The #FridayFlash Report – Vol 4 Number 5

June 30, 2012 in FridayFlash Report by Tim VanSant

We had 56 stories in the Collector this week with 2 Debuts. Please welcome Laura Besley and Louise Hastings to the community. The stories this week fall under 16 different genres, including one each in Action, Cross-Genre, Magical Realism, Noir, Romance, Thriller, and Urban Fantasy. What a wonderfully diverse community we have!

Remember to keep the community news flowing through our weekly News Flash.

As always, if your story is not in the listing below please go to the Collector and add the details. It will be in next week’s report. ~Tim

The Stories Read the rest of this entry →

News Flash – Vol.4 #4

June 26, 2012 in Community News, News Flash by Estrella Azul

You can read about Tom Gillespie’s forthcoming novel, “Painting by Numbers”, on the Crooked Cat website. Tom also just posted the launch event of his novel on Facebook, so if you have an account, go RSVP.

Deborah Rickard has been thrilled by two recent successes; first she was shortlisted for the Fish Flash Fiction Award 2012, and then heard that one of her stories reached the final fifteen of the Bridge House Publishing Competition and will be published in their 2012 charity anthology.

“The Shock”, Jen Brubacher’s story, has been published last week at AE-The Canadian Science Fiction Review.

Jodi Cleghorn has quite a bit of news to share, from a Christmas in July launch of “Deck the Halls” to “Dead Red Heart” in which Jodi has a story placed winning  Best Edited Work at the Australian Shadows Awards. Go to her blog post to read about the rest of her great news!

