Tuesday, July 3, 2018

42 Stories Anthology





Call for submissions:
42-Word Stories Anthology
An anthology of 42 categories of 42 selected works of 42-word microfiction stories, and 42 art pieces, one per chapter. 

That's potentially 1,764 authors in one book. 


All submissions must contain a beginning, middle, and end. AFTER SUBMITTING, CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDERS FOR EMAILS FROM THE EDITOR.

Deadline: Until filled.
Release date: TBA


Word count: 42 words exactly, which does not include the title: roughly 42 characters including spaces and punctuationDO NOT make the title 42 words. 

Use this counter:
https://wordcounter.net/

Every category (chapter) will have a Story of Excellence Award selected by a guest judge. 


Winners receive:


1) Either $0.42 payment or the option to donate the money to a pot that will go to United Through Reading.


2) Their story read (by themselves or a friend) on YouTube with all 42 selected Story of Excellence Award winners.


3) An award certificate signed by the compiler of the 42 Stories Anthology. 


4) A blog, email, and media spot with other winners that will be read by about 5,000 subscribers.


5) Writing the introduction to the chapter their story won the award in and their name on the first page of that category as the Story of Excellence Award winner. 


6) Possibly more.


Submission guidelines
Email subject: 42SUB_Category_AUTHOR INITIALS
Example: 42SUB_SF_DNA

Don't email asking "is it sub, SUB, or subs or SUBS?" We aren't that nitpicky.  


Specifics of your story that goes into the body of the email:


YOUR TITLE HERE (ROUGHLY "between 40 and 44" 42 Characters INCLUDING spaces)


by YOUR WRITER NAME HERE


Your story here



42-word third person bio here

Example of your email:


Dear BAM,

The name's Person Name Writer, email: person@name.com. Below is my Science Fiction, “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy in 42-Words" and bio. One or two more sentences optional. 


No attachments

NO ENTRY FEE

See the example at the bottom to help you

Do not send more than one story with the same name. The goal is to publish 1,764 different writers. The more writers in the book, the more people who will talk about the anthology, so before sending multiple submissions, ask yourself if it's necessary. Instead, consider asking other writers to send their stories. If you have to send more than one piece for consideration, use a pen name for each piece. 

In addition to your nom de plume, you can use the same bio. However, if you try and sneak your real name into the bio of a multiple sub, your story will be rejected. Your stories will all be rejected if you do not follow this guideline

Last point: all submissions are considered separately, so do not send multi-subs together in one email. 


No plagiarism


Payment: Aside from name recognition, ONLY winners of the Story of Excellence in their genre will receive the award and $.42 which can optionally go into a charity pot. At this time, the project cannot afford to pay everyone.

Most of the money earned from book sales will pay for anthology expenses such as editing, art, beta reads, and advertising. 

The anthology will be posted on 
Amazon.com and other platforms. 


Rule: Check your work. It’s easy to have a grammar-loving friend read the piece as a second pair of eyes. VERY IMPORTANT: Format: Make sure your subject line was written properly. 

Response time: About six months from the submission date, maybe longer. 

RIGHTS and FACTS:

By submitting your work, you agree and confirm that we can publish your piece in the anthology. However, you will have 30 days after acceptance to withdraw your story if you change your mind about having it in the anthology. More...
You grant the 42 Stories Anthology and staff first serial rights to your original work submitted. Rights revert back to you the author one year after publication. If your work is that of plagiarism, you agree to take full responsibility legally and otherwise for work you have claimed is originally yours.
Moreover, by submitting a story, you agree that we can reformat and make punctuation changes without your prior consent. If the story is formatted a specific way that you prefer, let us know in your cover letter. However, we will contact you if we want to change any of the words.


Send:

Nothing that's been published anywhere.

No Erotica. 

No Animal Abuse.



VERY IMPORTANT: Format the subject line correctly. 

No simultaneous submissions. 


Send us your best work. 


42 categories:

VERY IMPORTANT: Format the subject line correctly.

Note: Categories with few submissions are subject to alterations. 

1. Alternate Reality
(Alternative History)
filled
2. Apocalyptic
filled
3. Clown
filled
4. Craft of Writing 

Craft of Writing details: If you have won any prestigious awards in writing, or are a publisher, agent, or editor and do not have stories in the anthology already, you can send the following for our consideration. Persons in this chapter will receive $42 and act as guest judges for the Best Of piece for one of the other 41 categories, which is approximately 11 pages of reading. Specifics and Q & A here: https://bamwrites.blogspot.com/2021/08/42-stories-anthology-craft-of-writing.html

