17 August 2024

Submission Accomplished


  

About two weeks ago, a good friend who's also an editor contacted me and said he needed a story for a crime anthology he was editing and needed it really fast, because one of the contributors had backed out of the lineup and he had to send everything to the publisher in just a few days. (Red alert red alert!) The theme of the anthology was specific but interesting, and after some arm-twisting I agreed to come up with a story. I did it in my usual way, beginning with a plot (a crime) and then putting in the characters and settings that were necessary to tell the tale, and--bottom line--I finished the story, sent it to him, and got a thumbs-up, so all is well in the world.

But that's not why I'm posting this column. I'm posting it because it occurred to me, as I sat down to begin typing that new story, that every single story I've written in the past several years has started by my doing the same thing. I pull up a previous story manuscript, change the title, delete everything below my byline, and start typing the new manuscript--which is then "saved as" a new file bearing the title of the new story. What I'm saying here is that all my stories use the same template.

What does that template look like? It's almost identical to the example shown at the Shunn's Modern Manuscript Format site. I said "almost the same" because there are a few things I choose to do differently. 

In case you're interested (and if you're an established writer I'm sure you already have your own version of all this), here are some observations about the way I format a short-stort manuscript for submission:

- I like Shunn's advice on placing the name/address/contact information at the top left of the first page and and the approximate word count, rounded off to the nearest hundred, at the top right. I don't usually include my membership in professional writing organizations in all this, as he suggests, but you can do that if you want.

- I type my story title and byline in proper case between a third of the way and halfway down the page. I sometimes change this after I finish the story, depending on where my story ends on the final page. (More about that later.)

- I always indent the first line of the story and the first line of every new scene, just as I indent the first lines of all the other paragraphs, as Shunn suggests. Some authors don't indent those first lines of scenes in order to make it look more like a printed version, but I do.

- I double-space everything in the text of the story with nothing extra between paragraphs. When I taught writing classes, some students turned in their stories with a slightly bigger vertical space between paragraphs. Editors I've talked with don't like that, and neither would I.

- I center a pound-sign (#) between scenes. Some writers and editors prefer using other separators (three asterisks, etc.) and some prefer to use nothing except one extra vertical space to separate scenes. I do whatever the guidelines tell me to, but I like putting at least something there, because when I used only spacing between scenes, I once had an editor butt two scenes together in the printed version of one of my stories. Scene breaks are there for a reason, and inserting a separator of some kind lessens the possibility of that happening. 

- I make sure Widow/Orphan Suppression is turned OFF before starting. In other words, widows and orphans are fine with me (even in real life) and if you suppress them, it can cause way too much open space left at the bottom of some pages. If all this sounds ridiculous to you, Google widow/orphan control.

- I also make sure Grammar Check is turned off. That program is maddening to me. When writing fiction, I happily splice commas, split infinitives, fragment sentences, etc., when needed, and I don't want the computer telling me I can't. (This is one of those times when it's good to be da king.)

- I use the Tab key to indent the first lines of all paragraphs unless the submission guidelines tell me to do otherwise. I know some editors prefer an automatic half-inch setting, etc., to indent paragraphs.

- I space only once after a period. I'm old and it was hard to make myself change, on this, but I did. It's my theory that the two-spaces-after-a-period rule was there to go along with the each-letter-takes-up-the-same-amount-of-space Courier font. The two spaces made everything look better, back then.

- I italicize. I don't underline. Underlining to emphasize text goes back to the days of typewriters, when italics weren't a possibility. I have, however, submitted stories to publications whose guidelines said to underline and not italicize, and I followed their rules. Just saying.

- I center the word END three double-spaces (sometimes two) below the final line of my story. Shunn prefers THE END, and that's fine too. I think it's good to put something there, because if my text happens to go all the way to the bottom of the final page, I don't want an editor to wonder if another page should be coming. Maybe, as with scene separators, that's just me and my paranoia.

- I don't use anything except black TNR 12-point format throughout. No colors, no boldface type. If I need to include something like a newspaper article excerpt, etc., I sometimes indent the whole thing to set it off from the rest of the text but I leave the font size the same.

When I'm done typing the story, I go back and check several things:

- I make sure all curly apostrophes and quotation marks are "aimed" the right way. Example: to properly type 'em (instead of them), I type a character just before em, hit the apostrophe key after that character, and delete the character I inserted. I realize that's a bassackwards way of getting there, but it works. I do the same kind of thing with single quotation marks in funny places. There are of course other ways to do this, but I like that one.

