On Building Up and Tearing Down: A Call to the Horror Community

There is a small press tale that gets told on repeat. Word starts coming out that they are having troubles, or causing them. Perhaps they aren’t paying writers. Perhaps they are taking more rights than they should. Maybe they edit stories without writer approval. Maybe they are in hard financial times.

Then we talk about it. Point out the problems, issue warnings, post blogs and Facebook discussions. We generate noise, attention, to the tale, telling it over and over.

In these moments, these small presses are getting a level of publicity they have never gotten before. How many of them had you never heard of until their failures were brought into the light?

Would this amount of good publicity have saved any of these presses? Who is to say. Each version of this tale is slightly different; each version has its own flavor.

But, for the most part, this is when presses get noticed. This is when they get the attention. When it is too late.

I know that rewards for doing what is supposed to be done isn’t how things work, for doing not just what is expected, but what is required. But to take these moments, the energy of these events, to turn around and say, but don’t forget these guys, they do good work could bring a positive side to these tales.

Because if we are truly a community, we need to not just protect, but promote; not just tear down, but build.

So, in light of the tale being told again, here is my decree, my call: when these events happen, and they will always happen, take a moment to post about the presses that do good, use the energy to build up, to keep the foundations strong.

Poetry Challenge, Meta Post

I have written up three, yes THREE, poetry challenges for 2016: a fun game of lyrical telephone, called 1 in 12; a moment of reflection over your coffee, called Monday Poems; and the poetry version of NANOWRIMO, called April Poems.

Take a look, take a challenge, get to writing!

1 in 12

I want you to write one poem in 2016, but write it 12 times, seeing what time brings to the process.

Monday Poems

I want you to take a moment every Monday morning and write a poem.

April Poems

Write one poem a day for all of April

April Poems – A Poetry Challenge for 2016

April Poems – A Poetry Challenge for 2016

This one is a more intense challenge, and one I have done a few years now. April is National Poetry month, and to celebrate we have a poetry challenge.

Write a poem each day of April.

Preferred method is by hand for this one. Take a notebook, one with 30 blank pages, and give each day in April a single page.

That is your working space for the day. All of your writing and edits go here, and no where else. Now, confined in both time and space, create. Thirty days, thirty poems.

While I do edit later (usually much later, as this, like NANOWRIMO, tends to wear you out some), the goal of each day is to have a presentable draft.

30 in 30, your own April Poems.