10 September 2012

Short Stories or Novels?


Sometimes people ask me why it took so long for me to write a novel? I was writing and selling short stories. Well, the honest answer is, I was writing novels they just weren't selling. I wrote two or three novels that didn't sell. One came really close about three times to being published but the editor left or the publishing house went out of business or the novel buyer at the publishing house who was supposed to recommend my book got sick and died. Yep, that all happened. All with one novel. I think it's called being snake bit.

But in stead of giving up, I kept plodding along and because I was selling short stories, I found a editor who liked my work. That person was Ed Gorman and at that time he and the late Marty Greenberg were selling anthologies right and left and actually both of them liked my short stories, interviews, articles, reviews, etc. I was writing a regular column for Mystery Scene magazine.

In 1998 one of my short stories, "A Front Row Seat," published in the Vengeance is Hers anthology edited by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins was nominated and won the Anthony Award for Best Short Story.

A project came along that Ed and Marty had working. It was to be a coffee table style book about women mystery writers. There were to be interviews, articles and articles, by, about, and written by women mystery authors. They asked me to co-edit with Ellen Nehr and the book was titled Deadly Women. Unfortunately, Ellen got sick and passed away when we were about half-way into the project. Dean James took over in Ellen's slot and we continued the project. We were fortunate enough to be nominated for an Edgar for Best-Non Fiction and at Bouchercon we won a mccavity Award.

About then is when Ed and Marty formed a company, Tekno, and began working out a package deal with Five Star Mysteries. They would find the book for Five Star to buy, and once Five Star editor read and liked the book, Tekno would get the contract and get it signed, get the book copy-edited, get a cover, the blurbs, jacket copy,and whatever else was needed to get the book ready to be published.

Eventually, I had a chance to send my book, Austin City Blue, featuring my Austin policewoman, Zoe Barrow to Mr. Gorman and he recommended to Five Star they buy it. Five Star liked it and as they say, the rest is history. Soon I also had a contract for Five Star to publish a collection of my short stories, Found Dead In Texas. And soon after a contract for the second novel, Dark Blue Death, in my Zoe Barrow series.

In the meantime, I kept writing short stories and getting those published. Yet shortly after my husband passed away, and I began having health problems. I had a really rough four years. I had one novel I had written earlier which had never been published, I dusted it off, did some rewrite and in 2010 Five Star published, What Doesn't Kill You, a non-series or stand alone as some people call them. I certainly didn't do much other writing. My creative muse was trying to reassert itself I guess.

About four years ago, the American Crime Writers League, of which I was President, decided we needed to help get our name out a bit more and also wanted to earn a little money to go into our treasury. We came up with the idea of an anthology of original stories, all written by our ACWL members. I volunteered to co-edit and my co-editor was R. Barri Flowers. Barri was the one who had suggested the anthology. His agent sold the project to Twilight Times and our title was ACWL Presents: Murder Past, Murder Present. It was published in 2009. I wrote a short story for it, titled, "The Crimes of Miss Abigail Armstrong."

In May of this year, ACWLs second anthology, Murder Here, Murder There was published by Twilight Times. Again the anthology was co-edited by R. Barri Flowers and myself. My short story this time was, "The Confession." The story featured my long-time female Private-Eye characters from several short stories, Jenny Gordon and C.J. Gunn. It was a lot of fun to visit with the PIs from G & G Investigations once again.

So most of my writing career has been both short stories and novels. In some ways I like short stories better because you can usually write one in a very short time. I've had ideas and written a story in a day and the longest only took about a week. However, because you do only have a short frame work to write in you have to be more precise, more determined to have characters who seem real and you have to be ready to work and rework until the story is finally finished. It helps to have a great or even a twisted, you never saw that coming ending.

With a novel you have more room to develop your plot and sub-plots as well as develop your characters. There are many more characters and more scenes and it definitely takes much more time to write a novel. It takes me a year or so. But it's so satisfying when you get that book complete and polished and you send it out. There are more chances to make better money (at least that's what I've heard.) More chances for people to believe you are a "real" writer if you have a novel published.

I actually enjoy doing both and since my writing career first began with short stories I love doing them. But I also love that feeling you get when you go into a book store and see your novel on the shelf. Your own...the book your wrote.

I guess it's all how you feel about it. I remember an author telling me years ago, that he didn't write short stories because he only had one idea a year and didn't want to waste that idea. He felt he needed to spend his time on a novel. I can understand but I'd hate to give up either one.

How do you feel? Writers? Bloggers?

3 comments:

  1. "More chances for people to believe you are a 'real' writer if you have a novel published."

    Jan, having had four novels published and a fifth on the way, I should totally relate to that sentence. There are some advantages.

    The money part sounds true, as my advances (of course, later deducted from royalties) have been substantial from the point of view of a public school teacher. However, if we add it all up, John's probably made more off short stories than I have on novels.

    Recognition as a writer is nice because it thrills my grandson to be out with me and have his G-Mama acknowledged by strangers, including the servers at his favorite restaurant who call me their "celebrity."

    HOWEVER, as a regular blogger on SleuthSayers, I frequently feel like a failure as an author. Why? Because I haven't cracked the AHMM and EQMM markets that many of us appear in regularly. I haven't even tried in years because as much as I advise beginning writers that a thick skin is necessary, I STILL have hurt feelings over a rejection. It's easier to write what I know my agent can place.

    Though Berkley markets Callie books as "mainstream mystery," I've been labeled as a "cozy" writer and I'm advised not to publish anything deeper or darker as Fran Rizer. Writing Callie is fun and easy. (Wonder if I should try a Callie short story?)

    Wow! You sure got me going this AM. Your experiences in both the short story and novel areas give me inspiration to keep trying, but I can't see myself ever editing an anthology. I once worked as a magazine editor, and I felt horrible every time I rejected a manuscript.

    Thanks for an interesting read.

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  2. In my experience most people start with short stories and then go to novels.
    I had the opposite experience, writing and publishing novels and then, especially after one of my editors moved to EQMM, writing and publishing stories.
    Certainly at the moment, if one has no agent, short stories are a much easier bet!

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  3. I enjoyed the article, Jan. I'm one of those that began as a short story writer. Though I have written three novels, it was only recently that one got picked up--I was beginning to believe that might never happen. And you are quite right about the "real writer" and novels notion--sadly, I'm not sure the average person today knows what a short story is. Whenever I reveal to someone that I am a writer, I expect them to squint and asked, ala Clint Eastwood in The Unforgiven, "Of letters and such?"

    ReplyDelete

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