This Saturday, April 26, Super G and Super D will be at
the Rosemont College Book Festival from 10 to 3 p.m. Dawn Byrne, Marie Gilbert
and Ava Easterby of the South Jersey Writers' Group will be there to promote our group and our book “Tall Tales
and Short Stories from South Jersey.” The Keynote Speaker at the Book Festival is
John Searles, author of “Boy Still Missing,” “Strange but True” and “Help for
the Haunted.” There will also be workshops. So come on out and visit us at our
table. We’ll be happy to tell you about our new anthology and our group.
Speaking of anthologies, I had a chance to ask Editors Amy Hollinger and Jessica Walsh about the new book our group is working on. Here is what they had to say.
Marie
Gilbert: Amy, I know that you and Jessica have been very busy working on the
South Jersey Writers’ Group’s next anthology. Are there any tidbits you two
ladies for like to share about this venture before the book’s release?
Amy Hollinger: I
learned a lot about how to run a Kickstarter fundraising campaign! Next time,
we'll start with the stories and then raise the money to finish the book! For
Reading Glasses, the stories are a bit longer than most of the short stories we
published in Tall Tales and Short Stories from South Jersey. Editing longer
stories has a different challenge in that action takes a bit longer to build,
but the writing still needs to be tight and every action or event still needs
to matter to the overall plot.
Amy (again): Also, the book publishing process is lengthy in itself, and rushing it--especially when it comes to editing--is going to result in a poorer quality book. Selecting stories for this collection was different in that we tried to align our choices on a theme.
Amy (again): Also, the book publishing process is lengthy in itself, and rushing it--especially when it comes to editing--is going to result in a poorer quality book. Selecting stories for this collection was different in that we tried to align our choices on a theme.
Jessica Walsh: It's been a
really great experience so far, although I think we may have underestimated the
time it would take with the stories being longer and the editing requiring
several rounds. The Kickstarter campaign was very exciting and it's been great
being involved from the very beginning; fundraising, the call for submissions,
story selection, and now editing. I am very excited for publication, and I
think people are really going to enjoy the stories we've chosen for the
Anthology.
Marie
Gilbert: How many stories are included in this anthology?
Amy Hollinger: 12
stories, at the moment. Subject to change pending authors' final review of
stories and contracts!
Marie
Gilbert: What Types of stories can the reader expect to find in the book?
Jessica
Walsh: The stories are all fiction;
speculative fiction to be more specific, so the stories are more
fantastical/sci-fi/stretched imagination. The stories take place in varying
times (present/future/FAR in the future) and locations (the shore, a childhood
home in the south, a spaceship). Although all quite different, the common theme
is what makes them all work so well together as a collection. I can't wait to
tackle putting them in order!
Marie
Gilbert: How did you decide on a title, Reading
Glasses: Stories Through an Unpredictable Lens
Jessica
Walsh: It
was really kind of a fortunate accident on one of the author's parts. He
apparently had renamed his story "Ghostwriter" when submitting, but
forgot to rename the title in his attachment, which was "Reading
Glasses". Amy and I both loved the story and thought it worked very well
as sort of a 'feature' story; a great representation of the collection and the
spirit of writing. We actually thought the initial title, "Reading
Glasses" worked better, so Amy contacted the author and asked him if he
would consider changing the name back and if he would allow us the use of the
title for the title of the Anthology. He was happy to oblige
Marie
Gilbert: What was the process of picking the cover art? Did you have several
ideas?
Amy Hollinger: I had
an idea for something very simple, with just a pair of glasses on the cover.
but our designer, Shelley Szajner, incorporated the glasses and took it way
beyond my expectations! We had a little discussion on the cover, but one was a
clear standout. A few tweaks and it was perfect! The art and the concept go
perfectly with the dark feel of the story.
Marie
Gilbert: Have you’ve come across a story, that one of you liked, but the other
didn’t and how did you both decide if that submission stayed?
Amy Hollinger: We were
unanimous on several of the stories. Let's just say, you can tell the
difference between a polished story that has been through several revisions and
had several test readers, and a story that has not gone through that process!
But we did choose a few based on concept, and discussed how the story could be
made better, whether through tightening the writing or restructuring the action.
Amy (again) We chose the sci-fi genre early on (based on a few standout
submissions), although we accepted stories in literary fiction, YA, and memoir
also. Towards the end, we received some excellent literary submissions as well,
so we essentially created two book lineups, and debated the pros and cons of
each. Speculative fiction won out, mostly because we had an early decision in
the backs of our minds. Let that be a lesson to writers: Don't wait to submit;
early consideration can make a difference!
Jessica Walsh: Amy's right,
some stories just really stood out above the rest or just had a really good
concept and we just hoped that the author would work with us. So far, they've
all been very responsive to our feedback. There was one story that I threatened
resignation over if Amy didn't approve, but fortunately, she really liked the
story too haha. The challenge was when we loved a story that didn't fit the
theme. We discussed ways that we could "maybe" make it fit, but in
the end we had to ensure every story fit the genre we selected properly. We
could always do another Anthology!
Marie
Gilbert: When do we expect to see the book out?
Amy Hollinger: We are
aiming for July publication; no final date just yet. Again pending final edits!
Thank you Amy and Jessica for the update and I’m sure all
our readers are anxiously awaiting the South Jersey Writers’ Group’s next book. And
for all you readers out there, keep your eyes open for the announcement of SJWG’s
big book launch of “Reading Glasses: Stories Through an Unpredictable Lens.
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