As with last year, this
review post is coming a day late, as it seems life always has a way
of intervening. Last year it was the chaos surrounding the bushfires
sweeping Australia, and this year—well, 2020 speaks for itself with
a very foul tongue. The world is not improving, to paraphrase
Professor Henry Jones Snr.
So, from the
five-year-and-one-day milestone, here's the outlook on my pursuit of
a writing career!
Overall: In five years,
I have 1953 submissions, 122 placements (16.008:1
submission/acceptance ratio), 90 stories on submission at this time
(my record is now 101), thus 1741 rejections (14.27:1
rejection/acceptance ratio, slightly improved from last year, though
it really doesn't feel like it!). These ratios continue to reflect a
down-turn in the activity of the market, which, given the pandemic,
is only to be expected
In calendar year 2020,
I made 404 submissions (28 less than last year), receiving 31
placements, one less than 2017, my best year (13.46:1
submissions/placements, considerably improved form last year.) This
is an acceptance rate of 7.67%, up from last
year's 5.78%, and better than 2018’s 7.36%, second only to 2017’s
8.16%). If this is a any sort of measure of market viability, it
would seem things are in fact recovering, despite the turmoil of the
world at this time.
Average time between
acceptances in Year Five was 11.7 days, appreciably better than last
year (25 acceptances/14.6 days per).
Professional placements
picked up in 2020, five since January last, which is good for the
bottom line; I've done okay in the first half of the financial year
against previous years and obviously hope the trend will continue.
Productivity is fair,
36 stories this year (down from 43 last year, and miles behind my
grand total of 62 in 2017), totalling 186, 585 words, down from 214,
998 words last year.) I have over 230 stories registered at
Submission Grinder, and 270 in my personal list.
The general effects of
the pandemic and the craziness in the US in the run up to and
aftermath of the federal election has more than likely affected the
publishing field. Markets have continued to close, some of them
professional-paying, while new markets have sprung up to take their
place, some of them for-the-love-of-it mom-and-pop ventures, others
ambitious pro-paying projects originating in the mainstream of the
industry. There seems an indomitable spirit at work, that no matter
how bad things get, the need to read and write escapist fiction will
always endure, and the darker the days the more people need and want
such stories to both ease the gloom, and speak plainly of better ones
to come. That is one of the great strengths of speculative fiction,
its nature as a pointer of the way.
My record of 101
submissions in hand at one time is a fairly erroneous figure, as
there would have been a fair few older submissions either dead or in
limbo. I went through and tidied up old subs and guess ten or twelve
panned out as deceased—this was three or four months ago and the
stories were redirected to other markets. In the last few days I've
sent our twelve or fifteen queries against more old subs, and am
giving them a week or two grace. Given the chaos in the US at this
time—the Capital Building invasion was yesterday—I'm not looking
for prompt attention to inquiries.
High points of 2020: My
story Sky Tears not only won the Editor's Choice award from
Alien Dimensions in 2019, but was nominated for the 2020
Aurealis Awards, in which it progressed to one of the five
finalists—that's as close as I've come to a trophy so far! I picked
up a second Hugo Awards long-list nomination too. My mystery writing
has embraced Sherlock Holmes this year, with seven stories completed
and more to come. I placed a Holmesian piece with Ellery Queen
Mystery Magaizine, one of America's grand old mystery
publications (since 1941) and scored a berth in their annual Sherlock
Holmes tribute issue, due out at this time.
If I can maintain my
productivity and marketing rates, I would hope to see 150+ placements
by the end of this year. Also, I'm working on novels at this time,
with a historical adventure in note form and a sci-fi/fantasy noir
with three chapters on paper. With eighteen pro placements to date, I
would hope a literary agent would be eager to take me on—that's the
plan for the future.
Right, let's see what
year six brings!
Cheers,
Mike Adamson