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How I Sold My First Story
by
Michael A. Burstein
Copyright
© 1995 by Michael A. Burstein. All rights reserved.
First appearance in Proper Boskonian 36, December 1995.
I have enjoyed reading science fiction for as far back as I
can remember, and I always wanted to write it as well. Like
many
of us, I suppose, as a teenager I committed a lot of failed
stories to pen. I even went so far as to submit them to some of
the major science fiction markets. I still remember the pile of
personal rejection notes I had received from George Scithers at
Amazing Stories; at the time, I didn't realize that every story
submitted to him got a personal note.
I gave up sending out stories at the age of 14 or so, and got
through high school and college without doing much in the way of
fiction writing. Oh, I did an occasional story here and there,
and I even submitted a mystery story to some of the major
mystery
magazines, but that was about it. I guess I had decided that
although writing was fun, I wasn't very good at it, or it simply
didn't hold the appeal for me that it once had.
Then I entered Physics graduate school.
There is something about graduate school that can make a
person
feel contracted, almost irrelevant. You're asked to remain
intensely focused on one particular subject, and heaven forbid
it
if you express interest in Having a Life outside of your field
or
discipline. I was fortunate, in that I didn't get involved in a
research group right away, but I saw what friends of mine were
going through once they had joined a group. Their group leader
would expect them to submerge themselves -- mind, body and soul
--
into their work. Already I could tell that this wasn't the life
for me, and that I needed some outside release from the world of
equations and problem sets.
I was also fortunate in that I met the woman who would later
become my wife during my first year of graduate school. She was
also a science fiction fan, and in early 1992, she took me to my
first real fan run con. I was hooked. All these people,
sharing
many of the same interests as me -- and all these panels with
real
science fiction professionals spouting their opinions! The
parties, the filking, the Ôzines -- the ambience. That Monday,
I
went to my computer with a renewed vigor for my goal -- to
become
a science fiction writer.
I spent the next two years paralleling my pursuit of a
Master's
degree in science with an attempt to become a master in the
field
of science fiction. Oddly enough, I never had problems coming
up
with ideas for stories. It was putting those stories into
readable, interesting form that gave me problems. I wince when
I
remember an early attempt to exploit the Copenhagen
interpretation
in Physics, by writing a story about God being the ultimate
observer. A friend I showed it to had two comments -- it was a
great lecture on quantum mechanics, and the descriptions of the
dinner that the two main characters ate made him hungry.
Needless
to say, I had a lot further to go.
So I did two things. I read, and I wrote. I read every
single
useful book on writing that I could get ahold of, books on
characterization, plot, structure, dialogue -- and of course,
books on writing science fiction. I also wrote as much as I
could, when and where I could, and for a brief time gave up
discouraged when my stuff sounded wooden and mechanical.
Fortunately, a chance participation in an SCA dancing event gave
me new inspiration, because one of the people I met there struck
me as a really great character. I went home that night and
wrote
a thousand word character sketch based on her, which I later
turned into a 6,000 word story. That story still hasn't sold,
but
that wasn't so important. What was important was that it helped
me break a period of writer's block, during which time I had
thought I would never write anything that sounded good again.
I left graduate school in 1993 with my degree but without any
story credits to my name. I took a job as a high school teacher
in New York City, which made me even more eager to sell a short
story, so I could establish my identity as someone creative.
Finally, two things happened near the end of 1993. First, I
received my first personal rejection letter in recent history, a
short note from Stan Schmidt at Analog, who turned down another
failed attempt of mine to break into the "Probability Zero"
section of the magazine. Secondly, I got an idea for a story
that
intrigued me, that grabbed ahold and would simply not let go. I
got my first idea that needed, that demanded, to be written.
The idea was based on something that I heard at a lot of
cons.
I've been on the Internet since 1987, and a lot of people in the
world of science fiction -- and now, in the world at large --
have
made elaborate claims about the role of the Internet, to the
point
where one person said that by the year 2000 everyone would have
an
e-mail address and free access to the so-called Information
Superhighway. I was on a panel with someone who said that, and
I
was one of only two panelists who pointed out that the "free
information" out there was not free -- at the very least, you
need
to be able to afford a computer, modem, telephone line, and an
Internet provider. I decided that I wanted to point this out to
people in a science fiction story.
Of course, the Internet isn't science fiction anymore, so I
had
to extrapolate a little. Instead of writing about a poor person
not having access to the Internet, I created the idea of a
disadvantaged boy not having access to the school of the future,
a
Virtual Reality classroom in which students from all over the
country could interact with each other and with a teacher.
(AT&T
and NYNEX are now touting primitive versions of this concept on
some television ads.) The boy, who I made a black student
living
in Harlem, New York City, hates his decrepit home school, and
one
day finds a pair of spex and sneaks into a private Telepresence
School. And after enjoying a morning of learning and fun, he is
found out...
I wrote a version of this story, and sent it to Stan Schmidt.
Oddly enough, I got the story back on the same weekend as
Lunacon
'94, when I had a chance to have lunch with Stan and a few other
people. Stan hadn't quite rejected the story; he had typed up a
one-page note explaining the problems in the story, and had
enclosed a few newspaper clippings about kids sneaking into
schools in better districts. But nowhere in the note did he
explicitly ask me to revise the story. So I asked him at
Lunacon
if he wanted to see another version, and he laughed and told me
yes.
I took a few weeks to expand the story a bit, involving the
character of the teacher more, a woman sympathetic to my
protagonist's plight. But I got it back from Stan again, with a
note that it was not quite there yet, and still needed work.
By this point, I had been accepted by the 1994 Clarion
Science
Fiction and Fantasy Writer's Workshop in East Lansing, Michigan.
I wrote back to Stan, saying that I was going to Clarion, and
that
I'd have the story for him in publishable form by the time I
returned.
Although my attendance at Clarion is an important part of
this
story, I've covered my Clarion experience in another article
which
should appear in Mimosa 17 (but which I'd be happy to pass on to
anyone who wants to see it). With respect to my first sale,
though, let me just say that Howard Waldrop is a god. We sat
down
for over an hour going over what the problems were in my story,
and what could be done to make it work a lot better. By the
time
we were done with our session, I had two pages of notes on what
to
do with the story.
Clarion ended on July 30. I finished a third version of the
story in late August and mailed it to Analog. By October, I had
the cheerful news of my first acceptance, which finally appeared
as "TeleAbsence" in the July 1995 issue. A second sale to
Analog,
inspired by the circumstances of my first sale, happened almost
right afterwards, and "Sentimental Value" appeared in the
October
1995 issue.
And so, after either ten or three years of trying, depending
on
how you count, I found myself a published science fiction
writer.
Although I'm still very, very much a neopro, a lot of people who
are in the same situation I was just a little over a year ago
have
asked me how I did it. Well, this whole article is about how I
did it, but the problem with stories like this is that they are
so
personal it is hard to glean any useful advice from them. So,
finally, I would like to give a little piece of advice to anyone
who wants to get published in science fiction, tangible advice
that anyone can follow.
If you want to sell their first story: Write. Write and write
and write and write. And maybe, like me, you'll be lucky.
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