Skip to main content

Planned Beta Release for Upcoming Short Fiction Collection

Cartoon depicting a young man laying in bed with eyes wide open.
Credit: Pixabay


I've been working on my upcoming short fiction collection all week but have been worn out too many times, mostly from a bad case of allergies and insomnia. When I would work on one of my short stories for the book, there were several times when I nearly fell asleep ready to drop my head on the keyboard. So, I'd just go to bed intending to get more done in the morning but once in bed I wouldn't be able to fall asleep. Isn’t that ironic? Maybe I should make the computer keyboard my bed from now on. 

Well, there's some good news. Tuesday, I shared with my writer's critique group part two of "The Watch Party", one of the short stories that I’m including in my book. Compared to when the group critiqued part one several weeks ago, they didn’t have any problems with it. However, I did not factor in the changes suggested by the group from the last time. I've only done that for the first part so far. So, there's going to be some work that I need to do to harmonise the two parts. 

I also have to mention that I had been so busy with last weekend's newsletter, “Night Creautures' Call”, that I did not submit my story to the group until late. We normally agree to submit by the Friday before we meet at the latest, but I was so busy with the newsletter that I didn’t submit my story until that Sunday. Therefore, that gave everyone less time to give it a thorough reading. So, there was that possibility that the reading was not as efficient as it may have been and so they might have only seen mostly what was on the superficial level and so were simply impressed by that. I can't say for sure. 

All I can say is that part two of the story was the most difficult because it goes into heavy stuff like parallel universes, alternative histories and quantum mechanics. So, it would be easy for anybody to gloss over mistakes in the subject matter and I don’t think there were any physicists in the group that evening. The group that night only consisted of five or six people. Not that nobody's feedback helped, it's just that this has been one of the most difficult stories that I've written, maybe the most difficult I've ever written. And so I know there are flaws that I'm not seeing and that are easy for other people to miss if they’re not given enough time to read the story. 

For these reasons, I'm strongly planning on releasing a beta version of the short story collection. Hopefully, I can release it within the next month. As I said in Wednesday’s blog hop post, the release date for the final product has been pushed to October. So, if anyone is interested in serving as a beta reader and therefore getting a sneak peek at the book, please let me know and I'll be happy to send you a copy. 

Well, I'm going to stop here so I can catch up on some of that fiction writing and complete more of the book. I'll have more excitement, maybe even bigger excitement, for you here next week. 

Fellow authors: Do you release beta copies of your books before releasing a final version? Avid readers: Are you willing to read a beta copy of a book you think you might like or would this spoil the final version for you?

Until next time . . .


Comments

  1. I have beta readers the first round, critique partners the next round, then to my publisher where it goes through multiple rounds of edits before review copies are sent out - and then a couple rounds of edits before final copy. Sorry, don't know if that answered your question.
    Maybe the group missed stuff, maybe they didn't. Remember, average reader won't have a clue anyway.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No worries. You answered the question really good. Answering the question is by no means mandatory or expected, it's just to encourage conversation in visitors. You sound like you have a good thorough revision/editing process.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Book-To-Movie: ‘The Lawnmower Man’

Credit: Pixabay Warning: This review may contain spoilers. In past Book-To-Movies, we’ve reviewed several movie adaptations of books and short stories by famous science fiction and horror authors. All those films have stuck to the plot of the original work to at least some recognizable degree. But this week’s Book-To-Movie will be the first to review a film that does a poor job of staying faithful to the original plot. The film is 1992’s “The Lawnmower Man” which is based on Stephen King’s short story of the same name. Even so, the movie is a really good one. So then what’s the problem? The problem is that it’s hardly an adaptation and so more its own story simply with the title of King’s short work slapped onto it.  ‘The Lawnmower Man’: The Short Story Stephen King’s “The Lawnmower Man” originally appeared in “Cavalier” magazine in 1975 and was then collected into his book of short fiction, “Night Shift” the following year. The story’s protagonist is a middle-aged husband and dad ...

Book-To-Movie: Edgar Allan Poe's 'The Black Cat'

Credit: Wikimedia Commons It's another fourth Monday of the month and so that means it's time for another Book-To-Movie review! In a Book-To-Movie (BTM), we review a work of prose fiction and its movie adaptation. A few years back, we had a BTM for Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Black Cat" and its movie adaptation. However, the movie we reviewed was actually a segment in Roger Corman’s anthology film, "Tales of Terror", which features three of Poe's short stories, including "Black Cat". And I'll tell you now, I liked that version far more than the version that we're going to review today which is the 1934 Universal adaptation starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff. I like Corman's version better mostly because it stays more faithful to the original short story than Universal's does. However, even though Universal's "Black Cat", directed by Edgar Ulmer, strays (excuse the pun) far from Poe's short stor...

Book-To-Movie: ‘Journey to the Center of the Earth’

Both the 1959 and the 2008 movies based on Jules Verne's novel, "Journey to the Center of the Earth", feature terrifying monsters such as the ones here in this illustration from an early edition of the book. Credit: Ã‰douard Riou/ Wikimedia Commons   Warning: This review may contain spoilers. As I said last post , I’ve postponed the month’s Book-To-Movie review from last week to this week. For those of you who are just tuning into this blog, a Book-To-Movie is when we review a work of prose fiction and its movie adaptation. And this weekend’s review is of Jules Verne’s novel, “Journey to the Center of the Earth” and its movie adaptations. There have been several movies based on this novel that was originally published in Paris in 1864 (as “Voyage au Centre de la Terre”). However, most of them have been either made for TV or video. Because I believe movies are best when made for the big screen, I am going to review the theatrical films in which there have been two: the 195...