Bradbury, and the Contest

In Today’s Journal * The Bradbury Challenge * A Few Tips for Entering Contests * Reading for the Contest * Of Interest * The Numbers The Bradbury Challenge The whole point of the Challenge is to have fun and grow as a writer. There is no cost. The only requirement is to write at least one short story per week. Feel free to jump in at any time. During the past week, in addition to whatever other fiction they’re writing, the following writers reported these new stories: Loyd Jenkins “A Day in Dead Man’s Drift” 1300 Space Western Vanessa V. … Read more

We Might Have an Anthology

In Today’s Journal * We Might Have an Anthology * A Personal Recap of May * Of Interest * The Numbers We Might Have an Anthology As of 10 a.m. yesterday I’d received 18 entries from 13 writers for the Echoes of Hemingway short story contest. And as I write this (with submissions officially closed) I’ve received 22 entries from 15 writers. Woohoo! Congratulations to all of those writers for believing in themselves enough to write and submit a story to the contest. Now, for some of you, you still need to believe in yourself enough to Defend Your Work. … Read more

Last Day of the Contest!

In Today’s Journal * Last Day of the Contest! * A New Short Story * Bradbury Reminder * Of Interest * The Numbers Last Day of the Contest! Today is the last day to enter the Echoes of Hemingway short story contest. Here’s the whole thing: Everyone is eligible. No entry fee. Cash prizes. No rights grab (see The Fine Print below). Deadline May 31, 2025. 2000 to 7999 words. Stories must be new and unpublished. If I receive enough quality entries, an anthology will result, so please provide a bio of up to 200 words or so. All stories … Read more

Writing Out of Sequence

In Today’s Journal * Writing Out of Sequence * Inkers Con * Of Interest * The Numbers Writing Out of Sequence This is an awareness post. You might have noticed I’ve experienced a little trouble writing my current novel. Everything flowed great on Days 1 & 2 of writing this story. Then I reported a non-writing day. I did okay on Day 3, then had another non-writing day. Both of those non-writing days, I was right here at my desk, cycling over a specific couple of chapters of the story and wondering what the hell happened. The story felt stuck, … Read more

I Get Questions

In Today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * I Get Questions * Of Interest * The Numbers I Get Questions A young writer friend email me with a pair of questions yesterday, two of the biggies: ​”Is making art (in this case, stories) pointless? I mean does it help people at all?” Those questions are straight out of the critical mind, and every writer (artist, etc.) who ever lived has experienced them. Is it pointless​ to write stories, novels, etc.? No, of course it isn’t. Do our stories help people at all? Yes, of course they do.​ At a … Read more

The Longest Opening I’ve Ever Written

In Today’s Journal * A New Short Story * How Important is an Opening? * Only Four Days Left * Not to Complain Here But… * Pulp with a Legacy! * Of Interest * The Numbers A New Short Story I just posted a really good, intense, mind-bending short story story that’s bonus content for The Darling Members Club, the novel I just serialized at Your Morning Serial. The short story contains spoilers, so I suggest reading the novel first. You can find the first episode here. After you’ve read that, check out “Old Times.” Starting on June 1, I’ll … Read more

Attitude of a Fiction Writer

In Today’s Journal * DWS Attitude of a Fiction Writer * The Modes of Language * Of Interest * The Numbers DWS’ Attitude of a Fiction Writer I read the following some years ago on Dean Wesley Smith’s website and saved it. I thought I’d pass it along today. 1. Sustainability. Can you keep doing what you’re doing now for 5, 10, 15 years? 2. Have Fun. The Secret to doing whatever: have fun. If what you’re doing isn’t fun, it isn’t sustainable. 3. Never write to market. 4. Defend Your Work (even from yourself). Don’t write by committee, don’t … Read more

Bradbury, and Information Flow

In Today’s Journal * The Bradbury Challenge * Information Flow * New Release Alert * The Writing * The Numbers The Bradbury Challenge There is no cost. The only requirement is to report at least one short story per week in the following format. Feel free to jump in at any time. The following writers reported these new stories: Christopher Ridge “Death with a Twist” 2810 noir Dave Taylor ” Welcome Home Soldier” 3,663 Magic Realism Congratulations to these writers. Information Flow This is one of those next-level things I keep talking about. A great example popped up yesterday morning … Read more

Only Seven Days Left!

In Today’s Journal * A New Short Story * Bradbury Reminder * Only Seven Days Left! * A Different Reminder * Still Thinking About Recording * D2D EPUB Validator * Of Interest * The Numbers A New Short Story “Fireball” went live Friday at 10 a.m. on my Stanbrough Writes Substack. Go check it out. It’s free. Hint: Expect irreverence. If you enjoy the story, please click Like. Comments are welcome too. Both help with my Substack algorithms. Then tell Everyone else. Bradbury Reminder Today is Sunday. Just a reminder to get your Bradbury Challenge story info in to me before … Read more

The Pulp Writer Work Ethic

In Today’s Journal * The Pulp Writer Work Ethic * Of Interest * The Numbers The Pulp Writer Work Ethic Note: This is an enhanced version of a guest post I wrote for Frank Theodat and his Ink & Grit series a while back on Pulp, Pipe, and Poetry. First, my creds. When I say I’m “prolific,” I mean I’ve written 115 novels, 10 novellas, and just under 300 short stories in nine years. How? Although I don’t see myself as a pulp writer—I’m just a writer—I have a pulp writer’s work ethic. Writing is what I do. A lawyer … Read more