Showing posts with label jillian weise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jillian weise. Show all posts

Monday, May 24, 2010

Bohemian Rhapsody: Tonight's Reading Room

If you're around and feelin' bohemian tonight, you don't want to miss the local reading series: The Emrys Reading Room, 7 pm, at the Bohemian Cafe in downtown Greenville, W. Stone Ave.

The Reading Room is a place to hear authors read from their work, eat and drink, be merry, and generally act bohemian. [Black berets and cigarette holders optional.]

Tonight's readers are:

poet, essayist, short story writer, novelist
 and
author of four novels. The latest: the award-winning An Unfinished Score.
 

The Reading Room is brought to you by Emrys.

Unless you live hundreds of miles away and can't make the drive, it would be great to see you there tonight.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A Few Tips to Keep You Out of the Slush Pile

From Jillian Weise's excellent class for the Writing Room, a few do's and don'ts  that drew gasps from the audience. [Okay, I'm exaggerating-- not gasps, just mad scribbling as they wrote everything down.] Jillian-- prolific and talented poet, novelist, short story writer, essayist, and editor of the South Carolina Review,  suggests these Do's when you submit your work to magazines:

Use 12 point Times New Roman font.

Include a header with your name, address, phone number and email on every page.

Simultaneously submit, and keep a spreadsheet of your submissions. Jillian submits new work every 3 months, wave after wave. When rejections come in, she deals with them in the next 90 day wave. When acceptances come in, contact the other publications to which you submitted and let them know. 

Do use Duotrope's Digest to research and target magazines appropriate for your work. And--of course-- read and subscribe to magazines, and be thoroughly familiar with the publications you submit to.

Write a clear and succinct cover letter
...and speaking of cover letters:
  •  Keep it short and to the point.
  • Address to the editor by name if possible.
  • Don't end with "Cheers." 
  • Don't mention your blog unless it has higher number than Slate.
  • Don't kiss ass, with gushing compliments about how wonderful the publication is. Save that for a separate letter to the editor. [In other words, let your work speak for itself.] 
  • Do mention if you haven't been published before. Seems counter-intuitive, but magazines love to be the first to publish someone, and discover talent.
Don't:
call the magazine to check on your work...withdraw your call...don't call the magazine for any reason.

forget you can also submit online.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

How to Avoid the Slush Pile

I aim to find out tomorrow. So, oops...my title today should be How to Avoid the Slush Pile? And by Friday, with luck, my blog post will be Here's How to Avoid the Slush Pile!

The Writing Room's class, by that title [the former one] is tomorrow, Thursday, at 6:30.  The prolific, talented, and award-winning Jillian Weise will be teaching. If you're in the area, join us.

Info and how to register:

Jilllian Weise: How to Avoid the Slush Pile 
What happens to your manuscript when it arrives in the office of a magazine? Who reads it? What are they looking for? What are they appalled by? How do they make decisions about the work they publish? When can you expect to hear a response? This class will focus on the business side of creative writing, and give you a few Dos and Don’ts to help you navigate the publishing world. Instructor has worked on the editorial board of The Paris Review and currently works as an editor for The South Carolina Review.
Thursday Feb. 25
6:30- 8:30 pm
Innovate Building Conference Room,148 River St. Greenville
$25/ $20 Emrys members

About Jillian:
Jillian Weise's work has appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, Tin House and Washington Square, among other magazines. Her novel, The Colony, will be published in March. Her  books of poetry include Translating the Body (All Nations Press, 2006) and The Amputee's Guide to Sex (Soft Skull Press, 2007). A Creative Writing Fulbright Fellow in Argentina in 2007, she is currently an Assistant Professor at Clemson
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