This week I am *actually* going to work on my article and send it off to the journal I'm hoping will publish it. I've been putting it off for months because part of me thinks it's not good enough, but that's rubbish and I'm trying to ignore it. I need a publication, so I'm just going to go for it. The journal in question has a 'student perspectives' section that I'm more likely to get published in than anywhere else, so it's by no means impossible. I thought writing my intention down here might help with moving the project from theoretical to actual!
The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Go team Seska!
That does help sometimes, Seska. You can do it! Submit, submit!
To the journal, I mean.
To the journal, I mean.
Heh.
Back in the 60's Asimov along with a number of other writers voted a pretty editor as the editor to whom "we would most like to submit".
I'm now down 23,000 words. So far the cuts aren't too bad. Maybe I can save a couple of scenes that I thought would hurt if they were removed.
Typo, what's your book about?
"Cooling a Fevered Planet: The U.S. role in solving the climate crisis". It is about the politics and economics of solving phasing out fossil fuels, dirty industrial processes, and destructive forestry, agriculture and land use.
The editor does not like the use of the term "U.S." and wants to substitute American, so it sounds less "governmental". The critique makes sense, but I'm not sure of use of the word "American" as a substitute, given that the book does not deal with Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil and all the other nations that are just as "American" as the U.S.
Is it being targeted to a U.S. audience or something broader? Most Americans (tricky usage) don't consider the other residents of the continent as Americans.