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(just the) "Submissions" Entries


400TH REJECTION CONTEST (2008 Submission Log Weeks 25-27)
July 4, 2008

(scroll down for the "Guess my Rejection" contest)

Submissions 530-544

No brain power for links, maybe I'll add 'em later.

Weird Tales (9th)
The Colbert Report (1st)
Drawn & Quarterly (2nd)
The Believer (1st-5th)
Abberrant Dreams (1st)
Writers of the Future (20th!)
ChiZine (7th)
Supergrrrl Adventure Comics (1st)
Asheville Film Festival (1st)
Light (5th-7th)

Rejections 393-397

F&SF Haiku Contest (date not available)
The Believer (8 days on three poems)
Asimov's (15 days)

Hold Request

From Fantasy, 18 days. Here's hoping.

Acceptance 74, Tentative Acceptance 75

Sale of "Dry Frugal with Death Rays" to Futurismic, 42 days.

Tentative acceptance from Supergrrrl Adventure Comics (1 day) pending a rewrite. This is a new, nonpaying zine from Rachel Edidin and Jen Vaughn.

Pulled, Folded, or Otherwise No Reply 67-70

Cosmos (story), Interzone (story), Murky Depths (2 poems)

Of Interest

Yes, I entered the McCain greenscreen challenge thing. Don't know what I was thinking other than I needed to finish a project I could actually finish. A couple of bad PCS weeks, last month.

Completely flaked on catching the F&SF issue announcing the winners of the haiku contest. Mine was an obvious joke anyway; glad it only had an audience of one (the editor/judge).

Wow, 20th sub to Writers of the Future. It's what I was hoping to submit the week I got in the accident, so I _think_ it's finally submission ready, six months later. Brain injury aside, this story had more technical challenges than anything I've ever written, and it's been brewing at least since April '05 when I pitched it to a friend as a comic.

Guess my 400th rejection, win a prize!

Hey, time sure flies. First (up to) THREE PEOPLE to correctly guess where my 400th rejection will come from wins:
  • a copy of the February 2007 Asimov's Science Fiction issue (includes my novelette "Outgoing"), autographed if that's of interest
  • a DVD-R with at least one currently unavailable film project of mine, and
  • my recorded narrations of seven (7) Edgar Allan Poe tales (most of 'em bestsellers at Telltale Weekly)
Put answers in the LiveJournal Comments (LJ datestamps will determine tiebreakers). One guess per person. Entries accepted through July 13, 2008, 11:59PM, Eastern U.S. time.

Currently at Rejection #397. Current outstanding subs:
  1. Paraspheres (sent 5.29.07)
  2. LCRW (sent 7.13.07 and 6.01.08)
  3. Actor's Theatre of Louisville 10 minute play (10.31.07)
  4. McSweeney's Quarterly (2.12.08)
  5. McSweeney's Books (2.19.08)
  6. A Public Space (5.03.08)
  7. OSC's IGMS (5.15.08)
  8. Tin House (5.31.08)
  9. Fantasy (6.09.08, hold request on 6.28.08)
  10. Colbert Report's McCain greenscreen challenge (6.19.08; probably won't receive a rejection or acceptance)
  11. Weird Tales (6.19.08)
  12. Drawn & Quarterly (6.23.08)
  13. Abberant Dreams (6.23.08)
  14. Writers of the Future (6.29.08)
  15. ChiZine 14th Contest (6.29.08)
  16. The Believer (7.02.08; two poems)
  17. Asheville Film Festival (7.03.08)
  18. Light (7.04.08; three poems)

And, okay. If all of the above end up as acceptances, and my 400th rejection has yet to even be submitted, I will be so happy that once I recover from the shock, I'll do my best to give everyone who enters a prize of some sort or another. (EDIT: And if something I've yet to submit--not listed above--ends up as my 400th rejection, prize goes to whoever guesses #401, and so on.)


