Archive for June, 2009

EXCITING CONTEST PRIZE NEWS!

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Attention all you LongShortStories Short Story Contest entrants! Something absolutely wonderful just happened!

Within the past two hours today here at LongShortStories Short Story Contest Central, we were thrilled to receive an e-mail from our LongShortStories Web site designer and friend, Eugene Barnes.

Thanks to Eugene’s generosity, we have a fantastic NEW FIRST PRIZE!

Eugene has donated a basic Web site package (a package worth approximately $800) as our NEW FIRST PRIZE!

This First Prize package consists of:

1 year domain name (or transfer of existing domain with 1 year extension)
Design and development of a basic Web site up to five pages.
Includes a contact page which emails messages to you.
Includes an installation of WordPress blog customized to visually complement the main Web site.
Includes installation of Google Analytics.
Includes up to 40 email accounts.
6 months of basic level fully managed Web hosting (currently priced at $19 per month)

Some limitations apply. Prize may not be exchanged for cash.

Imagine, writer friends, what a professionally-designed Web site of your very own could do for your writing career! Take it from me, it’s what you need in this day and age!

As a result of this brand-new First Prize offering, we here at LongShortStories have decided to pump up the prize volume for Second and Third Prize!

Our Second Prize winner will receive US$150 and a free One Year subscription (or renewal) to LongShortStories.

Our Third Prize winner will receive US$100 and a free One Year subscription (or renewal) to LongShortStories.

We realize that these big changes have come just a few days before the June 30, 2009 deadline of the first of the two LongShortStories 2009 ShortStory Contests, so we reserve the right to move any entries received up to this late date into the second 2009 contest (which begins July 1 and ends December 31, 2009) so everyone has an equal chance to WIN BIG.

And get this!

Eugene Barnes is offering this first First Prize to the winner of our 2009 Contest season, and THEN  he is offering ANOTHER  $800 Web site package in 2010 for the First Prize winner. WOW!

So go to our www.LongShortStories.com Home Page, click on the Contests icon, and submit your terrific short story entries for 2009. May the best ORIGINAL, UNPUBLISHED entries win! That could be YOU!

Spotlight on Eugene Barnes

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Two years ago Wayne Long contacted me to get a price quote and proposal for website design and development.

At first it seemed like an unlikely “partnership.” Here was a person who was immersed in the creative art of the written word enlisting the services of someone who hadn’t read a novel or short story in years.

Not that I don’t enjoy reading. But my Attention Deficit Disorder has always made the pastime a challenge. And an ever shrinking amount of free time due to my business has pushed reading for pleasure further down on my list of priorities.

Wayne’s idea was something I hadn’t encountered before. I had created numerous websites for businesses large and small selling everything from t-shirts to fiber optic data transmission service. But a website that offered subscriptions to an author’s own collection of short stories — could this idea really work?

Two years later I now believe Wayne will achieve his goals. Wayne is very dedicated to his website and his writing. He doesn’t let disappointment deter him. He has the determination and patience to keep going no matter what.

I have seen many who believed that slapping a website on the Internet would be their path to instant success. Most give up when the money doesn’t come rolling in quite as fast as they had hoped. Not Wayne. He keeps working away at his dream. Testing this. Adjusting that. Spending time to learn the ins and outs of using a website to achieve his goals. And when something doesn’t work, he strives to find out why, makes some changes, and tries again.

And, of course, he keeps writing those stories. He actually wrote one dedicated to me. I liked it. It was clever, entertaining, and just when I thought I knew how it would end, he surprised me with an unexpected twist. It will not surprise me at all to see his writings end up on a bestseller list someday.

Happy Second Anniversary, Wayne. I look forward to celebrating many more with you… and to finding more time to read for pleasure again.

Eugene Barnes
http://www.eugenebarnes.com

Let me give a humongous THANK YOU to one of the best friends this short story writer could ever have …

Eugene Barnes, Web site designer extraordinaire! 

He has done more for the birth and first two years of LongShortStories and the development of its e-commerce store than any other human caregiver. It’s like Eugene and I have been expectant parents, then proud new parents, and now we are chasing our new toddler around the global entertainment playground, trying to protect it, nourish it, and ultimately trying to keep up with all the technological toys that can positively benefit our growing offspring.

Eugene, I’d say our LongShortStories kid definitely has your brains!  A digital Wunderkind!

