Welcome to the December/January issue of Aphelion! Once again, we bring
you a double issue so that the staff can enjoy the Holidays without
deadlines looming over our heads. There should be enough stories and
poetry here to keep you entertained until the Birthday issue in
February
Birthday issue comes out. And remember, Nate will be running the Flash
Fiction challenges each month over in the Forums, even if the rest of
us are slacking off! LOL! Indeed, I suggested one challenge subject to
Nate that will require me to write a Mare Inebrium flash as the basis
for the contest. Expect that one no earlier than February. Writers may
want to read through the Mare stories to get a head start.
Doctor Who fans are getting down to the wire on David Tennant's tenure
as the Doctor. In another couple of weeks his last two episodes will be
broadcast. He will be missed, but hopefully he'll return in special
episodes in the future. The rumor mill is working overtime on
speculations about those last two shows, and even harder on what sort
of dynamic the next actor will bring to the part. I've adopted a
wait-and-see attitude about the whole thing. I've been a fan for so
many years that only a major foul-up would get me to stop watching the
show. Given that the show began in 1963 and has returned from
cancellation at least twice, I believe the fan-base is strong enough to
keep it going for a good long while yet. Of course there are going to
be people who complain that the new actor isn't as good as the one who
just left. But those sorts of things have been said about every new and
departing actor that has landed the part. Matt Smith stands ready to
assume the role as the 11th actor to play the Doctor since the series
began. He's by far the youngest ever cast for the part, but if his
other acting credits are any indication, he will do quite well.
On the home front, Michelle, Marc, & Jamie are planning to
visit in early January. As are Judith & Anthony. It is possible
that they might all be here during the same week. If all goes according
to plan, Michelle will be taking her dog, cat, and her boxes of stuff
back to Virginia when the visit is over. That will give Lyn and I an
empty room, an empty closet, and two mostly-empty storage sheds. Plans
are afoot to turn our guest bedroom into a sewing room for Lyn. I will
be constructing a small fold-up bed that will mount to one wall of the
room in order to keep the guest bedroom aspect available. As usual in
this type of Murphy Bed, the hinges and folding legs will be the most
challenging part of the project. The remaining contents of the storage
sheds will then be consolidated so that I can turn the larger of them
into a workshop. I have enough raw materials on hand to produce several
different projects. Things that have been on hold awaiting room to be
freed up and a decent workplace created. I don't have any idea which
project will be green-lighted first, but just having a place to set up
my tools and a big workbench will be wonderful. Things have
been very stressful here at Casa Vila for the last couple of years. Lyn
and I have been frustrated since the fire, auto accident, and
everything else that caused us to fill our storage sheds with so many
boxes of stuff. I expect that several boxes that were packed after the
fire will be emptied, sorted, and many loads of now-useless junk carted
off to the local landfill. Who knows what treasures will reappear once
we have room to open those boxes back up again? One thing is certain,
lots of that stuff should have been trashed right away rather than
boxed and stored, but the clean-up crew needed everything out of the
way quickly in order to get to work.
But just what has this all got to do with writing? Indeed, you may ask
that, but then I'm sure that several of you have leaped ahead of me and
deduced my next paragraphs. The writing lesson from Doctor Who is
simple. Plot, characters, set, and setting. That show has covered every
point on the "good to bad" spectrum for all of those storytelling
tools. Stories with a good plot, stories with so many plot
holes they can't be saved, stories with little or no plot at all.
Characters that people love, characters that people hate, and even
really badly-written characters that people don't care about them in
the slightest. Fantastic sets, and sets that are little more than a
blank, empty room. Settings from history, mythology, the past, the
future, the impossible, and the commonplace. Doctor Who has had shining
examples of all those, both well done and poorly done. The show has
proved that good writing can salvage a story from cheap sets. It has
proved that great actors can take their characters and salvage
something from poor writing. And it has proved that even the largest
budget cannot make a story interesting if the characters and plot are
poorly executed. A writer has to make their story work, using all the
tools at their disposal. Balance every element, one against the other,
and the story turns out to be great. If that balance isn't there, the
story fails, falls flat, and the audience goes elsewhere.
The writing lesson from life at Casa Vila is a bit more complex. Life
is unpredictable. Stuff happens, often for no easily understood reason.
Bad things happen to good people, and bad people sometimes go
unpunished for the disasters they cause. The stresses of everyday
events can make a writer focus in things other than writing. There is
always that temptation to procrastinate. To just avoid sitting down and
getting some writing done because of other issues rearing their ugly
heads. So things get piled up, things get shoved off into dark corners,
and sometimes things get packed up and put away for a long time. But if
a writer is going to manage to keep being a writer, those packed-up
goodies will, eventually, have to be exhumed. Bring them back into the
light, sort through them, discard the rubbish and save the forgotten
treasures. A writer needs a place to write, a place to keep reference
works handy, a place for their tools to stand ready for use. That's
true, but it doesn't go far enough. A writer also needs to make a firm
commitment to putting their self in the chair, at their writing
instrument of choice, and writing. Good writing, bad, or indifferent,
that is totally beside the point. A writer needs to write, not daydream
about writing. The best plot, the best characters, the most beautiful
sets and settings- All those are useless without that work being done,
that writing being done, that in-the-chair-and-writing time each of us
must spend in order to actually *be* a writer. The work has to be done,
despite the distractions. All the tools and time and grand ideas in the
universe are useless without that commitment to do the work. Writers
write and dreamers dream. Choose wisely.
