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Creative Writing: Year One

At the start of the year I challenged myself to write more; not just to slam more words onto paper, but to get my writing out there and evaluated. This would involve not just working on pieces, but completing them (which was a big issue for me); and then once complete, sending them off to publications, contests and festivals.

Ultimately, the goal of all this would be to get at least one piece of mine published.

I suppose I could say that I inspired in large part by Stephen King and Robert A. Heinlein’s rules on writing.

For King, I recalled in On Writing his struggles with getting work accepted – King, the bestselling author of, well, ever. From him, I learned that rejection notices are just part of the craft. You get some, you do better, and then you write some more. Nobody is born as some kind of “hero” author with the perfect tale. To be a good writer, you have to get there by writing a lot.

From Heinlein, his philosophy is that one should finish everything they start, and then try to sell everything they complete. Don’t judge yourself, just keep working. Seemed to me like the perfect mantra for a challenging year to come.

And so I set out, in the final days of December 2015 (I cheated in that sense, by starting early), to write as much as I could in my spare time, complete as many of the pieces I began, and submitted everything that I completed to some place somewhere.

What a year it’s been.

I was definitely able to maintain a stronger pace during the first half of the year. My creative juices were flowing, I was unhindered by style and structure, and was writing roughly one story every 2-3 weeks.

Of course, the work I produced during that time was not exactly my strongest – definitely ambitious, with some enjoyable sections, but structurally a complete mess. Still, I kept myself to my word, and submitted everything I cranked out. If anything I was happy to have those ideas complete, fleshed out and on paper, as it opened the door to moving onto the next.

My rhythm slowed down during the summer (as it always does in the dog days), and then just about bottomed out in the Fall – which I was thinking would be my best month in terms of productivity, but in fact turned out to be my better months in terms of quality.

I don’t feel ashamed to admit that everything I’ve written in the second half of the year turned out better than everything in the first half. A craft is something that takes time and requires effort. Failure makes us stronger, and lets us learn from our mistakes.

So, as of this week, I have sent a total of 27 pieces for consideration to various publications and festivals. I should note that several pieces were submitted multiple times (consecutively, not simultaneously – always wait for an answer before putting it back into circulation) so that inflates the number of total pieces slightly.

Out of 26 submissions, I received 17 rejections as of today. 6 are pending and 3 came back with acceptance notes.

The rejection notices, at first, were difficult to read. Nobody wants to know that they were rejected for anything. Especially, in my case, since I began with a little bit of a chip on my shoulder thinking it would be easy if I put my mind to it. Rejection notices act to ground us and remind us that no, just because we want something to succeed, doesn’t mean that it should.

It was a good reminder of fallibility and a charge to do better and try harder.

Interestingly, all my early rejection notices came with the usual copy-pasted text with token words of encouragement. However, more recently I have been receiving personalized remarks along with the notices:

Twice, I was informed that my piece made it to the final round of consideration. Positive feedback followed with some constructive criticism for refining the piece.

Two other times, I was informed that my piece was rejected (no mention of how far it got) but feedback and other remarks were included.

I should note that one of the publications that sent out the cold rejections to my early attempts, was one that sent me the feedback when I finally submitted a stronger piece.

If anything, I feel that this is what has filled me with the most adrenaline, and joy at my craft. The realization, that I have been improving steadily and my work is being more positively reviewed than it was 12 months ago.

Returning to my initial goal, I did, however, partially succeed with the following good news I received during the year:

One flash fiction piece accepted for publication (Paid too! but yet to see print. Backlogs, I hear, can be from six months to a year or more).

One 1st place festival win for an original Horror screenplay.

One 2nd place festival finish for an original Thriller screenplay.

I suppose it won’t really feel real until I see that piece in print, but combined with the festival progress and better and better feedback, I’d say it’s been a decent year all around.

Here’s to the next, and a busy holiday season behind the keyboard.

 

 

 

 

Categories
Updates Writing

I Won First Place in a Screenwriting Contest

Chalk up a win.

My horror-thriller screenplay “Dead North” set in apocalyptic Northern Canada just took first place at the WILDsound Screenplay Festival for Horror (part of the Feedback Toronto Film Festival). As a prize, Dead North earned a live-recorded table read.

I even got a little interview published on their site:

Horror/Zombie Feature Screenplay – DEAD NORTH by Alexander Nachaj

The director and actors certainly interpreted things differently than I had in mind. There’s a definite “Guardians of the Galaxy” vibe to it. Of course, when has anyone ever interpreted something the same way we heard it play out in our heads?

In film, everyone brings a little something to the table. Writer, director and actor together create the character, and leads to some interesting fusions.

A big thanks to the judges at the festival for their feedback, the crew putting the table read together, along with the actors and director for lending their talent.

2016 has been off to a good year!

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Opinions Writing

Know your Ecommerce job descriptions.

Ecommerce is the art of selling useless shit on the web. Some people make a living out of it, other spend their living on it. Behind every successful ecommerce venture are a whole ton of people playing different roles in the company, each contributing to the team in different but important ways.

Sales
Sell useless shit to people who don’t want it.

Marketing
Make people think they want the useless shit you sell just long enough for you to sell it.

Inventory
Make sure the useless shit you are selling is actually being sold.

Accounting
See if you are selling enough of the useless shit you need to sell.

Shipping
Pack all the useless shit you sell into dumb little boxes.

Secretary
Answer the phone when people call about the useless shit you sell.

Web Admin
Make sure the website you use to sell useless shit keeps selling useless shit.

Designer
Make sure all the useless shit you sell doesn’t look very useless.

Management
Convince your employees that there is meaning behind all this useless shit.