But I’ll gladly take credit for this child’s sparkling vocabulary and how she transfixes her Dada and his worldwide friends with her wondrous storytelling!  Short! Sassy! And marvelously unafraid!

That’s our baby! Happy Birthday!

Wayne C. Long

Writer/Editor/Internet Publisher

www.LongShortStories.com

Where the Short Story LIVES!

Spotlight on Wayne Bartelt

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

I met Wayne Long where many literary people meet, at a Barnes and Noble book store. Book stores are treasure houses for readers, writers, dilettantes, kids whose eyes sparkle when they walk in the door, and adults who swoop down on new fiction. Wayne was buying a book and I was selling it to him. When I realized his name was Wayne, I had to know what made him tick. Even with different names, it doesn’t take long for writers to identify themselves, but with namesakes, 30 seconds is a long time. It took that long for me to find out about his website and tell him about mine. There’s a kinship among writers as there is between doctors, lawyers, and probably thieves. And it doesn’t matter in what genre they write, a bond forms quickly.

 

Because I’m a retired minister, I’ve been writing almost all my life. Near seventy sermons a year including holiday occasions, weddings, funerals, and social events helps one figure out where most of the commas go. Only since retirement some 10 years ago have I broadened my scope from sermons—they don’t sell well—to books in the religious inspiration genre. I’ve published articles in national magazines, maintained a weekly newspaper column, written several unpublished books (just for practice), and currently have a manuscript with a literary agent. What that’s done for me is to emphasize how I write rather than how I talk, and sharpen my critique skills.

 

When I read some of Wayne Long’s stories, I realized I could learn something from this fellow. Wayne’s emotions run deep and match his command of the language. He doesn’t just write, he paints word pictures that pack a wallop. He describes life as a reality to be enjoyed and revered. He doesn’t slobber over the kinks and catastrophes of life; he deals with them in a straightforward, scrappy way. Yet, the story always seems to come to an end at the right place with a satisfying close that makes me smile.

 

Wayne reminds me of the first servant in Jesus’ Parable of the Talents. The parable tells us that God gives each of us different talents and expects us to use them in his service and in service to others. In Jesus’ day, a talent was a sum of money, but now days we use the word talents meaning skills, strengths, and natural abilities. The first servant was given five talents and used them wisely, gaining five more. The second servant was given three talents and gained three more. The parable describes one of the great truths of life: those who work hard with what they have get more benefits and blessings as rewards. It doesn’t matter how much they start with, it’s what they do with what they have that counts. Double that for writers like Wayne Long.

 

Someone once said there’s a book in everyone. That may be but some have it buried so deeply inside no one will ever read it. The wannabes are like the useless servant in the Parable of the Talents. He was given one talent and buried it in the ground lest he lose it, incurring his master’s wrath. That’s another great lesson of life. Those who have been given gifts will use them or lose them. A husband who can’t find a million dollar job can be a loving husband. A wife who can’t boil an egg can be a sympathetic help-meet.

 

Congratulations, Wayne, for coming up with an innovative way to grab us with hard-to-forget stories.

 

Wayne Bartelt

 

Thank you, Wayne Bartelt, for your kind support of LongShortStories. Since you have a pipeline to Heaven, I am certain that your inspired words carry a blessing for us all. I promise to continue to be that wise servant, not only in the eyes of God, but in the eyes of readers everywhere.

LongShortStories readers are encouraged to visit Wayne Bartelt’s excellent Web site at www.atouchofcomfort.net.  

Spotlight on Don Keith

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Don Keith is a man to be reckoned with. Don Keith is one of the best writers out there today. Don Keith is my good friend and we are linked by our mutual love of writing and the fabulous hobby we both share — ham radio. His call sign is N4KC and mine is K9YNF.

When I invited Don to contribute a Guest Post for the second anniversary of LongShortStories, he didn’t even hesitate, as busy as he is these days. He even offered to contribute an autographed copy of one of his recent books, THE ICE DIARIES, for our prize drawing.

 

The Ice Diaries -- USS NAUTILUS

 

If there is one thing Don knows about, it is words. So let’s let Don share with us his practical wisdom. Friends … I give you Don Keith.