Several fellow #fridayflash writers (Tony Noland, Rebecca Emin, Sam Adamson, Jodi Cleghorn, Jim Bronyaur and Maria Kelly) have short stories and flash fiction pieces in “Scribble & Scatter: Sunday Snaps: the Stories“ which will be out in August 2012. (Please let me know in the comments below if I overlooked someone from this list and I’ll update the NewsFlash to include your name. Thanks!)

~~~

Natalie Bowers informed us that her flash-fiction site, 1000words, is now open again to submissions. They’re looking for previously unpublished flash-fiction of between 100 and 1000 words in length that have been written in response to the images on their Pinterest board. Here are the submission guidelines.

~ Estrella Azul

 

Keep the good news coming! You can send in your news items concerning the Friday Flash community to Estrella at estrella.azul@fridayflash.org or by contacting her on Facebook or Twitter. Or feel free to share your news by posting on the#fridayflash Facebook Group Page.

 

The #FridayFlash Report – Vol 4 Number 4

June 23, 2012 in FridayFlash Report by Tim VanSant

We had 55 stories in the Collector this week with 1 Debut. Please welcome Andrew Flynn to the community. The stories this week fall under 13 different genres, including one each in Literary and Non-Fiction and two each in Cross-Genre, Magical Realism, Romance, Suspense, and Thriller. What a wonderfully diverse community we have!

We hope you will give one or more of our FFDO Groups a try. Read about them in my recent post, Groupies Wanted, No Experience Required. [See what I did there? ;-) ] The Group functions are available to all FFDO members which means that if we do not already have a group for something you are interested in, you can start your own. It is fun and it is free and we even have a Sandbox where you can play around and learn. There is also a friendly group where you are welcome to drop by for some conversation. Come on. You know you want to.

And remember to keep the community news flowing through our weekly News Flash.

As always, if your story is not in the listing below please go to the Collector and add the details. It will be in next week’s report. ~Tim Read the rest of this entry →

Groupies Wanted, No Experience Required

June 21, 2012 in Groups, How-To, Tech by Tim VanSant

A group of men and women outside a building in NorwayOne of the features of the FridayFlash.org (FFDO) site that never caught on the way we had hoped is the ability to form and participate in Groups. We have noticed a trend away from niche sites and forums toward more general social media sites and the answer to why Groups aren’t more popular here may be as simple as that. But our Groups also lacked an important function that we believe probably contributed to their lack of use. The system for notifying you of activity in a Group was (to put it succinctly and charitably) severely lacking. You pretty much had to visit the site and look at the Group or Activity stream to keep up.

We’ve installed a new plugin though that adds Email Notification to Groups and we hope you’ll consider giving them a try now. Before I describe the email options, let’s do a little refresher on Groups in general. Groups are a simple way to interact with other members who share a common interest or purpose. Any member of FFDO can create Groups. Groups can be public or private. (There is also an option for hidden groups, but we reserve those for our site Admins.) If you create a Group, you are automatically an Administrator for that Group. You can grant Admin or Moderator status to other Group members, but in most cases that probably isn’t necessary. The official description of Group Settings and Roles is here.

A Public Group and all its activities are visible to everyone. Any FFDO member can join any Public Group. A Private Group’s name and description are visible to anyone, but activities are visible only to Group members. Membership in a Private Group is controlled by the group’s Administrator(s). You must either be invited to join or request membership and be approved by a Group Admin. You should also know that the editors and tech team for FFDO who have Site Admin status can monitor every group, public and private, even if we are not a member of the group. We trust you to use the groups responsibly, and will intervene only in extreme circumstances. Here’s a simple example: sometimes a spammer will join FFDO (in spite of our efforts to keep them out) and will create a group with spam content. We delete those users and all the content they post.

To see a list of existing Groups, click on “Groups” in the menu bar at the top of any page (or click here). One in particular that I want to draw your attention to is called Criticize Me, and it was created as a “Critique area for people seeking more in-depth commentary on their writing. Readers should offer constructive criticism on the piece at hand by informing the author what worked well for them, places were they stumbled as a reader, and suggest how the piece might be improved.” We started the Criticize Me group as a direct response to editor E. D. Johnson’s introductory post asking our FFDO community for suggestions on what FFDO can do for you. More in depth criticism was the single most requested feature.

JM Strother (FFDO founder) has a public Group called General Discussion as a place for informal chats and content that may not fit another group. I’ve also created a public Group called The Sandbox, just as a place to try out the various parts and functions of a group. Feel free to join that group if you want a place to try out posting updates, forum topics, and replies or testing different email options. I’ll clean out some of the content occasionally and, of course, you can quit the group at any time. Feel free to peruse the other groups, and create one if you see a need.

When you visit a group, you first see the Home stream. All activity (including update posts, forum topics, replies to updates or forum topics, and notices when new members join) for the group shows up here. If you are a member of the group, you will also see a form to post an update. New activity is posted at the top and everything scrolls down. It’s easy to miss something if there’s much activity at all in the group. (That’s another reason for the email updates, and I swear I’m almost to the bit where I describe those.) Group Forums though help organize the information. Forums are based on Topics that include a title. Forum Topics are listed under the Forum tab for each Group. You can click on an existing Topic to read all the associated content or Create a New Topic.

In the Criticize Me Group, for example, you wouldn’t want to place something to be critiqued as a simple post update. It would quickly get lost in the shuffle. Instead, go to the group’s Forum and create a New Topic. Use either your name or the title of your piece for the Topic Title and then put your work in the Content. You might also include a note there if you are looking for specific feedback (on grammar, structure, or tone, for example).

Now, about the email notification (finally!). There are five levels of notification:

