Tuesday 25 September 2018

How to get your short story noticed


I recently won second place in The 'Writers' Forum' short story competition, which means payment and publication (the two most important things for a writer after the actual slog of imagining and editing a story).

So what is my advice to get your story noticed?

  • The first paragraph has to set up at least one question to engage the reader and it has to sustain their interest. This could be (and usually is) a dilemma the character is faced with.
  • The reader needs to be grounded. Where are we? Make it concise and if possible simple, unless your character is a place, in which case it will have layers all of its own (think of the 'house' in Rebecca or the film: Monster House).  
  • The character needs motivation and emotion. We need to know who's speaking and any dialogue must be believable but reduced to as few words as possible because no one speaks in full sentences.
  • There has to be a structure (but not necessarily beginning/middle/end in that order).
  • Unpredictable is good but no story should have an unexpected twist that hasn't had any build-up (foreshadowing is a must). There's nothing worse than feeling conned at the end.
  • The dilemma the character faces must be resolved.
  • A good story should leave you thinking, even if it's a 'how did I not see that coming?'  Personally, these are my favourite.
  • The style should be all your own.
  • A proof reader is a good idea because it's very difficult to spot your own mistakes. If you don't have this (many people write in isolation) an alternative method is to print out your story in a weird font.  It's much easier to see any mistakes when the print looks unprofessional.  Duplicate words can be caught out by reading aloud.
  • Similies are great but only in moderation (a bit like everything).
Sometimes it takes a few submissions to get your story placed and that enforced 'drawer time' when the story is out there, is always positive.  I was lucky with this one but others I've had published before, have been rejected and rewritten before acceptance by another publisher.
Good luck!



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