and provided a constructive critique to Joe McKinney on his next major novel after Dead City. You can shoot D.L. Snell in the head at www.dlsnell.com.

To reprint this article, please contact D.L. Snell.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Diabetes, Best-selling Authors, Kevin Bacon, and DLSnell.com

For the longest time, I have wanted the domain name dlsnell.com. But since the beginning of time, it has been parked. Which means someone else owned it, but wasn't using it. I wanted it so badly--most respectable authors brand their sites with their name--but a lot stood in my way: doubt that I would hear back from the domain owner... procrastination... laziness... I could go on, but... meh, I'm lazy.

Anyway, a few months ago I decided I really wanted the dlsnell.com domain. Really really. So I got off my butt and did a Whois lookup, and I discovered that the name belonged to one Dianna Love Snell. There was an email address. Not expecting to get a reply, in fact totally expecting the email to bounce back undeliverable, I sent Dianna a message.

That same day she replied.

Never in a million years did I expect to hear back... let alone from another writer! But as it turns out, Dianna Love is a best-selling author, and a really cool lady. 
Best-selling author Dianna Love

Not only does Dianna share my last name and my occupation, she also co-authors with Sherrilyn Kenyon--I have been in two Blood Lite anthologies with Sherrilyn. It was such a small world, I started to wonder how Kevin Bacon fit into all this... He doesn't. At least I don't think...

In my initial email to Dianna, not knowing who she was, I had offered to purchase her a new domain name for one year, in exchange for dlsnell.com. But she had a different offer in mind. She would give the domain name to me on one condition...

No, I didn't have to trace our family tree back to Kevin Bacon--that doesn't make any sense. Why would you even think that? Dianna simply asked that I donate a $50 gift certificate and a copy of my book to the Brenda Novak Auction for Diabetes.

She said (and other writers might want to take note):

"[The auction] is a major event many authors, agents, publishers and others support each year.  Brenda is all about promoting authors so... it would be great exposure for you as well (she gets a tremendous flow of traffic on the auction site).... I’ve picked up a lot of readers from the auction."

I jumped at the opportunity, of course. Not only would I get the domain name I wanted, all while promoting my book to a new readership via the auction, I would also be supporting diabetes research. Some of my close family members have diabetes. Like Dianna said, it was a win-win; or a win-win-... win?

But, of course, as with most things that seem too good to be true, there were problems. Not with the auction. And not with Dianna Love. She and her web master were prompt, efficient, and pleasant to work with. The problem was with transferring the domain name from Dianna's registrar to mine. We initiated the transfer with no problem, but then it quickly unraveled into a confusing mess of authentication numbers and security codes and approval processes and arcane symbols... Dianna Love admits she's not good with technology on her best days, but even I was scratching my head... and my day job revolves around technology.

Finally, after a little initiative on my part, and a whole heck of a lot of patience and kindness on the reciprocating end, we got it figured out. And now, after years and years of wanting this domain but doing absolutely nothing for it, I am proud to announce that this blog has officially become DLSnell.com!

A big thanks goes out to Dianna Love and her web master, and to the Brenda Novak Auction for Diabetes. You guys are the best!



D.L. Snell writes with Permuted Press. He edited Dr. Kim Paffenroth twice, John Dies at the End once, and provided a constructive critique to Joe McKinney on his next major novel after Dead City. You can shoot D.L. Snell in the head at
www.dlsnell.com.

To reprint this article, please contact D.L. Snell.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Future Lovecraft antho

THE MARKET
  • Antho: Future Lovecraft
  • Publisher: Innsmouth Free Press
  • Editor(s): Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Paula R. Stiles
  • Pay Rate: Penny a word, Canadian
  • Response Time: Final selections announced at the end of July.
  • Reading Period: May-June 2011
  • Description: Science-fiction meets Lovecraft.
  • Submission Guidelines: www.innsmouthfreepress.com

NOTE: Author D.L. Snell conducted the following interview to give writers a better idea of what the editors of this specific market are seeking; however, most editors are open to ideas outside of the preferences discussed here, as long as they fit the basic submission guidelines.

THE SCOOP
1) What authors do you enjoy, and why does their writing captivate you? 

