Have
I ever pulled out old stories and reworked them? Yep! Could I get all of them
published? Not always! I did get one old YA short adventure story published and
then created others that the editor liked and published. But still other short
stories weren’t published. Why? Now if I knew that, I’d have many stories
published, wouldn’t I?
Writers
use what they’ve learned and read to create their stories. Yet each story is
different. And it can be difficult for the writer to see why editors prefer one
story over another. Sometimes the writer has neglected to give the reader [or
editor] key information in the story; some context, some explanation of why the
reader should care about this particular character with this particular problem
in this particular scene. I know I have.
It
is very difficult for writers to find what’s missing in their own work. This is
why all writers need critique partners and editors. Someone who hasn’t read the
story before can spot what might be missing in story logic or emotion. As the
story’s creator, the writer knows everything about the story. It’s just that
sometimes the writer forgets to tell the reader through story action or inner
dialogue key pieces of the story puzzle.
I
continue to forget to add “how the character feels” about a particular incident
in the story. Emotion is as necessary to short fiction as it is to longer fiction.
The reader needs to care about your protagonist in order to keep reading. Another
thing I seem to do wrong is summarize story action in my full-length
manuscripts instead of dramatizing it. Not all action. Just some of it. I think
it’s because I write a lot of short fiction. As writers, we can’t show
everything in our stories because that would be boring to the reader. But we
need to show key scenes—fully fleshed out with emotion, dialogue, and action—whenever
the protagonist goes through any emotional change or has a revelation about the
story problem, either internal or external. The reader wants to be part of the
story as it unfolds.
All the luck with getting your own stories published in
2017. Thanks for stopping by Adventures in Writing and leaving a note. Please
follow my blog. It’s greatly appreciated.
This post was written for the Insecure Writer’s SupportGroup. We post on the first Wednesday of every
month. To join us, or learn more about the
group, click HERE.