Filed Under: Contest, Happy Fun Log, Journal, Post concussion syndrome, Prose and Poetry, Submissions, Writers of the Future, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

"Shooting Dogs for Fun and Profit" free at ChiZine
October 9, 2007

My story "Shooting Dogs for Fun and Profit" is up at ChiZine/Chiaroscuro. As a comedy piece, it should be a bit more amusing than the story behind it, below:

I don't give a lot of thought to genre when I'm writing. Or if I do, it's more comedy vs drama rather than science fiction vs mystery vs non-genre or anything. There've been times I've written an entire story specifically for a market only to discover that, in the process of turning an idea into what I think is a workable story, I'd taken out the very element that would have made it appropriate for that particular market (no speculative element for an SF publication, no pirates for a pirate anthology).

Even after years of writing and reading genre fiction, I spent the first half of Clarion failing to figure out the expectations of genre, and the second half failing to figure out my expectations of genre. I've never made it any further than the addage: good stories are good stories.

So I've come to haphazardly put works into categories only after the fact, which probably contributes to my difficulty in placing my favorite work, and is probably why regular readers of non-genre fiction enjoyed "Outgoing" so much more than regular readers of science fiction or fantasy did (and why it's no great gamble to recommend "Shotting Dogs" to people who don't typically like horror; it's the horror fans who'll be wondering what the hell they're reading...).

"Shooting Dogs for Fun and Profit" was a ten-minute play I submitted in 2005 to the Actor's Theatre of Louisville's National Ten Minute Play competition, which I try to enter every year. It didn't place, but this summer I dug it up because a filmmaker friend was looking for pieces we could shoot in a weekend.

I realized there were still things I liked about it. So I'd meant to send it to another short play competition, but misread a deadline as "postmarked by" instead of "received by" because I'm silly like that.

At the same time, I was trying to come up with a story for James Van Pelt's Hardboiled Horror, a crime-horror crossgenre anthology. It occurred to me (two years after I wrote it, of course) that "Shooting Dogs" had elements of both crime and horror, but I'd never thought of it as anything other than a comedy. So I kept most of the dialogue, and filled in some gaps, completely Hemingwaying it at times with...

"DIALOGUE, DIALOGUE." He stood. His eyeballs itched. "DIALOGUE, DIALOGUE."

...an example which thankfully didn't make it into the submitted draft. So I felt like a hack. But prose can take many forms, and some stories are all about the dialogue. Why try to make "Shooting Dogs" something that it's not? I finished the prose version of the story at the end of June, plenty of time before the anthology deadline, which meant plenty of time to sit on it, work on other things, and come back to it with fresh eyes (which might mean a completely different thing in horror than it does in writing in general; I'll have to be careful). But the ChiZine/Chiaroscuro short fiction contest closed in a few days, so I figured why not let it sit in their slush pile instead of on my hard drive?

And I forgot about it, except to wince when the Michael Vick/dogfighting allegations were dominating the news in the months between the ChiZine deadline closing and the announcement of the winners. I thought: okay, there goes the chance in hell I had of placing in the contest, and I'll need to change the title (which is figurative--no dogs even appear in the story) before I send it out to Hardboiled.

But I never got the chance. It won third place in the contest and became my second SFWA-qualifying sale. And, for what it's worth, I offered it up to Mr. Van Pelt as a reprint, but it wasn't a good fit for the anthology in the first place, alas.

Ah well. I've got nothing to complain about, and clearly I've demonstrated that I'm not the best judge for where mys tuff belongs. Now of course, I'm wondering whether we can really film it on a weekend...


Filed Under: ChiZine, Clarion, Journal, News, Prose and Poetry, SFWA, Stories, Submissions, Vanity Smurf, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

Sale! "Squatter's Rites" to Weird Tales
September 25, 2007

Via email (from poetry editor/creative director Stephen Segal), 52 days.