Words

By Don Keith

How much do you think about words?  Not much, I wager.  You string them together, speak them, and convey some message to a particular person or to anybody who can hear them.  You sit at a computer or whip out the cell phone and type a message—for many or for one special someone—and then hit “Send,” launching those words off on their way.  We utter, speak, shout, sing, spit, whisper, and coo them.  We rattle them off with little thought or we choose them carefully, peeling them off like the slimmest slice of cheese.  We scratch them with a knife in tree bark, leave a trail of graphite on paper, or form pixels on a phosphorescent screen.  Still, most of us toss them around as if they had no power beyond the simple meaning we think we are imparting. 

Not true.  Words have more power than most of us could ever imagine.  “Sticks and stones may break my bones but words can never hurt me.”  Sure!  Who among us have not tossed out words at another with whom we were upset—maybe initiated them more harshly than we would ever have had we not been so…well…out of control of our words…and thus caused wasp-sting hurt?  Or told someone we loved them for expediency and then scatted when the person for whom they were intended actually took them seriously?

Shakespeare captured the human condition in the words of the children of two feuding families, two young people who just happened to be in love with each other.  President Roosevelt sent men off to battle and launched unrestricted warfare with, “This is a day that will live in infamy.”  Hemingway, in the sparsest of prose, showed bravery and cowardice in his flawed characters.  Sinclair Lewis peeled back the veil and revealed corruption with words that changed how things were.

Carefully crafted words, arranged like a necklace or tiara, can sparkle and glow, enhance beauty, inspire loyalty, incite rebellion.  Rhyme them, sing them, chant them or sign them to add to their emotional power and persuasion.

Choose them carefully to paint a picture.  Can you better see someone who is “watching her boyfriend walk away,” or someone who “cranes her neck, stands on her toes like a ballerina braced against the splintered bridge railing, trying to catch the last sunlit glimpse of his shock of wheat straw hair?”  An old man can “walk quickly to the mailbox and back.”  But he can also “shuffle his feet so hard he raises little dust devils in the dirt-and-gravel driveway.  He is hurrying to the rusty old mailbox as if the bills and circulars might evaporate before he gets there to claim them.  He drops the rusty door, withdraws the mail, and then considers each one of them for a moment, ignoring the cars that pass by where he stands at the edge of the pavement. Finally, he realizes the letter he is looking for is not there, and then starts back again to the sanctuary of the screened porch.  But now he moves slowly, his head down, the windowed envelopes and garish junk mail stuffed in the pocket of his overalls.”

Does that mean that more words are better?  Of course not.  At least not necessarily.  Better words are better.  Descriptive words.  Words that put a picture in the mind of the reader or listener.  Is it clearer for a lady to “walk” or to “sashay?”  For a child to “cry” or to “squall?”  For a dog to “drink his water” or to “slurp up the water?” Is it more powerful for a minister to “preach a sermon” or to “fling salvation at the congregation with fistfuls of fire and brimstone?”  Or to “lull the crowd into a stupor, his words a humming, numbing sing-song.”

But you get the point.  If you are writer or speaker, think about the words you use.  Choose them carefully to achieve the purpose you intend.  If you are a reader or listener, seek out those who use words wisely, effectively, even sparsely.  You will be the better for it.

The singing group the Bee Gees said it quite well in a song called, fittingly, “Words:”

You think that I don’t even mean a single word I say.  It’s only words, and words are all I have, to take your heart away.

Don Keith is the author of over twenty books.  He writes both fiction and non-fiction, and his submarine thriller Firing Point, which has not yet been published, will soon be a major motion picture from Original Films.  His web site is www.donkeith.com.

Spotlight on George Angus

Monday, June 8th, 2009

I met today’s guest on the social networking Web site StumbleUpon. What drew me to him first off was his avatar. I mean, how could you not love a smiling Alaskan bald guy in a kilt! I soon found George to be an affable writer with the humor of a teenage prankster. The kind of guy you might land in detention with back in high school!

Employing his trademark youthful charm, George inspires writers every day through his blog at Tumblemoose Writing Services www.tumblemoose.com. In addition to writing exceptional Web content, he has had success with his e-books published at Smashwords.com. The Inspired Query Letter and The Writing Experience have sold or downloaded nearly 500 copies in a little over two months. That, my friends, says a LOT about my talented writer friend George Angus. Now let’s let him tell us in his own words what being a writer means to him. And could mean to you!