- I do a spell-check of the whole finished manuscript to catch misspellings, duplicated words, etc. It also flags certain odd words that I want to leave as is. (I like made-up words, and my characters sometimes THUNK their heads on the sidewalk or WHACK their palms on desktops, so when those get flagged I just override the program and allow them.

- I check to make sure my headers look right. Since I use previous stories as templates, it's all too easy to accidentally leave the title to the previous story in my header.

- If my story ends too close to the bottom of the page for me to write END two or three double-spaces after the final line, I don't want to put END by itself at the top of the next page. Instead, I go back to the first page and adjust that one-third-to-halfway-down title and byline such that END can now fit at the bottom of the last page or such that I can put the final couple of lines of text at the top of the next page and type END below that. This adjustment isn't usually required, but it sometimes is.


NOTE: Some editors prefer different fonts, different separators between scenes, and other unusual things. Whatever they want, I do it. (One editor, I recall, wanted everything to be in Verdana font.) If I don't like it, I do it anyway, and then change it back later, when I submit the story someplace else as a reprint. 

Again, these are just things I do in preparing my own stories. I'm NOT saying you should do it that way. I would like to hear, though, about your preferences on this submission/style/formatting issue. Are you a Shunn follower or a Shunn shunner? What's the strangest requirement that you've seen in submission guidelines? Do you have some formatting tips that I or others might consider, to make manuscripts look or read better? In my view, all of us are still learning, on this and on everything.

Meanwhile, I wish you joy in your writing and luck with your submissions!

Back in two weeks.



32 comments:

  1. Great advice, John. Most of the authors who contribute to my various anthologies follow it, thank goodness, but not all — and those who don't come up with some weird variations: single-spacing, oddball fonts and font sizes, eighteen hashmarks to indicate a scene break, three spaces after a period, I could go on.

    On the other hand, I don't specify Shunn or any other particular format when I invite people to contribute. I want writers thinking about their story, not about the mechanics of formatting. If I ultimately want to use the story, it takes me, what, a minute to reformat it the way I want it? I'm willing to spend the minute, if that's what it takes to keep the writers focused on getting their stories told....

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    1. I hear you, Josh, and I agree we shouldn't get too hung up on all this. As you say, I think most writers know the basics anyway. Something I've always wondered, since I'm not an editor, has been how much trouble it is for you folks to properly format a submission that hasn't been done correctly. I've heard some editors say it's a real pain, others say no. I suppose it depends on what and how much has to be fixed.

      I just know I want to cause editors as few problems as possible, and make it easy for you to read (and like) my story as I can. Kiss up, kiss up . . .

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  2. I pretty much use the Shunn format. I use # as a scene break (unless told otherwise). I do automatically double space at the end of a sentence, but when I'm all done (sort of) with a story, I go back and change them all using the magic of the "replace" box. I use TNR unless told otherwise. And I told Grammar Check to take a hike when I first got it, because I write a lot of dialog, and people don't almost never talk right, and I don't want any back chat about John Davison's latest diatribe. If an editor says to do something else, I will.

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    1. For those of us who learned to double-space after periods, it's SO hard to stop, right? For a while I continued to do it anyway, and never even corrected it--and finally I gave over.

      As for fonts, I was once told by an editor that her publication's guidelines instructed writers to use an unusual font (can't remember what it was) in order to see if the writer bothered to check the guidelines. Makes sense, I guess. And yes, it's almost impossible to write good dialog and use correct grammar (depending, I guess, on the character). If I don't know the grammar rules by now, I probably never will.

      Thanks as always for your thoughts, Eve!

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    2. I always follow the stated submission requirements. But when one space after a period is NOT specified, I use two. Why? It's my normal.
      Save me the "computer spaces so you don't need two" argument. I'm trying to finish a novel now. I am writing in my finished format: 6" x 9" paper, 12pt NTR, single-spaced, justified, so that I can see what the reader will see.
      As we all should know, justified means the computer will space all the words on a given line. Therefore, the space after a period will vary from lots down to your specified minimum. My minimum is two spaces. I hate reading anything where the end of one sentence butts up against the beginning of the next sentence, as I see in some novels I have purchased. I am a visual person. How the words look on the page is important to me, and helps the reading flow. Apologies for drifting away from "submissions" to "two spaces" for this post.

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    3. Jim -- That's interesting--I'm glad to hear you ARE still spacing twice after a period, and I agree that it "looks" better. I caved in and followed the crowd a few years ago only after a couple of editors complained about my continuing to space twice. Maybe I should've taken your approach and held strong until guidelines commanded me to do otherwise, which of course they sometimes do.

      Thanks for posting this!

