By award winning author Barry B. Longyear. A step-by-step course in developing the outlook, method, and skills that will enable you to write the best stories of which you are capable.
About Barry B. Longyear's The Write Stuff . . .
"Don't read this book. Please. You'll only make my job harder. You see, it's true that we receive about 700 manuscripts a month. But the truth is that of those 700, 600 of them can go right back. It's easy to tell the writer doesn't yet have the right stuff. But reading this book will put you miles ahead of the rest of the pack. And the more people who read this book, the bigger the pack grows—the pack of real stories, the ones that make it hard for me choose which ones to publish, the ones I actually want to read. So don't read this book unless you want to make my job tougher . . . or want me to publish your stories someday."
—Gordon Van Gelder, Editor, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
"I've enjoyed it and overall been quite impressed. There are a lot of really good insights and advice in there, presented in a thoroughly engaging way."
—Stanley Schmidt, Editor, Analog Science Fiction and Fact
About Barry B. Longyear's The Write Stuff . . .
"Don't read this book. Please. You'll only make my job harder. You see, it's true that we receive about 700 manuscripts a month. But the truth is that of those 700, 600 of them can go right back. It's easy to tell the writer doesn't yet have the right stuff. But reading this book will put you miles ahead of the rest of the pack. And the more people who read this book, the bigger the pack grows—the pack of real stories, the ones that make it hard for me choose which ones to publish, the ones I actually want to read. So don't read this book unless you want to make my job tougher . . . or want me to publish your stories someday."
—Gordon Van Gelder, Editor, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
"I've enjoyed it and overall been quite impressed. There are a lot of really good insights and advice in there, presented in a thoroughly engaging way."
—Stanley Schmidt, Editor, Analog Science Fiction and Fact