Anyone want to give me some feedback?
I am definitely in the mood to read some fluffy vampire romance. You can send it to amy at amygarvey dot com.
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Anyone want to give me some feedback?
I am definitely in the mood to read some fluffy vampire romance. You can send it to amy at amygarvey dot com.
Erin, I'd suck at fiction feedback right now, or I'd offer. But R&RNF, all 45K words in seventeen days, has pretty much taken over my faculties.
I don't if anyone has seen this or not but every year there's a screenplay competition for Screenwriters Expo. I just noticed that, this year, there's a new side competition or something. Since I know we have some writers/comic fans around these parts, I thought I'd pass on the link:
$50,000 PRODUCTION DEAL: COMIC BOOK/GRAPHIC NOVEL
Wow, Deb, that's a lot of work. Rock and roll mystery, right? I'm so curious! It sounds like a lot of fun.
I haven't done a word count for me -- huh. 7300 words, 11 pages, single spaced since about midnight Friday, and no writing yesterday. Go team No Net.
AmyLiz, doll, insent.
Thanks for posting that, Kristen. Intriguing.
Got it, Erin. Will read it in a little bit -- I have to do a few other things while the baby's napping.
Cool -- I'm looking at job listings for teachers.
Erin, insent. And hey! You left me totally hanging there at the end, you tease.
Funny truth -- I left you hanging cause I had a booty call I had to get to! Apropo for the tale, n'est pas!
And, yo, backflung. I'll be Netted again tomorrow AM.
My most recent project:
Call for Submissions
“The November Third Club,” [link] an online literary journal seeking to “up the ante” of literary political writing, is seeking poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction that resonates with a political message and rises above the mere rhetoric and rant. The emphasis will be on political literature, will be unabashedly left-wing in nature, and will be looking at literature written from a liberal, green, anarchist or libertarian perspective. Biases up front.
The November Third Club is edited by Victor D. Infante, fiction editor; Richard Beban & Ray McNiece, poetry editors; Carlye Archibeque, nonfiction editor and Sam Hamill, contributing editor. We are also currently seeking fiction and nonfiction editors, so if you’re interested, drop us a line at nov3rdsubmissions@yahoo.com, and put “editor query” in the subject line.
Some of the ideas we are interested in exploring from a literary perspective include reclaiming church and state, electoral fraud and reform, race and identity, censorship, individual liberty and of course, “The War on Terror,” but we’re open to new ideas, particularly innovative ones. Don’t just rehash tired old knee-jerk anti-Bush propaganda and give us your commentary on Associated Press news stories. We want something that pushes the envelope of political writing. We’re open to styles and genre, we just want the writing to be good and the message to resonate.
Politics have permeated through literature as long as people have been writing. For a rough idea of what we like and are looking for, consider the work of such writers as George Orwell, Phillip K. Dick, Hunter S. Thompson, Norman Mailer, Tony Hoagland, Wanda Coleman, Barbara Kingsolver, Sherman Alexie, Philip Levine, Marge Piercy, Studs Terkel, Jonathan Swift, Thomas Paine, Ralph Ellison, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Aldous Huxley, Amiri Baraka, John Steinbeck, Charles Simic and Adrienne Rich, to give a small sampling. Seriously, we’re open. But don’t just imitate these greats, give us something new and unique. The simple idea is that no amount of facts and statistics makes a political message real to most people, but stories and symbolism can.
Guidelines for submissions:
Sincerely,
The November Third Club