Having sold almost 30 short
stories to woman’s magazines (small potatoes compared to some of their writers,
and I’m still learning), I might be in a position to offer some advice, on how
to break into this market. However, I suspect anyone who regularly reads this
blog realises, by now, that the key ingredients to success for getting
published in any area of writing are mostly:
Hard work
Determination
Perseverance
And,
of course, an unlimited supply of your particular poison - caramel Tunnocks bars are my latest – to see
you through the good and bad times.
More
specifically for the womag market (that’s what it’s called) I would add:
Always
carry a notebook – you never know when an idea might strike
Read
the tabloids – I am often inspired by their tales and surveys
And,
of course, get to know the market. A brief summary of the various magazines,
according to my opinion is:
Take-a-Break
Fiction Feast – interested in a diverse range of stories – crime, humour,
twist-in-the-tail, romance, supernatural
Woman’s
Weekly – slightly more literary, often deal with ‘issues’ – the 2 stories I’ve
sold them touch upon bereavement and mental health.
The
People’s Friend – cosy, moral, uplifting family stories, about the young and
old, nostalgia, romance, inoffensive in every way.
The
Weekly News - will take the quirkier stories, likes twists-in-the-tail, plus
from the male POV as their readers are from both sexes.
Perhaps
it might be more useful, though, if I take you through some of my rejections
and what I actually think they mean, when an editor has said that my story is…
Too flat/level – whilst
the scene and characters don’t need to be big, the story mustn’t be too slight.
What are the stakes? Is there any conflict? What revelation is there by the
end? Does the main character change?
Not engaging enough –
do we care enough about the characters? Is the story visual? Does the plot suck
us in so that we want to read on?
Too stilted – read your
story out loud, especially sections of dialogue that run to more than a
sentence – would a real person actually say that?
Too real – if the story
is in anyway based on your own experience, don’t make it sound too
autobiographical. Perhaps write it in the 3rd person instead of the
1st. Remember, it is fiction, not a memoir.
Finally,
there will always be what I’d call random reasons, for rejection.
- we’ve just
bought a story like that
- our
readers don’t like pretend characters (huh? No one told me Father Christmas
wasn’t real!)
- our publisher
owns Friends Reunited and wouldn’t like the number of times you’ve mentioned
Facebook.
I guess sometimes, you just can’t win!
Womag writing is rewarding, fun and an excellent way
of earning money from short stories. Whilst it’s a shrinking market, with many
of the magazines now preferring celebrity gossip stories to fiction, the
magazine fiction specials have their fanbase and fingers crossed, will ride out
the recession.
For anyone interested,
there is a Woman’s Weekly roadshow 13-15th September 2012, near the Trafford
Centre in Manchester,
where you can book yourself into seminars on how to write fiction for them:
Best of luck!
Samantha Tonge has sold short stories to Take-a-Break
Fiction Feast, Woman’s Weekly, The People’s Friend and The Weekly News.
Currently, she has stories appearing in the 1st Sept and 8th Sept 2012
issues of The People’s Friend.
Also, Samantha writes romantic comedy novels and her
agent is currently seeking homes for Doubting
Abbey and Must Love Ghosts. She
has two children, two kittens, two rabbits, and, um, just one husband.
13 comments:
Great post, Sam!
I think your 'reading between rejection' breakdown was spot on.
xxPat
Thanks, Pat! Well, as you may know, you learn to read between them after receiving, ahem, quite a few:)
Sam x
Great post, Sam. I especially like the 'reading between rejections'. Sometimes it isn't until after I have recieved a rejection that I slap my forehead and wonder why I hadn't spotted that problem before sending the story off, lol. But in general I try and learn from all rejections I receive (which is a lot). I think that's all we can do :)
Alana x
Hi Alana,
Yes, i agree, sometimes it seems obvious - after subbing - why the story has been rejected, and that is very frustrating! But, like we often say, any feedback is great as it's the main way we can learn - from our mistakes!
Sam x
Thanks for visiting Strictly, Sam. I admire your success and perseverance. I can't for the life of me write a short story. I just can't!
I used to say that, Gillian, and then after 4 years of writing novels, managed to write one for a competition. I came nowhere, but it seemed to spark a part of my brain that suddenly realized perhaps it could think of a beginning, middle and end within 1000 words!
Go on, try it!
And thanks for having me:)
Sam x
Good post Sam - I always knew you'd get there one day :)
I think the good thing about rejections is we all learn from them. Yes they smart at first, but we learn to grow a very thick skin and most importantly not to tale it personally. It's not a rejection of us or even our writing, but of the story itself for - as you pointed out so well - various reasons.
May you continue to have lots of success :)
Thanks Tina.
Yes, you are absolutely right, Tina, very valid point and one that's quite hard to take on board, when you are starting out, because it always feels so raw.
One recent rejection said my story was 'dull' and i didn't even flinch. Blimey, must have a rhino hide, now:)
Sam x
What a great post. So much valuable advice here, thank you Sam!
Thanks for an insightful overview, Sam. I always found magazine stories a bit of a mystery, but I can see a little more clearly now.
Rejects? I've had a few, but then again, too few to mention...not!
I'm the same as you, Gillian, I can't for the life of me work out what's a short story (in my head) or part of something longer. I get so confused I end up doing neither :/ Great advice, Sam, thanks for stopping by *rushes out to get People's Friend*
Thanks, Caroline!
Let's agree not to count, Derek:) I've a nasty feeling, including novel rejects, i'm well into teh hundreds now. But then Stephen King had 700 rejects, so i'm in good company!
Thanks for asking me, Debs:)
Sam x
Thanks Caroline.
Fascinating with great insight. All best and thanks for sharing.
Mary
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