A little over a month ago I received an
interesting e-mail from an intern at a prominent Literary Agency. Of
course, I looked them up on Preditors & Editors, Writer Beware,
and several other reference websites to see if they were indeed real.
Then I used an e-mail address from one of the reference sites to ask if
the offer was real. Everything checked out. This is genuine. This is an
open call for novel submissions from a respected, established Literary
Agency. Read the rest of this page, then start getting your manuscripts
ready for submission! Good luck, everyone!
This is the full text of the original e-mail:
Hello,
I work with a literary agent who is actively seeking new clients,
especially in the science fiction and fantasy genres.We think that
there is a lot of undiscovered talent on the internet and fan fiction
circles. Your publication looks very well run and features some high
quality writing.
What we would like to do is publish a letter in your next few issues
outlining who we are, what we do, who we represent, and what we can
do for a new author. I've attached the intended letter for you to look at.
There is a great opportunity for everyone involved, so I hope this is
an amicable proposal. Let me know what you think, I hope to hear
from you soon.
Sincerely,
Daniel Rogna
intern@ethanellenberg.com
(212) 431-4554
This is the reply I got from my query to the agency itself:
Dan,
I appreciate you following up regarding our open call for submissions. As you
may know, The Ethan Ellenberg Agency is a small agency specializing in
commercial fiction whose clients include John Scalzi, Mary Janice Davidson,
Sharon Shinn, Karen Miller, Mel Odom, and Gail Martin.
Our intern, Daniel Rogna, was indeed asked to contact several online
publications specializing in sci-fi and fantasy and present them with a letter
asking for submissions.
We are currently seeking new talent in the sci-fi and fantasy genres, and rather
than labor through several unrelated queries in our general mail box
(agent@ethanellenberg.com)we decided we'd make a more devoted effort to attract
up-and-coming talent by setting aside a separate inbox for science fiction and
fantasy queries and by imploring publications such as yours to post our open
call for submissions. That inbox, as listed in the letter, will be fantasy@ethanellenberg.com
If you have any further questions or concerns, then please let me know. Otherwise, I
look forward to seeing submissions from Aphelion contributors.
Thanks,
Evan Gregory
Ethan Ellenberg Literary Agency
548 Broadway, No. 5E
New York, NY 10012
(212) 431-4554
And here is the message attached to the original e-mail:
The Ethan Ellenberg Literary Agency
I'm writing to introduce you to myself and my agency and let
you know we are actively seeking clients in the Science Fiction and
Fantasy genre.
We opened in 1984 and have always had an interest in both
genres. We are a full service agency, representing writers at
every stage of their career from unpublished through
maturity. We are a very active, successful seller of
translation rights with agents in all foreign markets and a track
record of approximately 50 new sales per year. There is no
sub right we do not represent - movie, audio, e-book,
translation, United Kingdom rights.
We're privileged to represent a number of top
talents. In Science Fiction we represent Hugo winner John
Scalzi, probably the top talent to emerge in the last ten
years. We also represent Ian Douglas whose military science
fiction series for Avon have been selling well and in print for more
than a decade. We recently contracted for 5 more books in
these series. A recent client who is building nicely is Ed
Willet, whose most recent book TERRA INSEGURO was published by Daw.
We are even more known for our representation of fantasy
writers. Karen Miller is an international bestseller with
publishers in Australia, the United Kingdom and the USA. We
have represented Sharon Shinn from her very first book and today,
twenty one books later, we still represent her. We
represented Gail Martin for her first sale to Solaris and just
concluded a 4 book deal with Orbit to continue her TALES OF THE
NECROMANCER. We represent Mel Odom whose Tolkienesque series
beginning with THE ROVER was a hit for Tor.
Our success in this area is not confined to the adult market, Karen
Miller, Mel Odom, Sharon Shinn, and Ed Willet have all sold young adult
fiction.
We're actively acquiring new clients. The ideal
submission for us is an introductory letter, synopsis and the first 3
chapters of manuscript. We welcome electronic submissions to
fantasy@ethanellenberg.com. We also welcome submission by
mail with a self addressed stamped envelope for response.
Please check our website (ethanellenberg.com) and follow the directions
carefully so as not to fall afoul of U.S. postal regulations.
We remain upbeat, active and committed to the highest standards of
professional conduct and representation. We are members in
good standing of the Association of Author's Representatives
and consistently receive high marks from all the top professional
writer's organizations. We look forward to your
submission.
That's it folks, if you're one of our writers, go get a manuscript ready to submit. If you're a reader, cheer the writers on and then go read the stories and poetry in this issue.
Dan
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