"Squatter's Rites" is a poem that tells a quick ghost story in 12 lines. Weird Tales is a magazine that, in its previous incarnations, launched the careers of Ray Bradbury, Robert E. Howard, and H.P. Lovecraft. In its current, quite-strong form, fellow Clarion '06er Will Ludwigsen has a poem (and a few other writers I admire have stories) in the current issue. I'm in excellent company. Flattered and honored.

I still remember getting my first rejection from Weird Tales (Guidevines wiki link) in my Ashland University mailbox almost nine years ago. This was my second sub--and first poetry sub--to the magazine under its recently-changed creative masthead.

Phew, I needed that.


Filed Under: Happy Fun Log, Journal, News, Poetry, Submissions, Weird Tales, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

And my 300th Rejection is from....
September 9, 2007

F&SF! Yes, following the pattern of my last ten or so subs there, JJA only passes every other one up to GVG. This one JJA sent back to me within 10 days. But good news for my next story, innit?

For those playing last week's guessing game, I'm fairly certain I have both winners' emails, so I'll contact them directly.


Filed Under: F&SF, Happy Fun Log, Journal, Milestones, Rejection, Submissions, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 33-34
September 2, 2007

Any bets on who'll send me my 300th rejection? Guess correctly in the LJ comments and get a free set of Inconsequential Art #1 & #2, autographed if you want.

One guess per person, and up to five people (the first five to guess correctly) can win. Editors currently in charge of these pending rejections are not eligible. Ends one week from today or when I receive the rejection, whichever is later. My outstanding submissions list is the first comment. Cool?

Submissions 416-419

The Sun (my 4th)
MF&SF (my 20th)
Strange Horizons (my 12th)
Clarkesworld (my 4th)

Rejections 295-299:

Glimmer Train (4 months, 3rd rejection)
Tin House (96 days, 5th rejection)
Realms of Fantasy (4 months, 8th rejection)*
Asimov's (24 days, 16th rejection)
Analog (37 days, 11th rejection)

Of Interest:

Very busy August, but also quite productive in writing and other areas. Hopefully that'll bear some fruit soon.

Learned recently that The Sun is based in Chapel Hill. I received my first rejection letters from there in my Ashland University mailbox, and now I could probably walk to the office (don't know if proximity helps or hurts me, heh). Obviously that means I haven't sent them anything in at least five years. Time to fix that.

*Those submitting to Realms of Fantasy (via slush anyway) would do well to keep an eye on "Slushmaster" Douglas Cohen's blog, especially when he mentions meeting with editor Shawna McCarthy to pick up new slush stories and to pass promising ones along.

Doug has reported response times going down since he started there, though with my last two stories the response time has increased immensely--and it's actually a good sign. Here are the timelines of my last two submissions, my only two stories Doug (or any previous slush editor) has passed to Shawna.

09.16.06 - Sent to Realms of Fantasy
10.22.06 - Doug picks up slush pile to read
11.11.06 - Email from Doug; he's passing it to Shawna
01.03.07 - Actual pass to Shawna
02.09.07 - Rejection from Shawna

05.03.07 - Sent to Realms of Fantasy
06.03.07 - Doug picks up slush pile to read
06.17.07 - Email from Doug; he's passing it to Shawna
07.19.07 - Actual Pass to Shawna
08.31.07 - Latest Acquisitions announced; implied rejection

The above makes a lot more sense now that I've been reading his blog. And this weekend he posted recent acquisitions among the latest "batch," so even before receiving a formal rejection, I've been able to determine that I'm free to send that story elsewhere. So: not a magic bullet that'll turn a rejection into an acceptance, but a tweak to the submission process which gives my story a few days it didn't have before.


Filed Under: Chapel Hill, Happy Fun Log, Journal, North Carolina, Realms of Fantasy, Submissions, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 31-32
August 14, 2007

Submissions 414-415

Two comics pieces to MAD Magazine about a week apart.

Rejections 292-294:

Weird Tales, story, 36 days.

