Archive for the 'Short Stories' Category

Spooky Blogging

ghost As I munched on my lunch the other day, I scrolled through my blog aggregator and found myself reading a couple of eery and spooky blog posts that just seemed to pop up randomly in an eery and spooky way.

The first was a post from my associate Silvia Cambie, writing about an afternoon by the lake a long time ago. It reads like a Stephen King or like one of those creepy movies like “What Lies Beneath”. Here’s an extract:

“I could feel its skeletal fingers between mine…Its glacial breath down my neck.

A surreal fog was rising between me and my friend, like thick incense smoke in a dark, forsaken temple.

I don’t remember how I left the house. “

Eeeeek!

The next post that popped up on my screen was from the blog of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, telling ghost stories set in the haunted libraries of the US. Here is the entry for a library in Arkansas:

“Benton, Saline County Library. The library’s home from 1967 to 2003 was a converted theater building that frequently featured phenomena that made librarians suspect a ghost was afoot: phantom footsteps, paperback carousels rotating by themselves, books falling from the shelves, a self-operating photocopier, and a slamming book-return door. Once, late at night, Director Julie Hart heard the distinctive sound of a manual typewriter—but the library had long ago discarded theirs.”

The hairs are standing up on the back of my neck!

I love a good ghost story bu I’m completely hopeless when it comes to hearing strange noises in the night - I’m no plucky heroine, going off to investigate and instead, preferring to cower in my bed after I’ve turned all the lights ablaze and turned up the radio full blast.

Picture: thanks to gaileymcguire on flickr.com

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 at 1:00am

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Storytelling Workshop with Preethi Nair

I interviewed Preethi Nair for an article on The Writer as Entreprenuer a while back and we’ve been in touch ever since. Preethi is the author of Gypsy Masala and the story of her self-publishing that novel is an amazing story in itself - she acted as her own publisher, agent, publicist and distributor, in particular creating a fictitious publicist Pru who plugged her book so well, she was shortlisted for a publicist of the year award!

Preethi emailed me to say that she is running a Storytelling Workshop at Waterstones, Piccadilly on Saturday 16 June from 10am-4.30pm. The cost is £60 and proceeds to charity to support Multiple Sclerosis. The details are below.

It should be a good day so do check it out. If you do go and would like to write up a review of the day, do email me and I’ll post it up on Fusion View.

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My article on The Writer as Entrepreneur is due out in the July issue of Mslexia magazine. I will be posting up on Fusion View my telephone interview with Preethi as a podcast to co-incide with the publication of the article so do check back in early July to listen to that interview.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, May 18th, 2007 at 1:00am

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Call for Submissions by Italian e-zine Buran

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I received this email from an Italian e-zine Buran a week or so ago. If you are a writer or aspiring writer - especially if you are from Asia - and would like to see your work published online and in Italian, contact Flaviano Fillo at Buran with your writings or to find out more - his email address is at the end of his email.

Dear Yang-May Ooi,

I’m writing (and reading your blog) from Italy.
I am involved in some literary projects regarding the web.
Now a new project is about a web magazine named Buràn (http://www.buran.it)

In the new magazine Buràn we host foreign (for us) bloggers and writers,
from every part of the world.

The aim is to show what we call “Invisible Writing”: stories that we
usually are not able to read because of the language (chinese, arab and so
on) or because they are fading away into the great ocean of the web.
We are collecting stories from all over the world.

I read your blog, and appreciated it very much.

We would really like to publish something from you or from the people who
read Fusion View.

Our magazine is divided in two different parts: the first part hosts
stories (fiction and non-fiction) about a subject chosen by us (for the
next issue it will be: “The City”).

The second part host stories (fiction and non-fiction) regarding subjects
chosen by authors. There will be no resctrictions about themes.

We are interested in stories published on-line; if they’re published also
on paper, no problem.

About lenght: it should be good for us to get stories possibly composed by
about 5,000 to 10,000 characters.

About the rights: you’ll keep on owning all the rights about your stories
. Buràn is a no-profit project. It’s a web publication, everybody is able
to read it online; nobody will be allowed to use the italian version for
economic purposes.

Everybody (authors, translators, webmaster) join the projet for free.
No honorarium, unfortunately! Just a link to your website, and your name on an italian literary magazine that’s becoming very popular, and a lot of people reading your words and
your world.

If you are interested in our project, please contact me at
flaviano.fillo@libero.it or at redazione@buran.it

Thank you very much for your kind attention.
I hope to hear from you soon.
Best

Flaviano

PS We collect stories in original languages and than translate them in italian.

Next deadline: 19 march

About charaters: I don’t mean number of words, but number of letters and blanks (i.e. “Yang-May” has 8 characters). But consder the numbers of characters just as a suggestion, not a “must”.

People don’t have to mark their submissions as fiction or non fiction.

About authors biography, we link to authors blog or site.

