writing tips

3 Tips on How to get a Story in Print

3 Tips on How to get a Story in Print

What an amazing surprise I got when I opened ‘Writers’ Forum’ this month and found my story in print! (Cue happy dance and more than a little shrieking, if I’m honest!)

My story was published because it won second place in their flash fiction competition. (I was highly commended in December, so I’m inching closer to the win!) Competitions are often overlooked as routes to publication, so here’s three inspirational tips to help you give this route a try.

1. Get your entry count up!

Sounds obvious, right? But it’s true, the more entries you get out there, the more chance you have of impressing a competition judge with your work. I know this is easier said than done, but regular visitors to this blog might remember my own New Year’s resolution. I decided to enter at least one competition each month. By sticking to that simple goal, look what I achieved! By March, I’d got published. You absolutely can do it too.

Take Action

First, set yourself a target for competition entries, whatever you think is achievable, even if that’s entering your first ever writing competition. Next, tell me about it in the comments and, if you follow this blog, I will email you to support, cheerlead and chivvy you to achieve your goal 🙂

(Plus, you’ll receive a free short story and an email when I post something new to the blog.)

Not sure where to find competitions to enter? Fear not, I’ll be posting a list at the start of every month, with as many free-entry competitions on there as I can possibly find.

Right, on to the actual writing…

2. Follow the Brief

I can’t stress this enough! Make sure you read the brief for every competition, then read it again, then again. I know, this one sounds obvious too! But I’ve seen judges’ comments enough times to realise that a decent proportion of people don’t do this.

I know of contests that asked for pieces in a specific point of view, that include particular objects or embrace a certain theme. They will all get some work that doesn’t follow the brief. It doesn’t matter how good those stories are, they will never be successful. The competition can’t very well ask for pieces in the first person and then award the winner to something written in the third person, they would lose all credibility. So, you can easily put your work ahead of all those writers who didn’t read the brief thoroughly or, even worse, thought their story was so good it wouldn’t matter that it didn’t fulfil the brief.

3. Don’t Try to be Original

What? I hear you scream. The thing is, I think a lot of writers, myself included, sometimes spend too long trying to dream up the most fabulous, original storyline for their work. Now, this isn’t a bad thing necessarily. But, being original doesn’t mean you have to come up with a never-before-seen chain of events for your characters to go through.

It’s not a problem to tell a story that has already been told. You just have to tell it in a new way, from a unique viewpoint, with different (and vibrant) characters, an enticing setting, or ideally all of the above. You can take the oldest stories in human history, and authors frequently do, and reimagine them, rewrite them with a modern lens, or just use them as inspiration for your piece.

This works particularly well for short fiction, especially flash fiction. Check out this post, where I demonstrate, step-by-step, exactly how to write a flash fiction piece based on a very old story, in this case, a nursery rhyme.

I really hope you find these tips helpful. Please do get in touch in the comments if you have any questions. Or if you just want to chat about writing, I’d love nothing more. By the way, you can read my published story in issue #231 of Writers’ Forum. It’s the current issue on sale at time of writing, or available here as a back issue.

Happy Writing 🙂

Posted by Rachel in Blog, 0 comments
Create a Character in 5 Minutes

Create a Character in 5 Minutes

For writers after some inspiration, give this 5 minute exercise a go.

Look around the room you are in right now and pick an object. Pick anything, it doesn’t really matter, but it works best with something that is always there, like a piece of furniture.

Got your object? – Don’t cheat and read ahead, thinking you’ll choose something once you know what the exercise is. (I suspect I would be guilty of this myself and, the problem is, I would then spend so long agonising over which object to pick that I’d never get writing!)

Here’s the exercise: Set a timer for 5 minutes. Write something, even if it’s just a single sentence, from the point of view of your chosen object, as though it were a person in the room.

Hints and Help

Writing in the first person will make it easier to jump into your object’s point of view.

Write about how your object feels or what it thinks. Is it a well-used, well-loved item? When was the last time it was touched or picked up? Does it feel neglected or is it broken?

Write about what the object ‘saw’ today. Maybe they were watching you doing something? Or did they witness something funny? Tragic? Exciting? Scandalous?

Don’t worry about creating a fully plotted story though. If a complete story emerges, brilliant, but this is not the aim. The aim is to use your imagination to access a viewpoint you might not normally utilise.

Here’s mine:

Object: Wool blanket on the sofa next to me.

“I don’t mind telling you, today’s been really boring. Seems like years since I went outside. Yes, I know, it was only on Sunday for the BBQ dinner. But the point is it feels like ages. I’ve scarcely been glanced at, let alone picked up or wrapped around her. And being piled up on top of you is straining my fibres something chronic. I can practically see the stretch marks. Hideous.”

This was written in five minutes, and I seem to have created a rather vain and attention-seeking character. In an effort to appease my blanket, I have featured them in the picture for this article, and hope that will cheer them up.

In all seriousness, though, in just five minutes I have a character voice, which I could develop and use in a longer piece. When I next need to conjure up a character like this, I have one ready and waiting.

What will you come up with? Let me know what your object is and post your piece, or a link to it, in the comments.

Happy writing.

Posted by Rachel in Blog, 2 comments
5 Steps to Flash Fiction Competition Success

5 Steps to Flash Fiction Competition Success

I gasped with delight on checking my emails this morning, which is not generally a regular occurrence. The reason was a message from Cambridge Writers’ to let me know I had come third in their annual flash fiction competition. The entries are voted on by members, which makes it even more wonderful to have my piece ‘Location, Location, Location’ recognised.

For this flash fiction competition, there was no theme or genre, but the word limit was very tight, at just 250 words – definitely a challenge! So how did I go about it?