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  3. While there's much good information here, the easiest to overlook might be what's in the first paragraph. Like your unnamed editor, too many times I have had writers drop out of projects at the last minute, often ghosting me.

    It's one thing to drop out—we all have health issues, family emergencies, and the like—but waiting until the last moment to notify your editor (or not bothering to notify your editor at all) is a Cardinal sin. This puts writers on my informal list of "will not voluntarily work with again."

    Because of these situations, I have also developed an informal list of "writers who can come through in a pinch." I try not to impose on the same handful of writers every time this happens, but if you're a writer, it's far better to be on this list than on the first list.

    Also, even though I want to give new and new-to-me writers a chance, I've been burned so many times by writers who drop out with little or no warning that I tend to invite some of the same writers to many of my projects. These are the writers who deliver on-time, on-theme, and on-length; who decline an invitation if a project doesn't suit them or can't be completed in the available time frame; and who notify me well in advance if there's any kind of problem that might cause a delay so we can find a solution.

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    1. Michael, I know dropouts happen, but I'm a little surprised to hear how often it happens. I always consider it such an honor to be asked to supply a story, I try to say yes as often as I can and I try hard to deliver the story on time (or earlier) if I do. I recall that one editor we both know said he once edited an anthology project for which he intentionally used all new writers (or at least writers he'd never worked with before)--and if I'm not mistaken, he later said he regretted restricting himself that way.

      Hey, this is only one of the many problems you editors have to face. My hat's off to all of you!

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    2. Michael, I would love to be on that second list! Just sayin', as the kids say nowadays. I also cannot imagine dropping out of a project. As Ray Bradbury said in his speech at An Evening with Ray Bradbury 2001 (https://youtu.be/_W-r7ABrMYU?si=m26LCMKvCtQbj9qW&t=1467), "make a list of 10 things you love madly and write about them, make a list of 10 things you hate and kill them." I do that unless I already have something to write about at the moment.

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  4. More recently, I've employed Shunn's format when writing, though it's not perfect.

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    1. You're right, Justin--but it probably comes closest to being a standard format, and one that's usually accepted by most editors. But it's no substitute for reading individual submission guidelines. Almost every magazine and anthology includes those guidelines, some more detailed than others.

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  5. I also use the Shunn format, which is pretty much the same format I used in the "stone age" when I submitted manuscripts on paper through the mail. Wow! How primitive we were!
    I use Courier New but am careful to change the type face to the editor's request.

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    1. Bob, I stayed with Courier (actually Courier New, like you) for a long time, and then finally switched to TNR. It was about that same time that I started the painful migration to only one space after a period.

      As for primitive, think of all the novels that writers like Hemingway and Faulkner and all the others turned out over the years, wrestling with typewriters, ribbons, corrections, carbon paper, giant envelopes, postage, etc. My first dozen stories or so were created and submitted that way. Sometimes the Old Days weren't so great after all.

      Delete
  6. Elizabeth Dearborn17 August, 2024 15:43

    The thing I hate is when I email a story as an attachment somewhere, & Gmail changes the font!!! Since I don't know how to keep this from happening, I'm probably going to start up a website for myself again so I can hopefully control the email.

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    1. WHOA. I'd never heard of that happening, Elizabeth. I have a gmail account but it's not my primary email account, and I'm not sure I've ever sent an attachment using gmail.

      If anyone out there reading this can offer an answer/solution, I'd be grateful.

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    2. I use Yahoo mail and they have never altered an attachment.

      Delete
  7. Great info, John! You mention that you start with a plot and then people it. I like that. I start with a "what if" scenario, which I guess is a combination of plot and people, as in: what if a guy who has never committed a crime decides on the spur of the moment to commit a crime? Or something like that. Feel free to use the prompt (or anyone else who reads this).

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    1. Ed, I've started with other things instead--a character, a setting, a theme, even a title--but I begin most of my stories with a plot, and always have. I feel that if I have a workable plot in my head, everything else in the story easily falls into place. Make no mistake, the characters have to be interesting or nobody'll care enough to keep reading--but the plot is almost always the very first thing in my process. To each his own!

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  8. I use Shunn, and read submission directions obsessively to be sure I'm doing everything the market asks for. Why risk alienating an editor? The biggest problem I have is that I simply cannot convince myself to use a single space after a period. I change it afterwards--when I remember.

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    1. Joe, I'm so pleased to find that some of my writer buddies have resisted the change from two spaces to only one space after a period. Now that I'm more or less accustomed to it, I suppose I'll hold the new course, but it was truly hard for me to switch. Spacing twice after a period became so automatic, for some of us. As for guidelines, I'm with you: do exactly what they ask you to do. Why not??