5. Crime
filled
6. Culture
filled
7. Dystopia/Utopia
filled
8. Escape
filled
9. Fairy Tale
filled
10. Fantasy
filled
11. Fight
filled
12. Macabre & Morbid
filled
13. Hitchhiker's Guide to History or HGH
filled
14. Horror
filled
15. Humor
filled
16. Impairment
filled 
  17. Indigenous 
filled
18. Monster
filled
19. Mystery
filled
20. Mythopoeia
filled
21. Noir
filled
22. Oddball
filled
23. Outer space
filled
24. Paranormal
filled
25. Parents
filled
26. Poetic Prose
filled
27. Romance
filled
28. Satire
filled
29. Science Fiction
filled
30. Siblings
filled
31. Sports
filled
32. Steampunk
filled
33. Sword & Sorcery
filled
34. Thriller / Suspense
filled
35. Tragedy
filled
36. Trapped
filled
37. Travel story
filled

38. Vampire
filled
39. War
      filled
40. Werewolf
filled
41. Western
filled
42. Zombie
filled
  Example submission:

   Email subject line: 42Subs_CLOWN_EAJ
   Hello. My email is eaj@eaj.com. This story would fit into your clown or monster categories. Thank you. 

 MY FIRST AND LAST ENCOUNTER WITH A MONSTER
by Eval Allan Jaeger

          I was seven years old when the clown attacked. 
      Right in my face, zany. Scary white hands. 
      Aggressive smile. “Hi, little boy," he exclaimed. "Do you       like balloo—ugh.” 
      Bozo never saw my fist coming. 
      Blood slid down from his squeaky red nose.
         

         Bio
    Eval Allan Jaeger was a blogger who went by Devilsthrill back in the Myspace days. He had the number one read blog then vanished from the Internet until the Project 42 Stories Anthology launched. He looks like Don Quixote and is fictitious.
           




Submit your story through Submittable
or email it here     (42anthologysubs@gmail.com)                                   
         
All entries will be automatically subscribed to BAM Writes' email updates. It's easy to unsubscribe. But this will keep you informed of the project's progress.

Like our page


Here's a Q&A
Anthology updated NUMBERS 

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Darlene’s Behind Mount Rushmore



If I could have categories of best friends, Darlene Campos would without a doubt be my best “writer” friend.



Before meeting Darlene, my only sister had died, and I had been very sick. She was a sister I needed. She didn’t replace mine, rather became another one.

My friend, Darlene, just got married to David Alcala, who is always smiling and ready with a joke. He has a heart of gold. So does she. Together, their laughs will shine from the effulgence: Fact.




Unfortunately, I couldn’t make it to their wedding due to living far away in Southern Japan, and missed the dinosaurs and excitement.

I wanted to go all out in lieu and post this special blog about her awesome debut novel: Behind Mount Rushmore, which you should read and review immediately.

As an extra gift, I did what every writer should do for their fellow author:

Book Review: 5-Stars

Do you like to read books by authors that clearly work hard on the pages before you, know how to edit, and are highly educated in creative writing?

Try Behind Mount Rushmore, a debut novel by Darlene Campos.
Campos has been through higher education, graduating from the University of Houston's creative writing program and beyond. She helps other authors daily, teaches, and is well-known in the short story community.

A lover of indigenous American writing, she had a simple dream to meet her hero, Sherman Alexie.


Photo by Larry D. Moore CC BY-SA 3.0.



This dream came true for her through hard work. (If only she'd write a non-fiction piece about the time she met Alexie, so the world could feel the moment with her). You can read her interview mentioning the encounter here:
INTERVIEW

Yet, that has little to do with Behind Mount Rushmore. Only parts of its inspiration.


It is a professionally written and fun book. Zoomed through, yet there were some really memorable moments that captured me into the pages, which will stay in my mind forever. I'm honored to have a signed copy of her debut novel.


There are so many great moments in the book. My favorite chapter is "Vacation."

A lady asked the main characters, indigenous Americans, how big their teepee was just because of their nationality. This foreshadows an incident later in the chapter. The issue of bigotry is smoothly touched upon, and how it hurts families too. The way it’s dealt with is unique, imaginative, and relatable. I especially loved what Josie told Nimo in the end of the chapter about how to really look at a person. It's not too preachy, rather tear-jerklingly sincere.

Nimo is an interesting character: Football quarterback, passionate about books and a writer while a bit sensitive. He’s an imperfect character, yet fun to grow alongside as you read.

In this story, you will get Campos' very best work, and see firsthand an example of a person dedicated to the written word. So, take a break from your computer screen for a few hours, open a hardcopy of Behind Mount Rushmore, and enjoy the read.


BEHIND MOUNT RUSHMORE: LINK


Special treat, here’s an interview I gave Darlene last year.

BAM: Darlene Campos, give us a brief first-person bio.

Darlene Campos: I'm a writer who's trying to make my way in the literature world without leaving fellow writers behind. Some might say that's dumb, but I don't really care. 

BAM: What’s the greatest accomplishment in your writing career?

DC: I've won prizes for my stories and I've been nominated for a Best of the Net Award. However, the biggest accomplishment for me is when I get an email from a reader. I had one who emailed me just to say, "I loved your story." Prizes and awards are nice (especially when they include cash), but hearing from a reader is priceless. 

BAM: The relationship of child and parent comes up in your works, particularly that of the father / child dynamic. What inspired this continuous prompt?