I have always been amazed at how the best flash fiction stories seem to pack so much into so few words. I am no expert, but I have identified a few ingredients that seem to be common to the good ones.

Plot – Get a concept. It doesn’t have to be complex. If you are struggling, pick a nursery rhyme as a starting point. The themes are often quite dark, and you may end up with a story that no one would ever know was originally inspired by one. Write from the point of view of one of the children of ‘The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe’, for example. With themes of poverty, child abuse and neglect, the piece could really pack a punch. It could be made into a more positive story though, perhaps by having the child escape to avoid being “whipped soundly”.

Characters – Keep the cast small. One or two characters works best, there is only space for those vital to the narrative. First person point of view (I ran, I wanted) is often used to very good effect, and I would choose it in the ‘Old Woman…’ example, to get the reader right inside the head of my main character. Also, avoid describing a character as brave, working class or whatever, and instead show these traits through their actions and use of language in dialogue.

Action – Create a single scene. The bulk of your story will probably take place in one ‘scene’ or event. Think of it like a seminal moment in a movie, a scene that can stand alone. In my example, I would pick the moment the child is creeping out of the house in the middle of the night with a bundle on their back to run away. The reader doesn’t need to be told everything that led up to this moment, they can infer from the context of the writing what has happened, and how high the stakes are.

Conflict – Give your hero a problem to overcome – This is necessary for any narrative of any length. With the demonstration story, the old woman/mother could catch the child in the act of escaping. This would provide a really thrilling scene with a high degree of peril.

Ending – Finish with a bang. In flash stories, endings are often ambiguous, or designed to make the reader think. Having said that, they do need to make sense with the rest of the story so far. The hero could be allowed to escape, they could be caught and punished, or they could stand up to, or even murder, the abusive parent.

Demo Story

Let’s take ‘The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe’, here’s how I’d follow each step in a (very quickly written!) flash fiction story.

I crept towards the heavy wooden door, careful to avoid the creakiest floorboards. The house was unnaturally quiet, my brothers and sisters all sent to bed with their bruises.

This opening couple of sentences tells the reader that it is night, the character is a child, the setting is a house, probably an old, creepy house, due to the creaky floorboards. An atmosphere of tension and fear has been introduced, the child clearly does not want to be discovered. I’ve also identified the theme of child abuse by the mention of bruises. This section, at 29 words long, is pulling its weight in terms of storytelling.

At the foot of the stairs, my backpack of clothes slipped from my shoulder and thumped onto the floor. I froze, breath held, dreading the foul squeal of my mother’s bedroom door. Nothing.

This section shows the character is running away, why else would they have packed a bag and be creeping downstairs in the middle of the night. The reader now knows the child is afraid of their mother, and the horror of the child is clear at the prospect of being discovered.

I carefully gathered up my bag and tiptoed across to the door. I turned the big iron key in the lock and grasped the doorknob.

“Where do you think you’re going?” mother sneered.

Here, I raise the reader’s hopes by almost letting the child escape, then bring in the conflict as the mother appears. I’ve included a few quick descriptors so far, about the key and door, which add to the atmosphere and setting, without adding too many words. You want to create a picture in your readers’ minds, you just don’t want to go on about it for too long.

I span around to face her, babbling excuses, my fingers scrabbling desperately behind my back. As she loomed out of the gloom, my hand closed on the knob and twisted it. She grabbed my arm as I flung open the door but I wrenched free of her talons. My bag flew across the hallway, scattering its meagre contents on the stairs behind me. I hurtled out down the garden path, her boots thundering, too close, at my back.

I throw the reader right into the action in this middle section, as the child tries to escape, and is pursued. At this point, I’ve written 173 words, and the story is in full swing, the reader is hopefully gripped and invested in the outcome for the main character.

Now for the ending. I know lots of writers, myself included, struggle to decide on one. It sometimes seems impossible to know how a certain story should finish, but finish it must. I have been known to write several alternatives and read each through to determine my favourite. As this is a quick example story, written just for this blog, I’m not going to lose sleep over it, and just have my character escape. But, as the story has dark themes, I want something of a sting in the tail. The prospect of the siblings left behind offers the perfect foil to the relief of the escape.

I leapt the fence, and dashed into the forest. The gate clanged shut behind her as she gave chase. By the edge of the wood I had a good lead, she was an old woman after all. I entered a field, smashing through corn that towered over my head. Surely she would not follow me in here. I slowed down and slipped stealthily between the rows. Finally, I stopped and listened for sounds of pursuit. There were none. The night was silent again, as if nothing had happened. Then, from within the leather walls of that distant house, came the old woman’s shouts of fury. I blinked hard as I turned my back on the crying of my brothers and sisters, and made good my escape.

I dropped in an ‘old woman’ reference here, and progressed to actually calling the mother ‘the old woman’ by the end. This, in conjunction with the ‘leather walls’ and ‘brothers and sisters’, explicitly references the nursery rhyme, though you could be more obvious if you wished. Equally, you could continue to call the villain ‘mother’, and remove the word ‘leather’. In that case, it would be much less likely anyone would identify the source of your inspiration.

A final word on word counts

This came in at 299 words. After jotting down the initial story, which ran to about 450, I decided I would trim to 300 words, a commonly used limit for flash fiction competitions. I always focus on writing the story first, without worrying too much about the word count. I usually find I can edit down a fairly large amount if need be.

Tense can provide Tension

As I was writing, I found myself slipping into present tense at times, and if this story was for any other purpose than a demonstration for the blog, I would probably experiment with tenses. Though not something I generally use, I suspect present tense would aid the immediacy of the story, and make it more exciting. That’s another fun thing about flash fiction. You can experiment, and it doesn’t take forever to do rewrites.

Happy writing!

Posted by Rachel in Blog, 0 comments