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It's sooooo cold outside! |
Christmas
is long behind us, it’s dark and cold outside, and life’s feeling a bit flat. Just the time of year when we all need a bit
of a boost; something to cheer us up. And that’s where, for many of us, the
January sales come in! Seeking out a bargain, sprucing up our wardrobes, doing
something that’s fun and makes us feel good about ourselves.
But,
for me, January sales mean something entirely different. To any writer of
magazine stories, sales mean only one thing – an editor has read one of the
stories we’ve sent in, liked it, and said YES! We have sold a story and are
going to get paid for it. And that is just as exciting as finding a new winter
coat at half price, I can tell you!
I
am very pleased to have made THREE story sales during January, each one of them
penned months ago and pushed out of mind ever since. Believe me, it’s
absolutely no use sitting around worrying about whether a story has yet reached
the editor’s desk and if she’s going to like it. The work’s been done and the end
result is out of our hands. All we can do is get on and write some more.
Here are the stories of my January sales, what inspired them and
how they came to be written, although I’m not going to reveal which magazine
has bought them or what they are currently called (Editors often change the
title anyway!)
1.
Last
November, Paul and I had been heavily into house hunting. Estate agents were
ringing up every day, and we were already on first name terms with a few of
them. At the same time, we realised we would have to think about inheritance and
make the necessary changes to our wills once we owned our first home together.
Combine those two elements and what did I get? A young woman having to sell a
house after the death of her grandmother. It gave me plenty of scope to introduce
emotion, with the house
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Saying goodbye to the house |
evoking treasured childhood memories, and my heroine having
to say goodbye, not only to her Gran but to the house too. I knew from the
start where this story would fit and wrote it very much with that specific
magazine in mind. Luckily, the editor agreed, buying the story just two months
after it was submitted. Although magazines contain many stories about family
homes and country cottages being inherited by grandchildren, the new owner usually
decides to relocate and move in. My ‘twist’, whereby she does not follow the
conventional route but lets the house go, accepts the inevitability of change
and moves on with her own life, is what the editor says made this story rise
above the rest. And the hint of romance with the friendly estate agent, lifting
the mood at the end, didn’t do any harm either!
2.
The
second story was a strange one. I started to write it in the New Year, with no
idea of what it was about or how it would end. Sometimes that just happens,
with an opening line or a random image leading me off into the unknown. By the
time it was finished, it was too long for the magazine slot I had decided to
aim for, so I had to do some serious cutting – not a bad thing when a story has
rambled onto the page with so very little forward planning. By 9th January I
had a 2000 word story about… well, so many things. Childhood memories (again),
being a twin, having to wear second hand clothes, losing a friend and, years
later, deciding to try to find her again. There were all kinds of influences from
my own life mixed up in this story – a heroine of my own age, having twin
daughters, remembering school life and friendships decades later (a friend’s
ruby wedding party had helped with that one), and having to clear out cupboards
but not always wanting to throw everything away. I liked this one. It had a
feel-good factor by the end, and it was bought by the first editor to see it,
just five days after it was submitted, which is pretty rare!
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So many to choose from! |
3.
The
third story was written purely for fun, way back in June. I like a bit of
gentle humour, and this one was based on a family game. You know the kind of
thing we all play with our kids – Can you name a fruit or vegetable whose name
starts with each letter of the alphabet in turn? What would you be called if
you could have chosen your own name? If you were a car, what car would you be,
and why? For the game in my story, I chose biscuits. If you could be a biscuit…
Well, I love a good choc chip cookie, and I’m quite partial to fig rolls too,
which I know are not everyone’s cup of tea. So, we have a group of young boys
gathered for a birthday celebration, a harassed single mum and a gran helping
out, all sitting together and playing the game, with some interesting results.
But humour is a very subjective thing. It’s not always to everybody’s taste.
The first magazine didn’t like it at all. ‘Sweet, but with no surprises’ was
the verdict after a four month wait for a response. Yet, editor number two
loved it – ‘a smashing idea’ she said, ‘and I loved the ending’. So this one
has been seven months in the making, and it will probably be another couple
before it is published. Patience really is the name of the game… unless it’s one
about biscuits, of course!
1 comment:
Great to hear how those stories came to fruition, Viv. Jan has been a good story month for me too. - those fiction eds must have new year resolutions to respond quickly :)
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