Showing posts with label riots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label riots. Show all posts

Saturday, January 31, 2026

2025 Year in Review

 


It has been a while since I wrote a blog post. I have actually been working on a rather long blog for some time, but it is getting so involved, I may try to publishing it elsewhere as a non-fiction piece. But I digress. It is a new year, and 2026 is upon us. Therefore, it is time for that annual post where I discuss my submission numbers and successes. This is mainly for inspirational purposes for other writers. I know we write and submit, write and submit, and often times receive too many rejections, but as I have mentioned earlier in this blog, we should not count the rejections, or even the acceptances for that matter, because those are things we cannot control. Rather, we should count the submissions. We can control those.

However, I did receive a few successes this year, one of which is pictured above. But first, let's take a look at the number of submissions I made in 2025. I broke a few records this year, so it was a good year for submissions. I currently have two novels shopping around, and I submitted them a total of 17 times this year. That is a new personal record, shattering my old record of 10 in 2018, and I am still waiting to hear back from a number of those submissions. Fingers are crossed.

I also broke my personal record for the most short story submissions with 37, which beats my old record of 32 made in 2019. Additionally, I made 14 poetry submissions, which tied my second most for that genre. I did not make any non-fiction story submissions this year. This adds up to a grand total of 68 total submissions for the year, which also breaks my previous record of 53 also made in 2018. My annual goal of 50 submissions per year was not only reached, it was handily surpassed.

So what did all these submissions get me? There is generally a direct correlation of the number of submissions to the number published works, and this year was no exception. Two works found homes, one short story, and one poem. My short story, "Rabbit Holes," found a home after just two submissions, which sets yet another record. It will be published in the anthology pictured above, Rebels by Inkd Publications. I am very excited about this one for obvious reasons. It may be my best short story yet, so if anyone is interested in picking up a copy, their website can be found here.

Additionally, one of my poems, "The Giant Fig Tree," recently found a home at Teach. Write., which is a publication that has published more of my works than any other. The editor, Katie Winkler, even sent me a very nice note encouraging me to keep sending her my work, which was much appreciated. The publication with a link to the current issue where the piece can be found, is here.

Two success may not seem like a lot, but they still mean something to me. It means my work is being discovered and distributed by at least a few publications. It is like the gambling addict, pulling that lever on the slot machine again and again after putting in nickel after nickel. To some it is a one-armed bandit, but when that machine finally pays off, there is much rejoicing. To compare it to my previous years' accountability posts, here are links to my post in 2022, and another one in 2023, and finally last's year's post from 2024.

As of this writing, I have already made a number of submissions, and one more work has found a new home in 2026. I will post about that in a future blog. Until then, let's all keep writing.

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Writing in the Apocalypse

With everything going on now, the coronavirus pandemic continuing and now all of the civil unrest due to the murder of George Floyd, it can be hard to concentrate. It might even seem to be the end of the world. While I even named this blog post after an apocalypse, I am a bit more optimistic about the future of the country and the world as a whole. In the long term, I think we'll likely be okay. In the short term, things seem to be a bit rocky.

I, like many of you I assume, find myself on Facebook for longer periods of time than I used to. And I keep watching and reading the news to find out the latest. I've been watching some of the protests and riots on Facebook Live and other sources. We are living in a historic time, one in which, hopefully brings about some sort of needed change. It is hard not to get caught up in it. If you feel moved enough to get involved, by all means do so. Don't let me or anyone else talk you out of it.

But the bigger purpose of this post to remind myself, and if you see fit, to remind you, the reader, to keep taking care of yourself. It is best mentally to carry on as normally as possible. For the purposes of this blog that means to keep writing. Remember to tune out of the Facebook live feeds once in a while. Put time limits on how much time you spend watching and reading the news. It is good to be informed, but it is best to not let it take over your life. And again, I'm talking to myself as much as I am anyone else, as I do with most of my posts.

For myself, I've still been reading items I need for my non-fiction book on Frankenstein in film. I am also very close to finishing a rough draft of a novel about a werewolf. I've also seen a little success lately. If anyone is interested, my most recent publishing credit is a horror short story titled "The Lecturer" and was posted on Page and Spine's new Outta This World page here. And my latest poem, "A Perfect Rainbow" can be found in the latest issue of Teach. Write. here.

So what is everyone else doing to cope with the pandemic and all the other turmoil in the world today? Here is a picture from a cruise ship I was on a few years ago. I like it for its bright horizon.