SMG: Aside from Lovecraft? If you’re talking science fiction, I’d say I really liked C.L. Moore’s space opera stories about Northwest Smith. I’d be interested in seeing a Jirel of Joiry-like character in space. I like almost anything Tanith Lee writes. She’s quite versatile. James Tiptree, Jr., loved some of her stuff like “Love Is the Plan the Plan Is Death”.  Horror of all stripes. There’s a story called “Sticks” by Karl Edward Wagner that still scares the crap out of me. It’s probably one of the best Lovecraftian stories I’ve read.

PRS: Beyond (obviously) being a Lovecraft fan, I’ve always been a fan of the classic “feminist” authors: C.L. Moore for her Jirel of Joiry stuff, Leigh Brackett for her Mars and interplanetary stories, Tanith Lee for pretty much anything, Joanna Russ for her Alys sword and sorcery, Lois McMaster Bujold for the Vorkosigan saga. But I also love Charles R. Saunders for his Dossouye stories, Robert Heinlein (though I tend to prefer the earlier stuff, before he got long-winded and preachy), Samuel R. Delaney for Babel 17, Theodore Sturgeon, Poe (of course), Philip K. Dick, Robert E. Howard, Stephen King, Alfred Bester for The Stars My Destination. I think my favourite short story ever is “Fondly Fahrenheit”. But I think the scariest short story (at least in SF) I’ve ever read is Asimov’s “Nightfall”. And lately, I’ve been getting into Thomas Sniegoski for his angels and Simon R. Green for his edgy detective protag in London’s Darkside.

2) What are your favorite genres? Which genres would you like to see incorporated into submissions to this market? 

SMG: Future Lovecraft is looking for stories that combine Lovecraftian horror with science fiction. We want all types of science fiction, from space opera to cyberpunk. I’d like to see some biopunk in there. Personally, I am very fond of magic realism, but that’s neither here nor there for this anthology.

PRS: Oh, damn, do I have to pick? Look, if it’s genre, I’m there. Pretty much anything but “literary” or what I call “pseudo-genre”. There’s nothing worse than a pretentious author who hates a genre and then writes something in it, not having a clue about the tropes and clichés, and thinks what he/she wrote is God’s gift to the genre. I won’t name names, but I’m sure we can all think of a few. Anyway, my tastes vary a lot, but I guess I’d go with horror and mystery, SF and then fantasy, if I had to choose. Romance isn’t my favourite, but I won’t turn up my nose at a good cross-genre (like romance/urban fantasy) or historical romance, and have been known to review a few for the zine.

For the antho, I’d like to see some cosmic horror that doesn’t take place in the usual locations. Space opera, otherworldly living cities that have been built upon for ten thousand years. Stuff in the Oort Cloud, stuff on the Moon. I want to see stuff like that. I’ve also thought that some future steampunk would be fun in Lovecraft’s world. You could go so far into the future that you have that feudal, dying-sun, Brian Aldiss vibe going.

3) What settings most intrigue you? Ordinary or exotic locales? Real or fantasy? Past, present, or future? 

SMG: Honestly, it depends on the anthology. For this one, we are looking for anything set in the future, be it near future or far future. We both like to explore unusual settings. Why should aliens only land in the United States? Why not in New Delhi? There are many vast locations which would be great for science fiction stories and are often passed over.

PRS: Non-western settings, mostly. In this antho, we’re looking for future. I tend to like real and somewhat gritty, but nicely written. Not really into near-future postapocalyptic, to be honest. It’s lazy and a bit self-indulgent.

4) Explain the type of pacing you enjoy, e.g. slow building to fast, fast throughout, etc. 

SMG: Again, it depends on the story. I’m partial to a slow build, but it better build to something. Very often we see good stories that are just too bloated. They’re 1,000 or more words longer than they ought to be. The longer it is, the better it ought to be. I appreciate compact, well-told flash fiction.

PRS: You need to grab me in the beginning—a strong image, quirky/beautiful language, a unique setting or culture, something original like that—and you need to have a strong ending. Too often, we get stuff that peters out. Not every story has to end unhappily or with a big twist, but spare me long epilogues. Which is not to say interesting things need not happen in the middle, just that I’m okay with non-standard story structure as long as you begin and end well and have worth-reading stuff in the middle.