The New Yorker, gag cartoon, 32 days

Actor's Theatre of Louisville, play, 285 days

Of Interest:

MAD Magazine just might be the first place I ever submitted anything, back when I was a kid (and before I started keeping track). IIRC they didn't actually _take_ subs back then, though. Don't remember whether I ever got a reply. Quite a different experience to be following the guidelines, though they still say they don't reply to every query.

Still: the one part of DC Comics that actually considers script submissions. Until Vertigo answers a query, this is as good a bet as any.

The one year anniversary of my graduation from Clarion hit a week ago. I'll say more about that later this week.


Filed Under: Clarion, Comics, Happy Fun Log, Journal, Rejection, Submissions, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 29-30
July 29, 2007

Submissions 411-413

First film to the Sundance Festival.

Tenth story to Asimov's (my 16th sub there if you include poetry).

Second story to Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show

Rejections 289-291

From The New Yorker (poetry, 75 days via email), Strange Horizons (fiction, 13 days), and Shimmer (10 days).

Acceptance 67!

As already noted, I won 3rd place in the 13th ChiZine/Leisure story contest, which is my second SFWA-qualifying sale.


Filed Under: Happy Fun Log, Journal, Submissions, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

SALE/3rd Place Win in the 13th ChiZine Story Contest
July 27, 2007

My story "Shooting Dogs for Fun and Profit"* will be published in ChiZine #34 later this year, having won 3rd place in the latest Chiaroscuro/Leisure Short Story Contest.

Which means my second SFWA-qualifying sale arrives almost 14 months and over 150 submissions after my first one. Phew. It felt like even longer.

(*For what it's worth, the title is quite abstract. No animals appear--much less are shot for any reason--in this piece.)


Filed Under: ChiZine, Happy Fun Log, Journal, News, Prose and Poetry, Rejection, Submissions, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

400th Submission today
July 3, 2007

Took 8 years, 8 months, and 2 days from my first submission. It was a gag cartoon sent to F&SF (1st gag sub, 19th sub overall).

Phew. Glad that's out of the way.


Filed Under: Comic Stripping, Comics, F&SF, Happy Fun Log, Journal, MF&SF, Milestones, Submissions, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Week 26 - Halfway Point
June 30, 2007

Submissions 397-399:

Stories to Strange Horizons (my 10th), Weird Tales (my 4th, but first under current editor Ann VanderMeer), and the 13th Chiaroscuro Short Story Contest (my first, but I've submitted to Chizine before).

Rejections 275-279

Strange Horizons (20 days on a story; no comments this time), Shimmer (10 days on a story; "just wish there'd been more spec"--meaning "speculative element") and Tin House (12 days on a batch of poems sent for the Winter issue; form letter)

Of Interest:

I forgot about this last week: Doug Cohen (slush editor for Realms of Fantasy) emailed me to let me know that my current story submission will be passed to Shawna, which makes two in a row for me (my only two times getting past Doug since he joined the fray).

And I woulda hit 400 subs today, but I misremembered a playwriting deadline as "postmarked by" instead of "received by." Now I've gotta get all angsty and superstitious about what that milestone sub should be.


Filed Under: Happy Fun Log, Journal, Milestones, Realms of Fantasy, Rejection, Shimmer, Strange Horizons, Submissions, Tin House, Weird Tales, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 22-24
June 16, 2007

Submissions 391-394:

Stories to M&FSF (my 18th), Strange Horizons (9th sub overall, but 6th fiction sub), Asimov's (15th overall, 9th fiction), and Analog (10th).

Rejections 266-272:

Two from MF&SF (28 days from GVG, 9 days from JJA), Futurismic (32 days), Flytrap (37 days), and the last of the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest non-placers which I'll be counting here (see below).

Of Interest:

Of my last six subs to MF&SF, it looks like every other one got to GVG, and often not the ones I'd expect, based on my judgment of the stories and my reading of the magazine.

