Interview with Marcie Tentchoff, Spaceports & Spidersilk Editor

The One-Eyed Monster. Not Quite a Dragonfly. The Upside-Down Man.

The titles promise a world flipped around, where reality tumbles and the truth surprises. The first lines pull you in and the rest of the stories unfold with fantastic and futuristic twists.

It can mean only one thing: a new edition of Spaceports & Spidersilk has hit the internet. So it’s perfect that Word Crushes next interview is with Marcie Tentchoff, Editor of Spaceports & Spidersilk–an online fantasy and science fiction magazine for readers 8 and older (part of the Sam’s Dot Publishing lineup of magazines, novellas, and novels).

What do you look for in a story? Are there any specific types of stories or plots that you wish writers would send you?

I look for strong, well-written stories with plots and characters younger readers can relate to.  Tween or teen characters and viewpoints help. A speculative (sf or fantasy) element is required.  I never get enough good science fiction stories. Conflict and conflict resolution are important. Make it a real, complete story. Try to send in work that will be accessible to readers of nine or ten, but still appeal to older readers.

Why would you pass on a story?

There are a lot of reasons why I’d pass on a story.  Lack of a speculative element is an automatic rejection.  Too often I receive pieces about fantasy or science fiction rather than pieces actually written in those genres. Don’t give me a good poem or story, then tell me at the end that the speculative element was all in the characters’ heads or all a dream. Don’t give me a poem about how much we wish for real magic, give me a poem where magic is real.

What can writers do to make your job easier?

Read the guidelines.  Please.  And take them to heart.  Then read a lot of stories and books aimed at readers in our age range.

What do you enjoy the most about editing Spaceports and Spidersilk?

I love it when the occasional gem comes in to my slush pile, a piece that grabs at my emotions and makes me smile, or laugh, or cry, or where wit rings through every paragraph.  It’s a great feeling to read something I love and think, “yes, this will be in the next issue.”   And then I love handing that piece to my kids to read.

Who are some of your favorite authors and why?

My list of favorite authors would be far too long.  Some recent middle grade and YA authors I enjoy are Tamora Pierce, Patrick Ness, Holly Black, Suzanne Collins, Rick Riordan, Sarah Prineas, and Derek Landy.  All of these writers have the ability to tell great stories, ones that can draw readers in and keep them reading, spellbound, until the book’s end.

Any changes coming to Spaceports and Spidersilk this year?

I may be playing more with loosely themed issues. we’ll see.

Questions for Marcie? Leave a comment .

Breaking Market News: Audio Short Stories and Hopscotch

Just a quickie post to share this market news:

Mind Wings:  “Mind Wings Audio is a newly established audio publishing company with a vision and strategy to provide short stories to the public in an audio format.”

And I’ve added Hopscotch to the Tween Markets links.

Ebook Winner and Leaving the Pagan Behind

The winner of the ebook giveaway, Playthings of the Gods, is Halli from Alberta (visit her blog at: hallililburn.blogspot.com ). Thanks to everyone for entering the contest.

And leaving the pagan behind, I’ve added a few Christian short-story markets to the links column. I hope to have interviews with the editors sometime soon. In the meantime, since I obviously need some help with this one, please leave me a comment if you know of other Christian short-story markets for young adults.

Also be sure to read Writing for the Teen Religious Market from Writing-World.com. The article is a little dated but the advice is still excellent.

Book Giveaway and Markets for Myth-Lovers

 

Win an ebook of Playthings of the Gods (Drollerie Press, 2011).

You can enter the ebook drawing in two ways: 1.) leave a comment, along with your email address, on this post by March 1 OR 2.) subscribe to Word Crushes by March 1. A winner will be chosen at random with the help of Random.org.

From the publisher: “Forget what you think you know about Greek Mythology. The Gods are back—if they ever left—and this time they’re using our modern world as their playground. Enjoy fourteen stories that take you from deity-inhabited skyscrapers to cobwebbed, gated manors atop a hill, and everywhere in between.”

And if you’d like to write your own story based on mythology, legends, or fairy tales, then check out these markets for older teens through adults:

Drollerie Press

Cabinet Des Fees: A journal of fairy tales

Dante’s Heart

Enchanted Conversation: A fairy tale magazine

Quail Bell Magazine

Wicked East Press (scroll down to Twisted Fairy Tales)

Know of any other markets for myth-lovers? Then leave me a comment with the publication’s name and URL and I’ll add it to the list.

Edgar and me

Edgar Allan Poe sits at the top of my short-story crushes. I met him in fourth grade when my teacher read The Tell-Tale Heart  and The Pit and the Pendulum aloud to my class. Her performance rivaled that of a Tony Award-winning actress. She paused at the right moments, making me jump, shudder, shiver, and, best of all, beg for more.

She stretched the readings out over several days, and I still remember how the room grew quiet. I thought I could hear a heart beating from beneath the floor—obviously my own as it slammed against my chest—while terror slithered up and down the aisles.

I was already an avid reader, having consumed Nancy Drew and Bobbsey Twins mysteries, as well as the entire Wizard of Oz series, but I sensed something new in these two stories  Perhaps it was their succinctness—so much power wrapped up in so few words. It was certainly my first awareness of the short story and how brevity can sometimes be preferred, how a small story can somehow be larger than a novel.

Now get out there and find your own crush. But remember… Edgar’s already taken.

A few places to look online:

YARN: Young Adult Review Network  (One of my favorite stories from 2010: In the Spotlight by Emily Deibel.)

Hunger Mountain

Tide Pool Fiction

Crow Toes Quarterly

Spaceports & Spidersilk

But don’t stop here… Check out all the listings in the Markets links.