I will warn you that, in addition to my being naturally more impatient than Silvia regarding pacing, I also read the story with an eye to the fact that I’ll be copy editing the thing very soon. And if that prospect fills me with dread, I won’t be going thumbs-up on your tale.

5) What types of characters appeal to you the most? Any examples? 

SMG: Again, it depends. I don’t like reading about annoying characters. The teenage yuppies who are being chased by monsters is … ugh. I want compelling people that keep me reading. I’d like to see more regular people. We get a lot of rich and upper-class characters. Where are the people who work in the factories? They can also have interesting stories.

I’d be happy to see more heroic characters who do the right thing without being corny. Also, complex characters who are multi-faceted, smart and cunning without being total ass-hats.

PRS: Probably my favourite character type is the mentally disturbed protagonist who is dangerous to himself and others, but is sympathetic and active, even heroic, in dealing with the storyline while essentially cracking up. Delapore from “The Rats in the Walls”, Blake in “The Haunter of the Dark”, Vandaleur in “Fondly Fahrenheit”, Dean Winchester in Supernatural. Like that. However, you should avoid “weak” protags, especially if they’re female (Alyx in Picnic on Paradise, I want to see. “The Yellow Wallpaper, part 17”, no). Your protag should be an otherwise vivid, even strong, personality who has an excellent reason (or maybe 12) for losing his mind. No “I saw Cthulhu naked in the bathtub and it drove me insane” stories.

More women who aren’t young, beautiful and stupid, and/or being chased by evil boyfriends would be nice, too. Ditto with Silvia on the lack of regular folk. We need more of those. What’s up with all the rich, white folk in our slush, sometimes? We need more people from non-western cultures who are both sympathetic and not white folk in drag. We got far too many stories for Historical Lovecraft, especially, where a white man (usually from Victorian England) visits a “savage” culture and borderline-racist shenanigans ensue. That’s just lazy writing and a refusal to get inside the head of a different culture. There’s a place for Outsider/Colonial fiction, sure, but not every freakin’ story. I sure hope we won’t get the Spaceman Spiff version of that.

And for those who send us stories set in Ye Old Road Eyeland or some twee Cape Cod, look, Silvia and I have both spent many years in that area and half my relatives are Old New England. So, if you don’t know the area well enough to give us something more original than Hollywood New England, just don’t. Set your story somewhere you know well enough to do originally, with characters that aren’t cardboard.

6) Is there a specific tone you’d like to set in your publication? What kind of voices grab you and keep you enthralled? Any examples? 

SMG: We are open to all kinds of tones and voices. I don’t mind experimentation and will read a lot of weird stuff if it keeps me entertained.

PRS: Ditto. And I’m going to say this straight out—I LIKE unusual POVs. Just remember you have to do them well, because head-hopping simply because you never thought out your POV is annoying. Head-hopping because your protag is a crazy guy with a crazy, serial-killing android, now, that can be lots of fun.

7) What is your policy for vulgarity, violence, and sexual content? Any taboos? 

SMG: If it fits the story, it’s fine. Torture porn is not going to do it for us. There has to be something more than just shock value in a submission. Plus, there is very little you can do to shock us due to the sheer amount of stories we’ve both read. With that said, we are not a market for erotica.

PRS: We’ve bought stuff with profanity, quite a lot of violence and weird sexual shenanigans going on. I will say, though, that I’ve not much enjoyed subs that begin right off with the characters shedding body fluids, and continuing on with “look at my booger!” grossness. Please don’t start the story with the protag peeing on my shoes and cursing me out. We’ve only just met. Ditto on torture porn, which is boring and not really horror, in my mind.

Regarding sexual content, I don’t care as long as it fits the story. I will say, though, that I am even less fond of rape motifs than Silvia (and she’s not fond of it) and rape-as-hot-sex makes me very angry. We’ve bought a few stories that had rape in them, but it tended to be offstage and something where we bought the story in spite of the presence of rape in it. It’s a squick for us. Plus, tentacles in non-standard places scare Silvia and not in a good way.