Decided to stop counting Cartoon Caption Contest entries as submissions, because I don't want it to get to the point where I've "subbed" there more often than I have anywhere else. Might still throw jokes their way, so long as I have stuff in the New Yorker's "real" slush pile. But it's a throwaway thing, on the off chance that my name will flash across an editor's eyeline, but it was never an important part of my submission strategy.

Writers of the Future has posted its 2007Q2 Finalists to its blog at just 60 days from the entry deadline. Nice because this has freed up my entry-story to send it to another market, even before I got my rejection.


Filed Under: Analog, Happy Fun Log, Journal, MF&SF, New Yorker, Rejection, SF, Science Fiction, Stories, Submissions, Writers of the Future, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 20-21
May 29, 2007

Submissions 386-390:

Stories to Interzone (my 2nd), ParaSpheres (my 1st) and Tin House (my 5th).

And two more entries into the New Yorker Gag Cartoon Caption Contest.

Rejection 265:

62-day rejection from Strange Horizons, with a note about humor being subjective.

Of Interest/Queries Corner:

After ten unanswered queries to Marvel, I've received my first ever response!

It was a form letter saying that I don't quite have what it takes to be an illustrator for Marvel yet.

Which I agree with. Which is why I queried them as a writer looking to pitch some stories. But if that wasn't clear, then my writing chops really need work. (Or maybe it was just payback for this submission faux pas).

So I have finally gotten Marvel to open one of my envelopes. I know this because the form letter came in one of my SASEs. Now how do I get an editor to read what I send them? It just might take ten more queries before I figure it out...


Filed Under: Comic Books, Comics, Happy Fun Log, Interzone, Journal, Marvel, New Yorker, ParaSpheres, Rejection, Strange Horizons, Submissions, Tin House, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Week 19 Part Deux: The Revenge
May 16, 2007

As discussed earlier, I have begun sending out queries, so I'm thinking I should put some sort of tracking system in place, as I have with my slush submissions, "before I get overwhelmed."

And why, pray tell, would someone who has almost 400 submissions under his belt need to bother about organization? What rookie mistakes could I possibly be capable of making after 8.5 years of this? I'll give you a hint:

Who has two thumbs and just sent three queries to Vertigo editors at Marvel's mailing address?


Filed Under: Comic Books, Comics, Happy Fun Log, Journal, Marvel, Submissions, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Week 19
May 14, 2007

Submissions 381-385

Poetry to Mythic Delirium (my first three; I believe this is the first time they've been open to subs since I picked up my first copy) and New Yorker (6th submission there), and--since I have something in the slush pile--why not resume throwing my name into the Caption Contest pile again (for the 14th time)?

Still at 264 rejections, but I've got some miscellany to cover here:

First: I noticed that I skipped rejection 259 in my last two Submission Log entries, which is a shame because it was a fun one. I wrote a humor story for the John Joseph Adams-helmed issue of Shimmer near the beginning of the year. I had some time before the deadline so I sent it to JJA in his role as slush editor at F&SF first. He passed it up to editor Gordon Van Gelder, which I believe is the only time he's liked one of my humor pieces enough to do so.

It didn't grab GVG, so I queried JJA to see whether he'd want to consider it for Shimmer. "Yes, please," he said, and off it went. It made it to the final cut before getting the axe, but JJA said he liked it enough that if he had more room in the issue, it would have found a home there.

Second: Though I received a quarterfinalist notification for Writers of the Future's 2007Q1 period in my SASE back in March, I recently received a semifinalist notice for the same story, along with a critique by first judge KD Wentworth, in a second envelope. If the critique, which specifically discussed my story, hadn't been included, I'd be inclined to think the semifinalist notice was the mistake of the two, but it looks like I can upgrade my current tally to...

Non-placers: 6
Quarterfinalists: 5
Semifinalists: 2
Finalists: 0
Placers: 0

...with my 14th entry awaiting a verdict for 2007Q2. Small victory there, I guess.