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    2. I wrote a 50-word story about why there's only one space after a period (https://fiftywordstories.com/2022/11/16/ed-ridgley-gunfight-at-the-punctuation-palace/). I learned to type on manual typewriters in high school and my teacher hounded in us two spaces after a period. As Chicago says it's a "Hard Habit to Break."

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  9. I didn't realize the standard format had a name, but I'm glad to learn that. This is the format I've been using since college (1960s), and I wonder at the number of writers who don't know that it exists until I tell them. I'm also surprised at the writers who don't read the writer's guidelines for an anthology or magazine. For the Best New England Crime Stories anthology we get stories with nothing but the title because writers send us their stories after sending them to the Al Blanchard contest, which requires no identifiable information on the ms. It's maddening. Writers don't read is a cliche now, but I wish it weren't. As for specifics, two spaces after period is easy to correct on computers; I prefer using the standard indent instead of tabs for new paragraphs. But these are all personal preferences and easy enough to fix. Thanks for digging through the weeds for everyone.

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    1. Hey Susan! Yep, you're one of those writers who knows all this stuff anyhow. I first stumbled upon the Shunn manuscript formatting guide when I was starting out and trying to figure out what was going on, and--as you said--I've been doing what it says, or something very close to what it says, ever since.

      As for writers not following guidelines, I've never understood that. As Joe Walker mentioned, why not try your best to do what the editor asks you to do? I sometimes think the submission process has become so easy and inexpensive (with Word and email, etc.), writers just don't want to be troubled with having to read and research ANYthing before they type a story and send it in. Big sigh.

      Thanks for stopping in, here. Stay in touch!

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  10. cj petterson Sez: I've never heard of Shunn. (Should I be embarrassed?) My standard formatting, however, is pretty much the same as yours. I had also trouble with making one space after the period a habit. Nice article, and one that reassures me I'm still on some kind of right track.

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  11. Sounds like you're on exactly the right track, cj. As for Shunn, sounds like you do all that stuff anyhow, and as for being embarrassed, I've been doing this a long time and I'm constantly discovering things I probably should've found out years ago.

    Keep up the good writing!

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  12. John (and everyone!) I'm not sure I ever read the Shunn MS format, but I have used the standard manuscript format I learned early on and have gotten no complaints, even in the rejections. I also know to follow the submission guidelines to the letter! (H.P. Lovecraft didn't, he didn't even type his manuscripts which is why he didn't sell as many!) I even saw one set of guidelines where the editor included a key word he wanted included in the cover letter so he'd know the writer had read the guidelines and was following them! Wonderful column as always, John!

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    1. Hey Jeff ---

      A keyword in the cover letter?? First time I'd heard of that. Yep, follow those guidelines!

      Thanks, Jeff, as always!

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    2. You're welcome! And thank YOU!

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  13. I was saying "yes", "yes" after each point... we do it exactly the same, John, including taking an existing template and deleting the text, lol. So much easier and I just don't have to think about that stuff. Of course some people want everything different and it's a pain in the neck!

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  14. Double space after a full stop used to give clarity to setters reading the manuscript - rather than mistaking it for a comma. I broke the double-space habit when I started in on computers, back in the mists of techno-history :)
    As to the truncation apostrophe - hold down the CTRL key and tap the ' key twice - works in Word, and I'm assuming it would work in LibreOffice, WordPerfect etc.
    The main 'loss' of formatting is down to code stripping by methods such as GoogleDocs (etc). One of the main 'banes' is when someone starts writing via Computer & Wordprocessor, shifts to Tablet & Text Editor, and finishes it off by Phone & Lawdknowswhat app. What they don't do is check continuity before sending the sub off.
    And rather than TAB, you can set a change in the Paragraph Formatting to create an automatic indent. TABs are easy to strip out - but if you set the paragraph indent up, then you only need to hit the return key, and the cursor is in the right place to start new line typing.

    John Connor
    Murderous Ink Press

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    1. Thanks, John--lots of good tips. I've grown set in my ways over a lot of this, but I really should use a couple of shortcuts (the TAB key issue, the apostrophe-correcting issue) that would help.

      I want to mention one point: I have found that you are like several editors I know, in that you appreciate proper formatting but you're still fairly receptive and forgiving to manuscripts that don't strictly follow the rules. I suspect there's a point where you probably draw the line, but it's kind of you to have some flexibility there. If I were an editor, I think I would soon run out of patience.

      Thanks so much for chiming in here. I always learn new things from you!

      Delete

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