(Note 1:
While the first part of this post is mostly about my own process, I'm
hoping parts of it might be useful for those of you reading it and that it
doesn't seem TOO narcissistic.)
When I finished my four-novel series and was
trying to figure out what to do next, I was reminded of Ernest Hemingway's
famous quote, “Write drunk, edit sober,” and an old – I mean “ex” – girlfriend
who told me “You know, your brain is a bit haywired … and I rahther like that”
(she was British – well, probably still is, as far as I know; that was way back
in 2004). So I thought I'd give short
stories a try.
Since I don't drink (well, one bottle of
light wine a year, to be truthful), I thought about that little filter we all
have between our brains and our mouths, the thing that allows us to get along
with other people, and decided to simply remove it when writing and then slide
it back in (not all the way, of course) when I got into editing. With the
filter partway in, my usual question there is “Do I dare leave that in?” and my
usual answer is “Hmm … yeah, okay, what the heck.”
I bent and sometimes broke a lot of literary
conventions in my novels. For example, I
had a couple of arguments between a main character and the narrator in the
second one, I wrote the third one entirely in dialogue (which made the
gunfights a bit tricky), and the fourth and final one is all in present tense.
But this little essay is mostly about short
stories; sorry about that tangent.
For ideas, I'd ask myself two questions at
first: “What if?” and “How can I make that weird?” and then just think and
observe. Usually those two questions
morph into one.
When I was writing my first novel, I got
thinking about 3D printers, which were just getting a bit of notice back in
2012, and I thought, “What if there were 4D printers?” And that led to a major subplot in my second,
third and fourth novels: time travel.
Recently I saw a little girl at a beach
building a sand castle, and I wondered how to make that weird. I decided the sand castle could be
haunted. (I discarded ideas of demons,
dragons or aliens coming out of it or finding a murdered body as she digs.)
Then I had to fill in the rest of the
standard “story” questions: How, Who and
What Happens? then build the story,
structure it and edit it.
I chose to make it haunted by the little
girl's grandmother, because her ashes were buried there, and the little girl
was drawn to that spot to build the sandcastle.
Little kids can allegedly see and hear things that we “adults” have lost
the ability to do, and Granny and the little girl start “talking.” Then the REALLY weird stuff happens. That story wound up about 1300 words long.
Another idea popped up after I had a chat
with a retired insurance salesman. That
story set up an insurance company that ONLY insured against “acts of God.” 250 words.
Another one came from watching a flock (herd,
group, bunch?) of dragonflies and wondering why they couldn't spit fire. 830
words.
Then I wrote a story from the point of view
of a murder weapon; 1150 words.
Another is an only-semi-authentic police
procedural, in Seussian style, but with a twist: some rhymes are left for the reader to fill
in. That was fun, but tricky. 2170 words.
After I had about twenty of those stories, I
put them together in a book and published it, in paper, Kindle and Nook. It was titled “Perflutzed,” a word I made up
for my first novel. (BSP: 99 cents on Kindle and Nook for a limited
time.)
I also found long ago that if I studied how
certain comedians came up with some of their jokes, that helped a lot. Two I really enjoyed and enjoy are Stephen
Wright and Milton Jones (the latter is British) and a British TV show, “Mock
the Week,” all available on You Tube.
And sometimes something on/in the news can trigger a story idea, but I
try to avoid anything particularly timebound or political (although I couldn't
resist putting something about threatening viral tweets, some stuff about
gender fluidity, and alternative explanations for UFOs in a few stories).
Early on in that writing process, I also had
the idea of putting together an anthology of other authors' weird short
stories, if I could find some. I posted
invitations on several author Facebook groups and other groups, such as the
Short Mystery Fiction Society, and got three author friends to act as
judges. The result was 57 entries,
twenty of which got into the 2018 BOULD (Bizarre, Outrageous, Unfettered,
Limitless, Daring) Awards Anthology, the first annual edition. I paid out cash prizes to the top four
stories, $50, 30, 20 and 10. But I made
one mistake that year: I didn't keep
veto power. So a couple of stories got
in that I didn't think deserved to be there, and four or five didn't get in
that I thought should.
For the 2019 edition, I KEPT that power, but
I only had to use it twice. For that
edition, we got 73 entries, and forty of them made it in. That came out in November of 2019. Same cash prizes.
Now we're accepting entries for the 2020
edition, with the submission window closing on October 31st, 2020. This time, I've also taken on editorial
duties, and I'm working with authors to polish stories that are borderline
includable. Same cash prizes.
(Note B:
If anyone reading this would like to submit a story (the weirder, the
better, any genre, including mystery and crime), there's an email address for
an auto-reply with all of the guidelines and rules at the bottom of the
BouldAwards.com home page. (If you do send to that email, please note that you
heard about it here, at Writers Who Kill; thanks.)
(Note C: I've had to write this over several
sessions, since I can't stay serious for more than three and a half minutes, on
average.)
(Note 4: I've also edited out all of my
self-defecating humor – well, most of it.)
# #
# #
Jake Devlin (a pseudonym) is in his early
seventies and has been writing for the last dozen or so years, with six of his
own books out, including a stageplay from his early years, plus the BOULD
Awards anthologies, and he edited an erotic novel by a good friend of his,
Dallas Dalyce. He lives near the Gulf of
Mexico in Southwest Florida and enjoys plotting, scheming and writing at the
local beach. Here are some of his and Dallas' web sites:
JakeDevlin.com BOULDAwards.com DallasDalyce.com
Sounds like a twisted read.
ReplyDeleteThat it is, Warren.
ReplyDeleteI'll keep the upcoming deadline in mind. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteIt's a great place to submit stories that you just know are not going to be accepted by any mainstream venue.
ReplyDeleteSo true, Warren. And KM, thanks so much for inviting me to submit the post. Margaret, I look forward to seeing anything you want to submit. The weirder, the better.
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