8) What kind of themes are you seeking most in submissions to this market? In general, what themes interest you? 

SMG: We’re very open. We’d like to see stuff that strays from the default settings. Stuff that interests me: the integration of machines with biological parts, parasitism, space opera with smart and capable heroines, tales that create a sense of dread. Insanity and obsession. Body horror. Lovecraft had a lot of sci-fi in his stories and you can milk him for tons of inspiration, from the brain cylinders to that Tillinghast device.

PRS: I’d love to see some space opera. I don’t think we ever get that. Insanity, definitely. Body snatcher type stuff, too. It would be really fun to see some of Lovecraft’s SF stuff projected into the future. Like, what would happen if a probe like Voyager ran across the Mi-Go? Whatever happened to The Shining Trapezohedron? What are the physics involved with, say, trying to predict the appearance of Hounds of Tindalos? Like that. People tend to forget that an awful lot of Lovecraft’s horror was also SF.

9) Overall, do you prefer downbeat or upbeat endings? 

SMG: Lovecraft is pretty downbeat, but we don’t mind straying from that mold.

PRS: Normally, I like to see a protag survive a story. However, horror can be a bit different and a lot of Lovecraft is pretty bleak. I will say that you should avoid writing a lazy downbeat ending. Upbeat and still horrific is hard, but it’s also more original. “Everybody dies” has already been done a million times. I especially dislike downbeat endings where an outcast protag dies and order (corrupt or otherwise) is restored. That’s just cynical. Give me a sympathetic monster as your protag and have him/her live to monster another day. Don’t be afraid to leave things in a mess.

10) Any last advice for submitters to this market? Any critical do’s or do not’s? 

SMG: Please include a cover letter with a word count. It’s your virtual handshake and the word count is very important to me once I’m inputting stuff into our spreadsheets and I need all the basic information without having to dig for it. If you don’t have writing credits, please don’t put stuff just for the sake of stuff. It’s fine to say here’s the story and it’s 5,000 words rather than drafting a long justification of why you haven’t sold a story. Don’t be afraid to try wild, different stuff that strays from the old school Lovecraft. The anthology is called Future Lovecraft, after all. We are accepting submissions in English, Spanish and French. We are also looking at poetry. We’ll look at reprints, but include original publication information.

PRS: Cover letter with your contact info (not your phone number), word count, story title, author, whether the story’s an original or reprint. The story itself should have your contact info and word count in the top left-hand corner, and start with your title and byline. No, putting the title as your file name is NOT enough. William Shunn is your friend, people. We want the usual standard format (though you don’t need to double-space between sentences).



For more scoops
, go to
marketscoops.blogspot.com.

D.L. Snell writes with Permuted Press. He edited Dr. Kim Paffenroth three times, John Dies at the End once, and provided a constructive critique to Joe McKinney on Apocalypse of the Dead. You can shoot D.L. Snell in the head at www.exit66.net.

To reprint this article, please contact D.L. Snell.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Kevin J. Anderson Interview

Kevin J. Anderson is the author of more than one hundred novels, 47 of which have appeared on national or international bestseller lists. He has over 20 million books in print in thirty languages. He has won or been nominated for numerous prestigious awards, including the Nebula Award, Bram Stoker Award, the SFX Reader's Choice Award, the American Physics Society's Forum Award, and New York Times Notable Book. By any measure, he is one of the most popular writers currently working in the science fiction genre.
D.L. Snell: Hey, Kevin! Thanks for joining us!!!

Kevin J. Anderson:  Thanks, David—I’m on a radio interview right now, with 5-minute commercial breaks at (in)appropriate times, so I can type answers to the questions during the breaks.

DLS: Kevin, you have been working as an author for a long time, and have produced volumes upon volumes. But… what about your first story? Not the first one you ever published, but the first one you ever put to paper. What about that story? Was it crappy? Or the best thing you ever wrote? 