  • No Email (You’ll have to visit the site to keep up)
  • Weekly Summary Email (All the week’s topics – sent to you on Thursday)
  • Daily Digest Email (All daily activity bundled in one email – sent at 12:00 GMT)
  • New Topics Email (New topics are sent as they are posted)
  • All Email (Send emails about everything – post updates, forum topics, and replies)

The Group Admin sets a default level for the group, but each member can set or change the level of notification they prefer after joining the group. You set the level of notification you want for each group you are a member of — you may want some more often than others. Also note that the Weekly Summary and New Topics options only include New Forum Topics, not any replies and not updates posted in the Home stream. In addition, you may be getting email notices from FFDO triggered by certain events. For example, when another member sends you a friend request, message, or invitation to a group. To change those, in the menu at the very top of the screen go to My Account -> Settings -> Notifications. Set each radio button to Yes or No and then click the Save Changes button. There is also an option on that page to set all your group email options to No Email. Oh, and if you’ve set up to receive emails that you’re not getting, check your spam filter. They sometimes get caught there.

If you’ve stayed with me through what turned out to be a long post, Thanks! If you have questions, add them in a comment to this post or visit the Tech Help group and post them there. I hope to see some groupies around here….

~ Tim

 

Photo by Fylkesarkivet i Sogn og Fjordane, via Flickr Creative Commons

News Flash – Vol.4 #3

June 20, 2012 in Community News, News Flash by Estrella Azul

Laura Eno’s new space opera novella, “Wraith”, is launching on June 27th. “Wraith” is book two of the Carriena Oracles and picks up where “Raven” ended.

“Enemy of the Fae” by India Drummond was officially released on June 14th. You can purchase it via Amazon USA or Amazon UK.

P.J. Kaiser has a new story,  “Egg-ceptional”, in the new Literary Mix Tapes anthology from eMergent Publishing.  It will be released in July in Australia and will be available for pre-orders soon.

Cathy Olliffe-Webster has some exciting news as her short story, “Kiosk”, was featured in the print magazine, “North Bay Nipissing Life” which Cathy herself has designed, laid out and made pretty.

Over at Write AnythingTony Noland discussed the mechanics of making writing a priority: what works, what interferes and how to make it better.

I (Estrella Azul) have been featured on Dani Harris’s My Heart’s Love Songs, as part of her Featured Poets Series.

~ Estrella Azul

 

Keep the good news coming! You can send in your news items concerning the Friday Flash community to Estrella at estrella.azul@fridayflash.org or by contacting her on Facebook or Twitter. Or feel free to share your news by posting on the#fridayflash Facebook Group Page.

The #FridayFlash Report – Vol 4 Number 3

June 16, 2012 in FridayFlash Report by Tim VanSant

We had 50 stories in the Collector this week with 1 Debut. Please welcome Casey Douglass to the community. The stories this week fall under 11 different genres, including one each in Paranormal, Romance, and Urban Fantasy. What a wonderfully diverse community we have!

While you are reading today, make sure you check out Estrella Azul’s article, When we should STOP editing. And remember to keep the community news flowing through our weekly News Flash.

As always, if your story is not in the listing below please go to the Collector and add the details. It will be in next week’s report. ~Tim

The Stories Read the rest of this entry →

When we should STOP editing

June 14, 2012 in Guest post, Thursday Writing, Tips and Suggestions, Writers by Estrella Azul

THERE WAS THIS post that showed up in my Twitter feed one night last year as I was about to go to bed. It was so timely, I just had to read it then and there. As soon as I finished reading, I had to type out a few thoughts. Now, I have to share.

I somehow managed to lose the link and cannot for the life of me find it again. But the main idea was: at some point, you just have to stop editing. Set a deadline and keep it, hit Save, then send in your work and do not look back.

I think that is such a good idea. Slightly tough to keep to, but a great idea nonetheless.

Just two days before reading that blog post, I had a piece to turn in that was driving me nuts.

I love writing, do not get me wrong, but you have no idea how draining it was to finish my article. In the past few weeks I barely had time to breathe I was so busy. I felt like I was being torn in 100 different directions, and it is frustrating when I cannot concentrate on just writing. I like being able to write everything as it flows and then go back later to proofread—and, if need be, to include more info, photos, etc.

You know, minor editing.

However, I had written this particular piece a few sentences at a time every now and then when I had a couple of spare minutes—or before I could forget as soon as I remembered something of note.

I hate writing like that.

It has also been frustrating to have one day (self-assigned deadline because I could not take it anymore) to go through it all and make it all seem like the piece flowed from the very beginning.

At one point as I started re-reading for the nth time and still figured it needed work, it hit me: I really needed to stop obsessing over it, stop tweaking it. So I just stopped and sent it in without thinking about it for a second longer.

Results? The editor emailed back in less than an hour telling me: “I love your article!”

When I told her about my editing issues, she replied: “It would be frustrating to write in such an occasional fashion, instead of feeling like you’re in the flow. I’m impressed that you turned in such a flowing, conversational piece of writing, complete with sprinklings of history and other interesting details.”

Wondering which piece I’m talking about? “My Three Most Favorite Attractions in Paris” actually. And judging by the lovely comments left there, the editor was right; I did manage to turn in a good piece of writing. I was just too close to it (and too exhausted) to notice that myself.

I completely agree with the approach I read in that blog post—set a deadline and stop then and there. Do not wait until you have to alternate between pulling your hair and thumping your head against the desk.

Happy writing everyone! Now… STOP editing!

~ Estrella Azul

 

Originally posted as a guest post by Estrella Azul on Fear of Writing.

News Flash – Vol.4 #2

June 12, 2012 in Community News, News Flash by Estrella Azul

Alison Wells reminded us that the paperback of Housewife with a Half-Life is being launched online today, June 12th and is now available on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.

Karen Schindler had a new piece called “Autumn’s Child” on the VoxPoetica main page on Sunday. It is now open for comments as it hit the Poemblog yesterday.

Charlotte Comley has had a  flash accepted in the “Journey to Crone” Chuffed Books Anthology.