The first issue of Buràn counted 10,000 hits; many blogs from many regions of the world linked to it. Our stories has been about; A white farmer in Zimbabwe, Africa; A year in a scientific base in Antarctica; Imaginary People in Mexico; A girl who never stops crying in Argentina; A murder in Korea and so on (from 18 Countries).

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, March 7th, 2007 at 7:00am

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Getting Published - 13. Where to submit your manuscript

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I received a query from TK in response to my Writing Tips. TK asked: once a story is ready, who should a writer contact to get it published?

In some ways, the easy part is the actual writing of a story. Getting it out there and into publication is the challenge. So where do you start?

Novels

If you’ve written a novel and want to get it published in the UK, the first step is to get a literary agent. You can find agents listed in the Writers Handbook and the Writers & Artists Yearbook (both published annually - so get the most up to date ones). They will act on your behalf in submitting to publishers. This gives you the strongest chance of getting your work noticed by a publisher. For a more detailed insider’s view of what a literary agent does and how they can help you, listen to my podcast interview with a UK literary agent Lucy Luck - click here.

If you’re trying to get your novel published in Malaysia, I believe that the way you do it is submit it direct to the publisher. Eric Forbes, the books editor for MPH Books in Malaysia, gives useful guidelines at his blog - click here.

Short Stories

If you’ve written a short story, you should try and get it published in magazines and journals first before hoping for a book deal in the UK. It is much more difficult to get a collection of short stories published in the UK than a novel - especially if you have no track record of published work. Readers here tend to prefer novels so that is the primary market. Check out magazines and journals in the Writers Handbook and the Writers & Artists Yearbook and submit your story to them - make sure they are interested in short stories first, obviously. Payment is likely to be minimal. Once you have a published body of work, then you could try to get a publisher to put together a collection - the editors of the magazines you have published in may be able to suggest the best route for that. I do not have any experience of trying to publish a collection of short stories but I suspect that the process is the same for novels - ie to get a literary agent first.

There may be publishers who are actively looking for short stories to put into collections arranged by theme and featuring a range of different writers. You could try to seek those out. I do not know where or how you would find them but the Writers Handbook and the Writers & Artists Yearbook may be good places to start. Also literary / writing magazines and journals may publicise or advertise such ventures.

I believe that it may be easier in Malaysia to get short stories published in book form as that is the primary local market. I have no personal experience of this process but you might like to check out Ted Mahsun’s blog at http://tedmahsun.blogspot.com to see how he’s got his stories published - Ted is a regular Fusion View reader and commentor based in Malaysia, who is a great example of a tenacious and focused writer. For ages, he has been writing stories, sending them out for publication, getting rejections, picking himself up again and keeping writing. Last year, he had his first two stories accepted for publication and is starting to make a name for himself as a book reviewer, too.

Other Countries

These tips focus on the UK as that is my area of experience and I’ve mentioned Malaysian opportunities for publication based on what I’ve gathered from others.

If you have any tips about the publication process in other countries, please do add a comment or email me (see the Email Me link on the sidebar).

Or, if you have anything to add to what I’ve said here that could help emerging writers, do get in touch as well.

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Photo: thanks to wrtehereinfrance

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, January 24th, 2007 at 7:00am

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Micro Photo Stories

A while back I featured a site that published Micro Short Stories - ie short stories in 55 words or less.

There’s this fab photo group on the photo sharing site Flickr.com where you can Tell a Story in 5 frames. It’s open to anyone and some of the Micro Photo Stories are very cleverly done.

See this macabre one called Attack. attack.jpg

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And this sinister take on the Snow White story.poisonapple.jpg

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If you’re inspired to submit a photo story to this group, please let me know by adding a comment and I’ll feature a link to the story on Fusion View.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, September 8th, 2006 at 8:30am

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“The Book” - a micro short story by a Fusion View subscriber

I am delighted to tell you that a Fusion View subscriber, David Grantley, has had a micro short story posted on www.55fiction.com - the link is here http://www.55fiction.com/the-book/.

David was inspired to submit a 55 word story after reading my post Micro Short Stories. David lives in the UK and also writes poetry.

I love the story - it suits my macabre sense of humour! Well done, David! Lim would have been proud of you, too.

posted to Fusion View by: Yang-May Ooi

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Monday, May 15th, 2006 at 8:52am

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Micro Short Stories

For the writers among you, here’s a challenge. Write a story in 55 words or less!

That’s the raison d’etre of a website http://www.55fiction.com.. They must be stories - ie. have characters, a setting, a conflict and a resolution. The ground rules are set out in detail on the site.

Some of the micro stories on the site are brilliant - very inventive in the use of the this tight "haiku" form of prose writing. Take a look for yourself.

I haven’t submitted anything - yet. The Flame Tree ran to 180,000 words. I’ve got a lot of word honing to do to make a story out of 55 words - or less.

If you do submit a micro story to 55fiction, please come back and post a link to it so we can all share in the success!

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006 at 10:32am

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Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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