KJA: Oh, it was delightful—I wrote it in fourth grade about a mad scientist who invents an injection that can bring anything to life, but when the other scientists don’t believe him, he breaks into the wax museum and brings all the monster figures to life, and then goes to the natural history museum and reanimates a dinosaur skeleton, all of which go on a rampage.  The writing wasn’t very skilled, but the story was pretty cool.

DLS: You’re an editor as well. What projects have you worked on? Who are some of the authors you have edited?

KJA: My first anthologies were for Star Wars, Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina, Tales from Jabba’s Palace, Tales of the Bounty Hunters, and those are still (I believe) the best-selling SF anthologies of all time, so not a bad way to start.  Then I did War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches, spinoff stories about the Wells Martian invasion.  I thought I had given it up for good, but HWA asked me to come up with another anthology, and I suggested Blood Lite…humorous horror stories.  That’s been a lot of fun, allowing me to work with some of the biggest names in the genre—Charlaine Harris, Jim Butcher, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Kelley Armstrong, Heather Graham, LA Banks, Sharyn McCrumb. Of course, when someone is at that point in their career, they don’t need me to edit them; they turn in good stories in the first place.

DLS: I’m an editor, too, and have had a couple… “funny” experiences. The funniest had to be when someone publically accused me of inserting rape into a novel. What’s the “funniest” editing experience you’ve ever had?

KJA: Sad more than funny, I suppose.  I had one person submit the same (awful) story to all three Blood Lite anthologies, as if I wouldn’t remember it. They think I have skyscraper offices with dozens of staff…I have a house and the stories come through the mailbox, and I read them. I’m not senile yet; my memory lasts more than a few months.

DLS: I found the following in your bio: “Practically unheard-of in the field, Anderson released all seven large volumes [of The Saga of Seven Suns] on time, year after year, and he completed the series with Book #7.” Many writers struggle to be prolific, let alone punctual. How do you do it?! Can you describe your typical work schedule?

KJA: Due to a confluence of deadlines, I recently found myself finishing three book manuscripts in two weeks—The Key to Creation (Orbit/Hachette—172,000 words), The Sisterhood of Dune, with Brian Herbert (Tor—181,000 words), and a YA space adventure Star Challengers with Rebecca Moesta (Catalyst).  Two solid weeks of 12-hour days, 7 days a week.  Not quite the stereotypical image of a writer lounging around all day.

I have an office in my home, or I occasionally take the laptop and hide in a local coffee shop.  When I have a particularly heavy slate of writing/editing to do, I’ll go to an out-of-the way lodge where I can work uninterrupted.  The workload changes all the time, depending on the projects, but I generally write a couple of new chapters in the morning, edit in the afternoon, do correspondence, blogs, etc. throughout the day and in the evening. Everybody else with a high-end career—doctors, lawyers, restaurant managers, business CEOs—has to put in a full day at work.  Why shouldn’t an author?

DLS: Okay, here’s something a little different—a question from a horror writer familiar with your work…

  • Bobbie Metevier: Kevin, how has publishing . . . the process . . . changed since you started?

KJA: It took them quite a while, but they finally take my computer files and typeset from that, rather than retyping the whole manuscript. The physical production process is a lot more efficient.  The business side, however, is what’s changed the most, with distribution being completely scrambled, online bookstores, authors being expected to do the lion’s share of publicity.

DLS: Dean Koontz was one of my biggest writing influences growing up—and this was back when he was Dean R. Koontz. We’d love to hear about the novel you co-authored with him, and about your co-authoring process in general. How do you make collaboration work?

KJA: Dean had written a script for his own version of the Frankenstein story, which was made into a TV movie so awful that he took his name off of it and wanted it released as a book instead. He asked me to help him novelize the script as the start of his series. Ed Gorman worked with him on the second book, and then he has gone off to finish the series on his own. That was different from my usual collaborating method, because Dean had already written the story and much of the dialog.  For my work with Brian Herbert, Rebecca Moesta, and Doug Beason, it’s much more interactive from the start: we brainstorm the whole book together, develop the chapter-by-chapter outline together, and then write our separate chapters, before combining it all into one manuscript and then editing it repeatedly.