~~~

Charlotte Comley has also entered an online Sci Fi story competition with Etherbooks. The story is called “Fields of Gold”.

Natalie Bowers has also entered this competition with Etherbooks. Her story is entitled “The Limit”.

Please join in with the downloads and votes for both Charlotte and Natalie, they deserve our support!

  1. Go to the Apple App Store, search for “Ether” and then install the Ether Books Ltd app onto your iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch.
  2. Once you have installed and opened the app, you can select the “1st Sci-Fi and Fantasy Contest” from the list of Genres and scroll through all the entries, or you can search for their names or the title of their stories.
  3. Tap on a story from the list to view the details and tap on ‘Free’ to download it (and cast your vote).

Break a leg, Charlotte and Natalie!

~ Estrella Azul

 

Keep the good news coming! You can send in your news items concerning the Friday Flash community to Estrella at estrella.azul@fridayflash.org or by contacting her on Facebook or Twitter. Or feel free to share your news by posting on the#fridayflash Facebook Group Page.

The #FridayFlash Report – Vol 4 Number 2

June 9, 2012 in FridayFlash Report by Tim VanSant

We had 59 stories in the Collector this week with 3 Debuts. Please welcome K.L. Coones, Bryan Mitchell, and L. G. Keltner to the community. The stories this week fall under 14 different genres, including one each in Crime, Cross Genre, Mystery, and Thriller. What a wonderfully diverse community we have!

I often notice that similarities in titles and themes appear serendipitously in the stories entered each week. Last week, for example, we had Fish Stories, The Fishermen, The Fishwives, Red herrings: listen within, and In the Shadow Of the Valley Of Whales. [Yes, I know that whales are not fish. Humor me.] Also last week we had A Bird Fossil Made Out Of Rubbish, Magpie’s Nest, Robins in Spring, and Secret War of the Birds. Does it mean anything that this week we have Four dead birds? Anyway, this week we have a spate of one-word titles: Blogging, Censorship, Cockcrow, Friends, Gamer, Gnome, Hell, Hitching, Predation, Ruthless, Seeds, Splash, Traitor, and Unseen. Taken together, they could make an interesting writing prompt, I think. Were I to make a game of it [and I have, sort of] I could find several other connections. None of this really matters, of course. It is just my brain being its usual weird self.

We continue our efforts to bring you interesting and useful original content with this week’s post Technical Trick for the Mobile Author by FFDO editor E. D. Johnson. Give it a read. And remember to keep the community news flowing through our weekly News Flash.

As always, if your story is not in the listing below please go to the Collector and add the details. It will be in next week’s listing. ~Tim

The Stories Read the rest of this entry →

Technical Trick for the Mobile Author

June 7, 2012 in Tech by E. D. Johnson

Desktop Computer Image

From notforthemass.blogspot.com

I do not spend all my time writing on a single computer. For that matter, I do not even do all of my writing on a computer at all, even if a mobile phone can be considered a computer. I use a multitude of tools for our craft, as I am sure many do: pens, pencils, paper, computers, notepads, notebooks, laptops, tablets. These days, the technical advantages to working electronically cannot be underestimated, but I often switch devices more than once in a single day. Partially, I believe this is to get comfortable and change positions enough to keep my body from revolting from long periods of writing. Unfortunately, my desktop is not very mobile, and until I find a way to put my monitor above my head while laying in bed, my preferred, reclined position will not be available to me.

What is an author to do when they wish to not be stationary?

Some times, we writers need a change of venue to assist us in our art, but no one would ever take a desktop computer with them to Star Bucks to soak in the atmosphere. Instead, we reach for our phone and laptop and head to our favored coffee-dispensing center. Sadly, all the work we have done is stuck back on the desktop.

Now, this should not pose a huge problem, except I use a specific software program to do my writing. The software I use is called yWriter, by SpaceJock, but I am sure this could work with almost any writing program I have tried so far. The list of reasons why I use it would be fairly long, just suffice to say it is a simple, clean interface with complex features under the hood. Also, even an unorganized wandering agent of chaos like myself can draw some relative order in the chapters and scenes. That organization comes at a cost though. Namely, it takes a fair chunk of time to input all of your necessary, behind-the-scenes details into the software, which then stores them in text files. I do NOT want to do all of that work on every computer I use, but I am constantly changing computers, right?

Enter the magic of cloud services like Google Drive (Previously Google Docs, but now cooler!) and Dropbox. After installing the software, these programs make a directory, where ever you like. Dragging and dropping files into that directory works just like any other on a computer, but that is where the fun really starts. When installed on multiple devices and signed in under the same account, the program automatically downloads files saved to that directory from any other device. So I can type a shopping list on my computer, save it to the directory, then while at the store, pull up the list on my phone.

Laptop Image

From cliparts101.com

But shopping lists are not the concern here. To keep all of my work together and accessible from all of my different devices, I saved my yWriter project(s) into a directory in my shared directory. Now, when yWriter auto-saves as I am working, not only does it save to my computer and make a backup on my computer, that save and backup are automatically uploaded to my Dropbox and Google Drive account and further distributed to my other devices (available on laptop, tablet, phone as well).

No need to worry about backups, because as a matter of course, I have at least five as soon as the first is made.

No need to re-invent my wheels for each story or project, as yWriter is accessing the same data every time.

No need to stay cooped up in my room or office, when I can just grab the laptop and head to Chick-Fil-A, get some chicken, and go to typing away.

Also, the laptop is far less likely to distract me with shinies like Facebook and games because it is slow compared to the desktop.

Overall, it results in a huge boon to writing productivity and efficiency, even while not staying put.

Do you have any awesome tricks and tips that you would want to share with the rest of the #FridayFlash community? Post a comment here or drop me an email (edjohnson) at /fridayflash/ dot {org}. I may include them in another article later, with proper credit given of course, and I hope that this one helps some folks out there.

~ E. D. Johnson