by Jason Joyner | Nov 1, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
Continuing the discussion about Dragons, Knights, and Angles Magazine with Mirtika Schultz, assistant editor and fangirl of Gerald Butler.
5. What types of stories is DKA looking for? I mean, what would have the best chance of getting published?
Something with a fresh twist and very good prose. We always look for those. We like stories of hope that offer an emotional and spiritual and not just cerebral experience. We want characters who aren’t bits of cardboard pushed around to serve a doctrine, political stance, or scientific concept. Make us care about the characters.
I refer your readers to the contest-winning story by Chris Mikesell, “The Unfortunate Purgatory of Arthur MacArthur” for a look at solid, good prose with atmosphere and an interesting character. Plus, it has a hopeful, happy ending (of sorts). Is this a slipstream story? You decide.
I also refer you again to “Damage” by Jane LeBak, an angel story. (Angels, really, as there are more than one.) The twist here: the guardian angel is actually a fallen angel, and one who has critically damaged the fetus to which he is then tethered. Consequences and redemption ensue. And surprises.
We like humor, too. We’ve published some pieces with a chuckling spirit.
Ultimately, we don’t want to be bored and we don’t want crappy writing or flat characters. Beyond that, be creative.
6. What are DKA’s plans in the future?
To stay afloat. No, really. We depend on volunteer workers and donations. (A good part of the budget comes from the volunteer staff.) If you want to support the CSF community, consider donating to DKA. It’s easy. We take Paypal. (Jason’s note: see the Paypal link on the left sidebar of DKA)
Besides the matter of survival, we hope to be able to offer higher pay rates. That depends on how much support we get.
Next year, we will host our second fiction contest. Unlike this year’s, we may have to charge an entry fee, a minimal one. We had hoped to offer it as a free contest, but funds are low and the reality is that for a good prize(es) to be given, a five or ten dollar entry fee may be required.
We’re no different than any magazine with an ethical heart and a fannish soul: We aspire to offer higher quality stories and poems of wonder and magic and space. We pray and we work to improve the magazine. But the long-term depends a lot on what those of you out there do. If you support us and submit good work, we’ll continue.
7. I help moderate a site for Star Wars related fanfiction ( www.kotorfanmedia.com). We get some pretty crazy submissions sometimes. What is the most interesting (read: weird, unpublishable) story that you’ve come across in reading submissions?
We recently read a very strange and incomprehensible story with oodles of math and talk of dimensions. We declined it. Later on, we accepted another rather odd story by the same writer. I fought for that one. I like odd stories, as long as I see evidence of good craft and some character I can relate to or sympathize with or root for or be enthralled by. Good sci-fi concepts will nab me, too, but the execution is often lacking with science fiction, it seems.
Usually, our unpublishable stories and poems aren’t that way due to weirdness. They are unpublishable due to poor execution: awkward prose, jarring metaphors, stilted dialogue, cliche plotlines, etc.
8. Do you have a favorite story you’d like to highlight here?
I really loved the ones I mentioned and recommended in a previous question. Those would be my top two.
Others your readers may enjoy: “Sorrow’s Shroud” by Rachel Marks (Issue 30) got very good reader feedback and had a redemptive, hopeful ending. The Dragon Keepers, or How the Dragon Spits Fire by Candy Taylor Tutt in issue 31 has a Rudyard Kipling “voice” and is both amusing and rather charming. As a book-lover, I had a soft spot for Tyler McHenry, Middle-Aged Lover of Books by Wade Ogletree.
I wouldn’t mind highlighting my poem about Lot’s wife, “MONUMENT “in issue 34. A shameless plug, I know.
—
I like this quote from Johne Cook, former managing editor of DKA who wrote the vision statement:
To my way of thinking, dragons represent the mystical, the unknown world, dangerous and magical and huge beyond reckoning. Knights represent the horizontal, selfless but moral humans fighting the good fight with feeble flesh and faith. Angels represent the vertical, messengers of an almighty God, purveyors of Providence, proof of the unprovable, denizens of a supernatural spiritual reality.
