Links Galore

Lots of fun links for the end of the week:

 

One Story Goes YA

While there are tons of journals dedicated to literary fiction, there aren’t that many for YA, even though the genre has grown exponentially over the last ten years. Fortunately, One Story (a fantastic literary journal) has expanded into the teen market with its new division, One Teen Story:

One Teen Story is a new literary magazine that connects teens to great short stories.

Each month, readers will get a short story in the mail, on on their Kindle, or on other electronic reading devices. Printed copies will come to you as a beautifully designed 5 x 7 booklet – easy to slip into a backpack or read under the covers. The digital version will arrive on your Kindle or phone, ready to read on the spot.”

They’re accepting submissions until May 31, so if you have a YA short story buried away, polish it up now. Between One Teen Story and Sucker Literary Magazine, I’m hopeful that a new era in YA stories is on the rise.

(H/T Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich)

Reading of the Green

When people see I’m a redhead, they usually assume I’m Irish. (I’m not.) But this year is the first I can claim being Irish by marriage so I’m excited to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day.

Ireland has no shortage of stories and storytellers, so it’s pretty easy to feel literary on this holiday. For the YA side, the Hub has compiled a list of books inspired by Irish mythology. I’m reading The Scorpio Races right now and loving it.

My own Irish literature suggestions tends to run to the more contemporary. I’ve mentioned before that I’m a huge Roddy Doyle fan, and I recently read his MG novel, A Greyhound of a Girl, which was just as funny and heartbreaking as I hoped. It’s not available in print in the US yet, but you can download it via Kindle. I’d also recommend Bog Child by Siobhan Dowd, which gives readers a fantastic glimpse into life during the Troubles.

Writers Digest also shares inspiration from Irish authors. My favorite quote:

“The good end happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means.” –Oscar Wilde,The Importance of Being Earnest

Any other suggestions for Irish reading?

How to Build a Magical World

At Writers Digest, Steven Harper Piziks talks about how to write paranormal/fantasy novels. One big difference between fantasy and other kinds of fiction obviously boils down to the magical elements. Piziks says:

“The need to explain the magic [is] the biggest challenge, really. It’s so easy to use big expository lumps, but that bores the reader. “

I can definitely see this as one of the hardest parts of fantasy writing. You want to make sure your reader understands what makes this world/these characters magical, but you don’t want to bore them with an infodump. If your character is living in a magical world, wouldn’t he/she not really call attention to a lot of the magical elements? It would be like a character in a contemporary novel explaining in length what a television is or how a garage door opener works. (Although I bet Arthur Weasley would find that pretty fascinating.)

I think the introduction of these elements works best when they’re introduced gradually and naturally. For example, in The Hunger Games, Katniss doesn’t really talk about what led to the collapse of the US and the rise of Panem. She wouldn’t because she doesn’t need to think about it. But we find out what Panem is and how classes are structured because she has to worry about who’s in charge and where her family will get food. In The Golden Compass, we meet daemons long before we find out what exactly they are, and can slowly pick up on the subtle differences between the real Oxford and Lyra’s Oxford.

Being able to balance necessary information with compelling forward momentum is enormously difficult, and I salute any writer who can do that well. What are your suggestions for creating compelling magical worlds without all the exposition?

Wibbly Wobbly Timey Wimey Stuff

With the clocks shifting ahead an hour on Sunday, you might feel like your sense of time is off. Fortunately, there are two lists of time travel-related reading. We’ll get that hour back somehow!

At The Hub, Sarah Debraski has a great list of mostly YA time travel stories, including Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver (which involves a time loop) and The Midnighters Trilogy by Scott Westerfeld (in which time stands still). At Secrets & Sharing Soda, Katie expands a little to MG, bringing in titles like The Time Trilogy by Madeleine L’Engle (love!).

When I was in middle school, one of my favorite time travel books was Both Sides of Time by Caroline B. Cooney. It had everything I liked–romance, the Victorian era, feminism, vague fantasy/sci-fi elements, and mysteries. When I found out there were sequels, I freaked. (The last one didn’t thrill me, sadly.)

For very mature YA readers (probably junior/senior high schoolers) I’d also recommend The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger. I assumed it would be kind of schlocky, but a friend gave it to me with enormous enthusiasm, and I found myself really enjoying it as well.

And of course, if you’d rather watch something about time travel, you need to check out Doctor Who. Immediately.

(image: Emo DJ Steph)

Links Galore

A few more mid-week links:

I’d Go to a Conference to Meet Neil Gaiman

An excellent post by Neil Gaiman about why conferences, workshops, and other writing events aren’t around to get you published. One point:

“We were doing that because we wanted to meet people like us. Because we wanted to attend the panels and learn. Because we were fans of the people who would be at the convention and wanted to listen to them.”

Although conferences and workshops can be very useful tools in developing your craft, they’re also for fostering a sense of community, which is fantastic. And maybe the people you meet will be able to suggest agents to get in touch with or grants to apply for. Maybe you will get published because of someone you met at a conference.

But I think this plays into the overall idea of there being no guarantees in writing. Even if you meet all the right people and have all the right tweets, it doesn’t mean you have earned a spot on a bookshelf somewhere. The best you can do is write your best work. The work that needs to be in some reader’s hands. Even then there are no guarantees, but it makes success a lot more likely in case you do happen to meet that right agent/editor.

Links Galore

A few more fun links for the afternoon:

  • No, those Catching Fire paperbacks aren’t coming to a bookstore near you.
  • What makes a cookbook publishable? One point I’d add: a successful food blog.
  • Tales from the slush pile.
  • Finding new books online is great, but there’s nothing quite like browsing in person.
  • Walt has a great post about why stage directions are necessary, even if some people use them poorly. Just like the semicolon!
  • Library Journal’s Movers and Shakers list spotlights people enhancing library communities and studies. Lots of cool profiles here.