Third: I began sending out queries last month. Not sure whether/how to tally them here. I figure queries are going to be a big part of my writing life over the next few years, so I better come up with a system before I get overwhelmed.


Filed Under: Happy Fun Log, Journal, MF&SF, New Yorker, Shimmer, Submissions, Writers of the Future, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

2007 Submission Log: Weeks 16-17
May 1, 2007

A third of the way through the year.

Submissions 369-373:

Stories to Glimmer Train (3rd), Flytrap (my 3rd), and Sword and Sorceress (my 3rd).

Filmish things to Gizmodo (don't ask; it didn't end well), and Wholphin (as writer, not director, which is exactly as it should be).

Rejections 255-258:

From Sword and Sorceress (about a day) and all the comics awards (when they announced their winners/finalists). Not at all surprising, but it's an honor just to be seen by the judges.

Of Interest:

Glad to see Sword & Sorceress starting up again. MZB's anthologies and magazine were among the first places I've ever sent my fiction starting in 1998. I never got any of Bradley's legendary berating rejections (just form letters and a few "is this supposed to be humorous?" rhetoricals), but then I probably wasn't worth her time.

I actually enjoyed the writing of two new prose stories in a row this month. That can't be right.


Filed Under: Fantasy, Film, Flytrap, Glimmer Train, Happy Fun Log, Journal, Rejection, Submissions, Sword and Sorceress, Wholphin, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

Modern Conveniences
January 28, 1999

(Selected republication of old entries from the pre-Movable Type journal...)

The most interesting thing happened to me last night.

I was on this email discussion list called Writers Unite, which actually has little in the way of stimulating discussion (I was considering unsubscribing but never got around to it), and, last weekend, the list owner decided in her divine authority to sign all her list members up for some other list she ran, called Horror Writers. As a former fanatic reader of horror writers like Stephen King, Dean R. Koontz, Clive Barker, and Brian Lumley, I tolerated this, even though it bothered me a bit that someone would sign me up for a list without my permission.

The discussion on the new list is very mediocre, containing at best a few insightful comments and at worse (and as usual) a whole bunch of inside jokes and gags. There is also much bragging, as many of the writers and editors on the list sound well-published. Still, I find myself glancing at the messages at least briefly before deleting them and last night was no exception.

Continue reading "Modern Conveniences"


Filed Under: Acting, Eggplant Literary Productions, Jackhammer, Journal, Poetry, Prose and Poetry, Submissions, Theatre, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com

First Post
November 13, 1998

(Selected republication of old entries from the pre-Movable Type journal...)

I've got good news and bad news for the first entry of this writing journal. The bad news is that I received my first rejection letter. I sent a creative nonfiction piece to a print magazine, and got turned down this Monday. I must admit, it gave me a small amount of satisfaction when I noticed a misspelling in the publisher's letter.

Continue reading "First Post"


Filed Under: Eggplant Literary Productions, Jackhammer, Journal, Prose and Poetry, Rejection, Submissions, Writing, Writing Life


Alex Wilson .com


Alex Wilson Writer

Alex Wilson writes fiction and comics in Carrboro, NC. His work has appeared/will appear in Asimov's Science Fiction, The Rambler, Weird Tales, The Florida Review, Futurismic, Shimmer, ChiZine, FutureQuake, Pif, and Dragon. Locus Magazine has called him a "promising new writer," and Publishers Weekly also has nice things to say.

Alex runs the audiobook project/podcast Telltale Weekly and the writer wiki Guidevines. He publishes the minicomic/zine Inconsequential Art. He is a 2006 Clarion graduate.



Blog Archives
2008 - Clever Label TBA
2007 - BadYearNoCookie
2006 - Clarion! 1st Pro Sale!
2005 - Peers and Peerless
2004 - Telltale Launch
2003 - Dog bites, acting out
2002 - In my mind, I'm going...
2001 - Marriage, Macs, 1st Cons
2000 - Setback, Milestones
1999 - Engaged, Graduated
1998 - Creative Independence


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