It *should* be! That's a BIG reason for woo-hoo, in my opinion!
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Yeah! But, see, last time, I made a big deal, and then the magazine was like "It's not you, it's me," and no clip. So I'm holding back, just a little.
Rock on, Erika!
While I'm here, I'll ask.
I have this thing I've been working on for the past six months or so. It's not a story, but it's not non-fiction, either. It's a fictional account of what I've been calling a "platonic climb" on a cliff in upstate New York. Sort of "this is what it's like to do this and this is what it feels/sounds/smells/tastes like, on an October Day on a multi-pitch route in the Gunks west of New Paltz." I've made up the climb and the characters but not the emotions or the experiences.
If that makes any sense.
Oh, and it's in 2nd person, dunno why.
I'm not quite done, but I'm trying to figure out what to do with it when it is. Any suggestions?
Shop it around to climbing/outdoor magazines. Or Web sites. t edit Or possibly The Sun, if it would fit one of their reader submission topics.
Consuela, how long? Are we talking about a novel-length work here?
The piece I've read that description reminds me of is actually a piece on rowing that I read in my alumni magazine, FWIW.
Here are the submission guidelines for The Sun.
Suela -- [link] -- Motherrock calls itself Southern California's climbing magazine.
Just something Google turned up.
Nowhere near novel-length, Deb. I think it might be 3,000 words or so now, and I'm planning on trimming it down.
It's just weird, and I don't know what to do with it.
See, now, I don't think it's really appropriate for a climbing magazine, because it's very much on the novice level. It's not highly technical, not a trip report.
But then I dunno, the only climbing magazines I know are the big national ones, "Climbing" and "Rock and Ice", who have no interest in anyone who doesn't have less than 10% body fat and climb over 5.11.
edited to fix wonkiness.