DLS: It seems like every time I do a book signing, I run into at least one… “interesting” person. For example, this lady in a muumuu—she took one look at my book cover and started backing off, saying, “That book’s from the dark side.” You’ve been on national book tours and have attended countless conventions. Any interesting people you can tell us about?

KJA: Oh, always interesting people.  I have plenty of unique fans, some eccentric, some a little odd or intense, but they’re still my fans and readers, so I’m happy to have all of them.  They come in costume, some have even named their children after my characters, and it’s great to see the impact my stories have had.  I’ve written over a hundred books, and it’s amusing sometimes that someone will come up and ask me about a minor detail in a novel I wrote 15 years ago…I really don’t remember!

DLS: Your new novel Hellhole, co-authored with Brian Herbert, looks stellar. What’s it about?

KJAHellhole is a big SF colonization epic, about a rugged world that’s nearly been destroyed by a massive asteroid impact. Not a pleasant place, earthquakes, volcanoes, terrible storms, the whole ecosystem wrecked, yet a bunch of misfits try to make a new home there…and they find remnants of an alien race wiped out in the impact.  Lots of characters, adventures, politics, a very big story.

Hellhole (The Hell Hole Trilogy)


DLS: Let’s say you committed a crime that landed you in Hellhole. What kind of crime would it be? I mean, if you were a criminal in the Hellhole universe, what kind of criminal would you hope to be?

KJA: In true Hollywood fashion, I would be innocent, I swear!  Falsely accused, wrongfully convicted, but because of my heart of gold, I will work to make life better for my fellow colonists.  (Fortunately, the characters in the novel itself aren’t so clichéd.)

DLS: Here’s another question from the outside, this one also from another writer…

  • Zombie Zak: Kevin, I understand you carried on from AE van Vogt's work with Slan Hunter (2007); what was that like for you?

KJA: My collaborations with Brian Herbert have led to a great resurgence in the popularity of Frank Herbert’s works.  Van Vogt was also very popular with me when I was younger, and I was thrilled when Van’s widow Lydia got in touch with me to ask if I would be interested in finishing the last book her husband had begun before his death.  Slan is such a classic, with such an impact on the whole SF genre (you’ve seen it copied a million times, though Van doesn’t always get credit).  That one didn’t take off as much as the Dune books did, but it did lead to the reprinting of other van Vogt classics and a new readership for Slan.

DLS: Any upcoming writing or editing projects?

KJA: I’m just wrapping up the manuscript and starting the boring production parts of Blood Lite 3: Aftertaste, and that’s the only editing project I have going right now.  Next month, Tor will release this year’s Nebula Awards Showcase, which I also edited.  In coming months I will be releasing a lot of my short story catalog as mini ebook collections, three stories for three bucks; most of those stories have never been seen beyond their original magazine publication, so it’ll be new stuff for most readers.  I’ll also be giving away free stories and book excerpts on our website, www.wordfire.com—check there in a couple of weeks (as soon as the web guy gets all the details fixed).

DLS: Thanks for humoring us, Kevin—it was great to have you!!!

KJA: Thanks for being humored.


For more scoops, go to marketscoops.blogspot.com.

D.L. Snell writes with Permuted Press. He edited Dr. Kim Paffenroth three times, John Dies at the End once, and provided a constructive critique to Joe McKinney for Apocalypse of the Dead. You can shoot D.L. Snell in the head at www.exit66.net.

To reprint this article, please contact D.L. Snell.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Darwin's Evolutions: A Journal of Speculative Fiction

THE MARKET
  • Zine: Darwin's Evolutions: A Journal of Speculative Fiction
  • Editor(s): Darwin A. Garrison
  • Pay Rate: $50 plus royalties upon earn out
  • Response Time: 2 to 4 weeks
  • Reading Period: Continuous
  • Description: Science fiction and fantasy adventure entertainment novelettes and novellas.
  • Submission Guidelines: darwinsevolutions.com

NOTE: Author D.L. Snell conducted the following interview to give writers a better idea of what the editors of this specific market are seeking; however, most editors are open to ideas outside of the preferences discussed here, as long as they fit the basic submission guidelines.

