ATTENTION WRITERS: A Service For Every Budget

Writer’s Relief helps writers of every budget prepare and target their submissions to agents and editors. Here’s how we can help YOU:

FREE: Our Writers’ Newsflash—Sent via e-mail once a month. No purchase required, EVER. Hot leads, contests, tips, and techniques to get you published.

$100: A La Carte Service—We will target your work to the 25+ best markets for your specific topic, style, and writing goals.

$200 - $250: A La Carte PLUS Service—Just like A La Carte, but with 25+ cover or query letters. We will compose, proofread, address, and print all your letters. Save tons of time!

$339 - $399 (per cycle): Full Service—We rescue you from ALL the tedious submission legwork—preparing, proofreading, formatting, targeting, and tracking your submissions. All you have to do is write! Our BEST service with our HIGHEST ACCEPTANCE RATE. By Review Board, invitation only.

Short Story Checklist: Techniques for Getting Short Stories Published

Thursday, 17 January 2008 15:18 by Writer's Relief Staff

There are various writing techniques that will help you get your short stories published. Good characterization, dialogue, mood, tone, action, pacing, and plot development are some of the essential elements found in published short stories.

However, many writers are unfamiliar with the literary strategies that are required when writing short stories for publication. If you’re trying to get your short prose published (as individual stories or as a collection of short stories), this short story checklist will help to increase the chances that your writing will be selected by editors for publication.

Short story checklist: 

  • Is the opening sentence (and opening paragraph) of your short story strong, enticing, and confident? Does it set the mood and tone of your entire short story? Is it overly “anything” (overly cute, overly obvious, overly clever), or does it have a hint of mystery?
  • Do you ground your short story in scene by appealing to the reader’s five senses?
  • Does your description advance your reader’s understanding of character and plot?
  • Does the relationship between dialogue and description support your short story’s goals? Is the description well-researched, accurate, and evocative?
  • Do you show rather than tell? Is there a sense of immediacy? Do you reveal and imply, rather than explain and state?
  • Are the characters unique and memorable—but believable at the same time? Are their motivations clear and are they well-rounded? Do your characters’ personalities complement each other in a way that makes the central conflict more pronounced?
  • Is the dialogue believable and effective, striking the right balance between efficiency and realism? Does the dialogue show that the characters are challenged? Is the tension illustrated in a way that is not always “flat and obvious?”
  • Are secondary characters as well-developed as main characters, even if their entire backstory doesn’t come across on the page? Have you taken care that your secondary characters aren’t more interesting than your main characters? Do secondary characters truly add to the short story, or can you cut them out?
  • Is your pacing even and controlled? Is your beginning engaging (or full of too much backstory)? Is your ending well-developed? Does the action have well-controlled ups and downs?
  • Is your ending surprising yet fitting? Does the tension level of your ending deliberately rise above the tension level of the rest of your story? And does the denouement (tying up loose ends) reveal that the character has made a choice (has changed in some way or has had the opportunity to change but instead remained the same)?
  • Is your voice unique? Do you have mesmerizing, insightful, and impressive things to say (or imply)?
  • Have you read your work aloud at least once?
  • Have you had a professional proofreader look at your short story? Even the best writers need a proofreader—in fact, it’s often the best writers who recognize this fact, while new writers tend to think they don’t need help.
  • These short story techniques will help you wow editors when you’re submitting your short story for publication at literary magazines. As an author’s submission service, Writer’s Relief will proofread and format your short stories to industry standards and will target your work to the best-suited editors.

Comments

March 13. 2009 14:54

Great imformation!

NewWriter12

June 10. 2009 05:22

thanks again

Patryk

September 7. 2009 10:43

Thanks for the information. It will certainly help.

ralph geeplay

Add comment




  Country flag

biuquote
Loading