Category Archives: L. M. May

I am NOT a Literary Agent

I am NOT a literary agent or editor at a publishing house.  Don’t query me or send me copies of unpublished manuscripts.  I will have to destroy them unread.  I hate doing that, but it has to be done for privacy reasons–sending stuff to me is like sending your medical records to a complete stranger out of the phone book.  Don’t do it!

The novelette “Green Grow The Rushes” is now available

The novelette “Green Grow The Rushes (Weird Wild West Short Story)” has been published through Osuna Publishing. The subtitle in parentheses was added because there’s a recent novel out by a different author that has the exact same title as mine.

Short Description:
Lachlan is tempted to bargain with a lake demon for the gold he needs in  order to marry the woman of his dreams.  But a demon’s gold always comes at a terrible price.  A Weird Wild West short story set in late 1870s Colorado.

Available at:  Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Smashwords (all electronic formats). It’ll be available at other e-bookstores such as the iBookstore, Kobo, Sony, and Diesel by early April.

I put up the JPEG for the e-cover under the “LATEST E-STORY” sidebar awhile back. In April, it’ll be moved under a new sidebar listing “E-STORIES FOR SALE.” I’ve got more stories coming out through Osuna this year, so things will be changing in the sidebars quite a bit in 2011.

No marketing (beyond posting on this website and Facebook) will be done this year.  Since e-books don’t churn on and off the shelves rapidly like print books in bookstores, a slow build over five years can be done.  The current goal is for me to get ten different e-stories published (short stories and novels),  give Osuna time to get through the steep learning curve of doing print editions of novels, and then a marketing push will be done since with ten stories (some of which will be novels in both electronic and print formats) the odds of readers finding at least one story they would want to buy will be significantly greater.

Since I intend to be a writer for the rest of my life, I like this plan.  Slow and steady growth appeals to me.

“Parallels” is Being Published by Albuquerque The Magazine

My short story “Parallels” won the 2010 Albuquerque The Magazine short story contest, and will be published in their March 2011 issue of the magazine.

I just got a copy of the magazine issue last night from the Editor-in-Chief Dan Mayfield, so it’ll probably hit the stands in the next few days.

Here’s the cover for the March 2011 issue:
Albuquerque the Magazine March 2011 cover

Feels a bit weird to no longer be unpublished.   I’ll have a different short story, “Green Grow the Rushes,” coming out for e-readers after the first week of March.

A Talk on “The Benefits and Perils of Websites and Blogging for Writers”

I’ve been asked by the Los Alamos Writer’s Group (LAWG) to give a talk, so on Thursday, March 10th from 7pm to 8pm I’ll be talking about “The Benefits and Perils of Websites and Blogging for Writers.”

Here’s the details:

Do writers need a website?  Is blogging optional?   How does one go about setting up a website when one can’t afford a web designer?  How can a website be used to market one’s work?  We will candidly talk about the benefits and perils of the internet age for writers.   Participants are strongly encouraged to bring to the meeting a device (laptop, PDA, cell phone, etc.) that allows them to browse the web so that the group can compare well-known writers’ websites together.

There will also be a drawing for a Jane Austen action figure.

The location of the talk is the usual meeting place for the LAWG, the Morning Glory Bakery in Los Alamos, NM.  Business address is:
1377 Diamond Dr
Los Alamos, NM 87544

Busy Times at the Moment

Things are a bit crazy behind the scenes for me at the moment, so my blog posting will probably be sporadic for a bit.   I just found out two days ago that my short story entry placed first in a yearly short story contest in a glossy regional magazine, and it will be published in their March 2011 issue.   So I’ve just hit the milestone of having a story published for the first time.  As the publication date approaches I’ll post the name of the magazine.

I also signed up for the Denise Little Workshop at the very last moment, and am now scrambling to get caught up with everyone else and get the travel arrangements nailed down.