DC: This is a question I receive often, and I do have an answer! My dad certainly wasn't Father of the Year when I was growing up. He did and said a lot of horrible things, not just to me, but also to people I care about. When you're not happy in the real world, writing is a way to create your own happy world. This is why I 'make up' good fathers. Just because I didn't have the best dad, it doesn't mean I can't have one in my fictional world. 

BAM: You’re on an island, no Wi-Fi of course, what are three items you take with you, why?

DC: That's easy - I'd take a notebook, pen, and toilet paper. I would say my boyfriend David, but I don't think he's considered an item. Or maybe he is -wink, wink. 

BAM: What’d you read recently?

DC: I just finished reading, "The Glass Castle," by Jeannette Walls. It's a memoir of Walls' childhood and the early parts of her adulthood. It was so well written, I finished it in two days. 

BAM: What’s the greatest lesson you’ve learned as a writer?

DC: Never, ever put another writer down. We all have writer's block, we all write stories/poems/essays that suck more than a vacuum cleaner. There is absolutely no reason to be a snob. 

BAM: If you could win one award in writing, which would it be?

DC: That would be the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. O'Connor has been a major influence for me and to have her name attached to mine would truly be an honor. 

BAM: Who inspires you the most, why?

DC: Even though I haven't read much of his work, Stephen King is a writer to look up to. He's been writing since he was a small boy and he never, ever quit, even though he sometimes really wanted to, which is understandable for new writers. I have a sticky note above my work station with the number of rejections Stephen King received for "Carrie." That little sticky note keeps me going. 

BAM: Where do you write? Does location matter?

DC: I usually write in my bedroom with the door closed and a pair of earphones on. I can't focus unless I'm totally alone, but there have been, though very few times, when I have written something in public. My award-winning story, "The Fork," was written in multiple places. I started and finished it in the comfort of my bed, but the middle parts were written in a doctor's waiting room, during a timed break between my college classes, and in my car (while I was parked, of course!). 

BAM: Why do you write?

DC: It's a part of me now. I take breaks from writing to recharge, but the breaks don't last very long. 

BAM: If you could sit with any author, living or deceased, who and why?

DC: I've already had the opportunity to sit with my favorite living author, Sherman Alexie, so I chose Oscar Wilde. He was the king of wit! 

BAM: When searching for writing prompts, do any objects or people inspire you? Explain.

DC: That depends. Sometimes when a person is really ticking me off, I think "that's it, you're going in a story and you're going to die in it." As for objects, it's an elegant notebook and a smooth ink pen that gets me writing. 

BAM: Do you feel your lineage carries over into your writing, how so?

DC: Most certainly! Several of my characters are heavily based on my family members. Some of them will figure that out sooner or later. 

BAM: If you could give one piece of advice to every would-be writer, what would you tell her or him?

DC: As Winston Churchill said - never give in, never, never, never, never.

BAM: What’s your favorite word?

DC: Linguistic - it flows on the tongue so well. 

BAM: What makes you laugh?

DC: My life. If I couldn't laugh at myself, I would be miserable. I've fallen going up the stairs, pulled a door that said 'push,' and fallen asleep at inappropriate times (apologies to my previous professors!). I've also spent a significant amount of time looking for my cell phone only to realize it was in my hand. 

BAM: Rock or rap?

DC: Rock! There's no question about it. 

BAM: Gum or mints?

DC: Gum. I've choked on many mints before. 

BAM: Thanks for your answers! Hope to see more of your work soon. 



Remember to remember . . .

Saturday, May 5, 2018

I QUIT

Really weird how people say “never quit.” 


(link)


They say nothing great is ever easy to achieve. 

Quitting is fine sometimes though.
I quit 
(link)

smoking 10 years ago. 

I’d smoked two packs a day at the end. 

Had puffed away from 9 to 25 years of age.

I quit
(Link)

eating deep fried food whenever possible several years back. Really unhealthy to eat and bad for your heart. 

I also quit
(link)


drinking cola 15 years ago except a few times when it was in my alcohol. Soda has corn syrup. You might as well beg for cancer because it’s linked as a cause. Source, source, source.

But, hey, everything else causes cancer these days. All I know is I feel better without pop in my life. I avoid all products with corn syrup.

Most recently, I quit caring that no matter what diet I go on, or how hard I hit the gym that I’ll still look fat until I have extremely expensive plastic surgery to remove scar tissue and fat bumps stuck in my body from eight back operations. I had to learn to walk again in 2011, since do my best to never give up

On that note: I quit caring when someone makes a comment like, “You should go on a diet,” when they have no idea how healthy and extremely active I am. 

These days, I do karate 3 times a week and go weightlifting, plus up and down four flights of stairs at my jobs from 9am to 3pm, and I started chilling with the judo club at work, too. We exercise together.

Proud to have quit stuff that held me back. 

How about you? What have you stopped that makes you proud to say:
(link)


Remember to remember . . .