I had no idea I could write.  I had no aspirations TO write.  No visions of book signings while jet-setting around the globe.  In high school, I would argue with my English teachers about the fallacy of learning grammar and sentence structure – hey, I could read so what difference did it make if my subjects agreed with my verbs.

 

So now I’m a writer.  Go figure.

 

It happened almost by accident, really.  I was working as an Emergency Medical Services trainer for a non-profit organization when I wrote an article for the newsletter about a medical device.  Well, the feedback about the article was tremendous and the article got picked up by a national company newsletter.  In my mind, I didn’t do anything special – I just wrote what I thought and wrote it like I would speak it.

 

Therein lies the key to successful writing.  It is all about voice.  Yes, there needs to be some technical skill involved, but that can come later.  Anyone can learn the grammatical technicalities but without a strong and true voice it’s all for naught.

 

Voice matters no matter what type of writing you do.  Even with formal, technical writing your voice should stand out.  Much of my initial writing was for textbooks and trade journals.  The inner you needs to shine in all of your writing endeavors.

 

For those of you who stick to fiction ventures, voice is important as are a few other things.  A writer reads.  Read a lot of the genre that you like the most, this is most likely the genre that will generate the ideas for stories that appeal to you.  Set time aside to read.

 

It can be very intimidating when you walk into a book store and look at all of the hundreds of books written by hundreds of different authors.   Pay them no mind.  This is not a competition.  If you stick to what you know to be a good story and if you do all of the non-writing work that is required to market your work, you have gone far and above the thousands of wannabe writers out there.

 

Also, a writer writes.  True story right there.  You need to write every day.  Want an eye opener?  Write one page per day and at the end of a year, you’ve got a decent sized novel finished.  Don’t try and make it perfect at first – that is why we have revisions.  Just get it on paper.  Write, write, write.

 

I’m glad that Wayne offered me this guest post opportunity as part of his two year anniversary celebration.  LongShortStories is a fantastic venue to showcase the great fiction that Wayne writes.  When you read his stories, pay attention to his unique voice and style.  Those components bring life to his stories and color to his characters.  Reading these stories is your opportunity to learn from a true master of the craft.

 

Thanks for having me, Wayne.  Congratulations on the two year anniversary!

Thank you, George! You’re an amazing friend!

Anniversary Greetings From One of the Best!

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

Successful short story writers are often the busiest writers of all!

And yet, when I checked my LongShortStories e-mail June 1, 2009, there it was … a quick show of support from one of the BEST:

Hi, Wayne.

I wish you — and your writing — the very best

Take care.

Ben

My friend Benjamin Percy, currently Assistant Professor in the MFA program at Iowa State University, is a marvelously brave fiction writer.

His first collection of short stories was published in 2006. Its title: The Language of Elk. It’s a storytelling masterpiece!

His powerful short story Refresh, Refresh not only won the Pushcart Prize in 2006 but has just gone into film production this May. Watch out! This film will clean house at all the major independent film festivals!

Much more could be said about my short story writing friend Ben Percy, but in this business where “less is more” really means just that, I’ll step out of the shared spotlight of this moment to let the sun shine brightly on this unique and kind man who made me feel like a king today.

Thank you, Benjamin Percy! May Creator bless your tipi and all who reside within it!

Happy Second Anniversary, LongShortStories!

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Ta-DAH!

Yes, today is a big, bold, brassy kickoff day to our month-long second anniversary celebration here at LongShortStories … Where the Short Story LIVES!

Here, have a party hat, some yummy cake and ice cream, and something appropriate to drink!

Welcome friends, and thank you for all your support!

We’ll give you a sampling of what’s in store this month:

Guest postings by some of the best writers in the business.

Some really cool prize drawings.

And get this!

The LongShortStories Short Story Contest now going on (with the entry deadline of June 30, 2009) is so proud to announce that the cash prize pot has just been DOUBLED by yet another generous anonymous donor who believes in LongShortStories!

This means that

FIRST PRIZE now jumps to US$150 and a free One Year subscription (or renewal) to LongShortStories!

SECOND PRIZE now jumps to US$100!

THIRD PRIZE now jumps to US$50!

And there’s still more big LongShortStories news to come!

Excuse me, friends, while I mix and mingle with all of you during this festive month.

Thanks for all your happy well-wishes. Your e-mails are welcome!

Thanks for subscribing!

More cake?

Wayne C. Long

Writer/Editor/Internet Publisher

www.LongShortStories.com