Website Additon of “Help With Writer’s Block” page

I’ve created a website page that has links to the posts that are most focused on dealing with writer’s block and other creative blocks. Over time I’ll add to it, and add links so it can work as a resource page. I want to do this as a way to start “paying it forward” for all the help I’ve received from other artists.

A Mistake I Made on WordPress

I really like using WordPress for doing a website.  Great user interface and templates to use.  I like supporting them directly by being a customer of theirs.

Tonight I discovered I’ve been making the mistake of only looking at my website as a whole.  I check my blogroll links regularly, but I never had a need to click on my blog post links.  So imagine my dismay when I clicked on an individual blog post tonight, only to discover a bunch of Google ads at the bottom of the post’s page.   And then realized that every individual post page displays this sort of junk.

One ad was for a vanity press, which peeved me off to no end.

It was my fault this happened.  I ought to have clicked around my website more throughly.

Anyways, now that I know about the junk ads showing up at the bottom of individual posts, I’ve done the necessary work behind the scenes to get rid of the junk ads for good.

Changes on this Website

There will be various changes coming to this website in the next six months, the first of which (the design) just happened tonight.  Also, all comment sections have been turned off and will remain off in the foreseeable future–I’ve had too many problems with spam behind the scenes and I don’t have the extra time to mess with it.

The good news is that I’m too busy because my writing career is picking up speed.

Working on a Problem Changes Everything

I used to have what I nicknamed “submissions block.”   I wrote, but I had a near phobia about submitting my work to editors or letting readers see it.  To help deal with that problem I started this blog back in the fall of 2008.

And over time, this blog helped me deal with that borderline phobia and move past it.  I began to submit my work to editors, and let readers see it.   I’ve also been getting feedback behind the scenes these past few months from some of the best editors in my genre.  As a result of all this work, what I need from this blog is changing.

I’m getting very close to being published.

So the focus and format of this blog will change over the next six months.  I will continue to try to post on Sundays, but the topics will probably expand beyond writing subjects.   The appearance of the website will also change.

I’ve really appreciated the emails I’ve received offline from readers of this website this past year.

Tiny changes over time can change a life beyond recognition.  I am no longer the writer I was back in 2008–I’ve come a long way since then.  I still have a long way to go, but I’m unstuck and moving faster and faster each month.

The Value of Seeking Out Editor Rejections

It used to be that the short stories I submitted for publication got nothing but form rejection letters back.  But in the last three months that’s been changing–the letters are coming back at times with personal comments from the editors.  Considering how little free time editors have, if this happens to you, celebrate it, because it means you’ve gotten good enough in your writing that they want to encourage you.   Editors are continually swamped with manuscripts and work–to take a few precious minutes out of their schedule to say something personal to you is a big deal.

And a few days ago, I got a letter of the “we really like this novelette, but it’s too long for us” variety from a major science fiction publication.  Again, this is a milestone to celebrate if it happens to you.  It means that story was good enough to sell.

So, I took those stories, found new markets to submit them to, and mailed them off.    Why not just self-publish them?

Two reasons:  1) Quality control, and 2) audience.

Like any other writer, I am unable to be objective about my own abilities.  So I like to submit my work for traditional publication to editors because it tells me how I’m doing as far as skill level.   I want to know if I’m reaching “pro” level or not in my stories.    If a story isn’t at a “pro” level, I’d rather it sat in drawer than self-publish it.   However, if it was good enough to get a personal letter from an editor, but a hard sell due to length (such as novelette and novella), chances are that once I ran out of traditional markets, I’d look into self-publishing it.

The other reason to consider traditional publishing for a short story is the available audience.  Think about it.   If you get a short story in THE NEW YORKER, you’ve just reached a huge potential reading audience.  Even the smaller periodicals will give you exposure to hundreds, even thousands, of readers who might not hear of you otherwise.

There’s two chapters in Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s Freelancer’s Guide that also tend to haunt me whenever I get impatient with the slow pace of submitting my work.   Check out Giving Up On Yourself Part One, and Part Two.