THE SCOOP
1) What authors do you enjoy, and why does their writing captivate you?
Let's see: Julie Czerneda, Kristin Britain, Anne Aguirre, David Weber, John Ringo, Tom Kratman, Michael Z. Williamson, Dave Freer, Sarah Hoyt, Jim Butcher. Folks who tell stories that grab your attention and don't let go from beginning to end. It's a function of having exciting, empathetic characters actively taking part in their own fate while experiencing a fast paced and intriguing plot.

2) What are your favorite genres? Which genres would you like to see incorporated into submissions to this market?
I read across the science fiction and fantasy genres. I also follow a good bit of military science fiction. As for Evolutions, my primary goal is to acquire stories that have real traction to get the reader hooked and turning the page and then leaving them with a solid and satisfying ending. I'm not concerned about obtaining one genre or another in preference. What I want is high performance stories.

3) What settings most intrigue you? Ordinary or exotic locales? Real or fantasy? Past, present, or future?
The locale doesn't draw me except as enjoyable ornamentation to the characters and the plot. I appreciate well developed settings when they're properly related through the telling, but I don't much desire one type over another.

4) Explain the type of pacing you enjoy, e.g. slow building to fast, fast throughout, etc.
A good story hooks and doesn't let go. The pace can be blistering or it can surge like waves depending on the storyteller. The proper meter for a particular story is a direct function of the author's storytelling style and the presentation of the characters. I can no more dictate one sort of pacing than I can tell people what characters should be wearing. The proof comes in the reading and success is primarily due to author proficiency.

5) What types of characters appeal to you the most? Any examples?
The characters that draw me most into a telling are the battlers. The ones determined not to give up no matter what the cost. The biggest turn off is a whiny victim, especially if they pretend to be esoteric and intellectual about it.

6) Is there a specific tone you'd like to set in your publication? What kind of voices grab you and keep you enthralled? Any examples?
I think that what you will never likely see in Evolutions are stories that are devoid of hope. I despise anything that smacks of the nihilism that seems to infest literary fiction recently. What I want is for people to be confident that when they open a copy of Darwin's Evolutions they will be entertained and left, if not uplifted, at least not suicidally depressed.

7) What is your policy for vulgarity, violence, and sexual content? Any taboos?
We are not a market for gore, smut, erotica, horror, or tales featuring profanity-laden diatribes by any character. Think of the rating as PG-13 for language and R for sex. If it turns me off or is something that I would be embarrassed for my wife or children to find lying about the house, then it's out. Also, when some activist or another trots out a fictional piece justifying their mania, I get to round-file the submission instantly.

8) What kind of themes are you seeking most in submissions to this market? In general, what themes interest you?
I'm not interested in dictating themes. I don't have a goal in mind for the stories to build towards. Like I said previously, I want stories that hook the reader and keep them turning pages until the story ends in a satisfactory manner. Perhaps that's not a valid market model. Maybe I should be terrified at myself for not having an overarching meme that I want DE stories to ascribe to. Thing is, other than "science fiction and fantasy adventures", I have nothing more to add.

9) Overall, do you prefer downbeat or upbeat endings?
This was debated hotly in a blog I watch the other day and it made me stop and think. My final decision was, "I prefer appropriate endings." You don't end a tragedy with sunshine and roses except as a final ironic twist of the knife. And you don't end an uplifting piece with the heroes skipping through the carnage and laughing. My key point is to avoid nihilistic "life sucks" endings. A ray of hope in an otherwise dark end is not a bad end in my opinion. Likewise, a hint that nothing is ever completely good or evil in the ending of a heroic adventure is definitely apropos of reality. The key, though, is that the ending must fit the narrative and be a solid conclusion.

10) Any last advice for submitters to this market? Any critical dos or don’ts?
Don't be afraid to submit. Do read a publication's guidelines before submitting. Don't give up when the rejections roll in. Do keep writing.



For more scoops
, go to
marketscoops.blogspot.com.

D.L. Snell writes with Permuted Press. He edited Dr. Kim Paffenroth twice, John Dies at the End once, and provided a constructive critique to Joe McKinney on his next major novel after Dead City. You can shoot D.L. Snell in the head at www.exit66.net.

To reprint this article, please contact D.L. Snell.

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