Submitting Stories

There was thread on my blog that talked about the submission process. I hate the idea of submitting stories. Here are a few stats from my Excel spreadsheet where I keep of every finished story. I said over 100 rejects. I hadn't checked in a while - it was much larger. This does not count the spat of stories that I sent out in the late 60's early 70's

This does not count flash or non-fiction, which I don't track. I have about a dozen flash around at various places.

As of August 2006
Stories Written: 46
Word count: 164,000
First story submitted: 6/1/2003
First sale: 11/1/2003
Stories accepted: 32
Number still waiting: 4
Number of rejections: 151
Average wait: 22 days
Longest wait: 230 days (and still waiting).
Trunked stories: 10
Most rejections for one story: 15 (last was a rewrite request.)
Average number of submissions per story: 4.3

I don't keep track of how much I get paid for each story because I always try to donate the money back to the zine. I do know that 22 stories were from pay sites and that 10 were at for-the-love-of sites. The most that I was ever offered was $25.

The average number of times a story gets rejected is misleading. A good story gets snapped after one of two submissions, but sometimes I submit a story that I like to the big print zines first. I stand almost no chance of breaking into the big zines. (I got a rewrite request once from Baen.)

The average number of submissions for trunked stories is actually about 4.6 but not that much higher than accepted stories because I pulled some stories for rewrites after the first or second submission based on editor's response. I never got back to many of these.

Here, for those who don't know, are Heinlein's rules for submitting stories.

Rule One: You Must Write
Rule Two: Finish What Your Start
Rule Three: You Must Refrain From Rewriting, Except to Editorial Order
Rule Four: You Must Put Your Story on the Market
Rule Five: You Must Keep it on the Market until it has Sold

The hardest is #2. I fiddle with an idea, write a page or two, and then drop it, all the time. The best stories write themselves and I can see the ending paragraph before I finish writing the first one.

I break rule #3 all the time. Based on editors comments I will fine tune most stories before they go out again. The best stories just need a few scrubs to get all the typos out, though. Nice editors will point out the typos that I missed or the fractured sentences so I can fix them before the story goes out again.

Rule # 4 has become difficult for me, lately. I hate submitting because I don't like the anticipation of the reject.

Rule #5 has actually worked well for me. I keep a story on a downward spiral at markets until it sells. I don't like it that several of my stories are on no-pay sites, but it is a good way to kill a story and get out of Heinlein's endless loop. I have re-published four stories at other sites that appeared in defunct free sites, so this has worked well for me.