I was watching the end of Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers yesterday where Sam and Frodo were talking about the story that will be told of them someday. I felt an encouragement from the Lord, telling me “there are still stories of good and evil waiting to be told.” I felt it was an encouragement for me to continue with my writing, but I think it applies to DKA as well. Our species needs hope, and it has been a tradition as far back as cave paintings: Telling of the exploits of our heroes to encourage us all. Sci-fi and fantasy seem to do this particularly well. I encourage everyone who reads this to check out DKA and support them if you feel so moved. We need a place for these “stories of good and evil” to reside.
And continue the journey with the other members of the blog tour below.
Jim Black
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Kameron M. Franklin
Beth Goddard
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Karen Hancock
Elliot Hanowski
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Joleen Howell
Karen and at Karen¹s myspace
Oliver King
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Caleb Newell
Cheryl Russel
Mirtika Schultz
Stuart Stockton
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Frank Creed
Christina Deanne
Lost Genre Guild
John Otte
by Jason Joyner | Nov 1, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
Continuing the discussion about Dragons, Knights, and Angles Magazine with Mirtika Schultz, assistant editor and fangirl of Gerald Butler.
5. What types of stories is DKA looking for? I mean, what would have the best chance of getting published?
Something with a fresh twist and very good prose. We always look for those. We like stories of hope that offer an emotional and spiritual and not just cerebral experience. We want characters who aren’t bits of cardboard pushed around to serve a doctrine, political stance, or scientific concept. Make us care about the characters.
I refer your readers to the contest-winning story by Chris Mikesell, “The Unfortunate Purgatory of Arthur MacArthur” for a look at solid, good prose with atmosphere and an interesting character. Plus, it has a hopeful, happy ending (of sorts). Is this a slipstream story? You decide.
I also refer you again to “Damage” by Jane LeBak, an angel story. (Angels, really, as there are more than one.) The twist here: the guardian angel is actually a fallen angel, and one who has critically damaged the fetus to which he is then tethered. Consequences and redemption ensue. And surprises.
We like humor, too. We’ve published some pieces with a chuckling spirit.
Ultimately, we don’t want to be bored and we don’t want crappy writing or flat characters. Beyond that, be creative.
6. What are DKA’s plans in the future?
To stay afloat. No, really. We depend on volunteer workers and donations. (A good part of the budget comes from the volunteer staff.) If you want to support the CSF community, consider donating to DKA. It’s easy. We take Paypal. (Jason’s note: see the Paypal link on the left sidebar of DKA)
Besides the matter of survival, we hope to be able to offer higher pay rates. That depends on how much support we get.
Next year, we will host our second fiction contest. Unlike this year’s, we may have to charge an entry fee, a minimal one. We had hoped to offer it as a free contest, but funds are low and the reality is that for a good prize(es) to be given, a five or ten dollar entry fee may be required.
We’re no different than any magazine with an ethical heart and a fannish soul: We aspire to offer higher quality stories and poems of wonder and magic and space. We pray and we work to improve the magazine. But the long-term depends a lot on what those of you out there do. If you support us and submit good work, we’ll continue.
7. I help moderate a site for Star Wars related fanfiction ( www.kotorfanmedia.com). We get some pretty crazy submissions sometimes. What is the most interesting (read: weird, unpublishable) story that you’ve come across in reading submissions?
We recently read a very strange and incomprehensible story with oodles of math and talk of dimensions. We declined it. Later on, we accepted another rather odd story by the same writer. I fought for that one. I like odd stories, as long as I see evidence of good craft and some character I can relate to or sympathize with or root for or be enthralled by. Good sci-fi concepts will nab me, too, but the execution is often lacking with science fiction, it seems.
Usually, our unpublishable stories and poems aren’t that way due to weirdness. They are unpublishable due to poor execution: awkward prose, jarring metaphors, stilted dialogue, cliche plotlines, etc.
8. Do you have a favorite story you’d like to highlight here?
I really loved the ones I mentioned and recommended in a previous question. Those would be my top two.
Others your readers may enjoy: “Sorrow’s Shroud” by Rachel Marks (Issue 30) got very good reader feedback and had a redemptive, hopeful ending. The Dragon Keepers, or How the Dragon Spits Fire by Candy Taylor Tutt in issue 31 has a Rudyard Kipling “voice” and is both amusing and rather charming. As a book-lover, I had a soft spot for Tyler McHenry, Middle-Aged Lover of Books by Wade Ogletree.
I wouldn’t mind highlighting my poem about Lot’s wife, “MONUMENT “in issue 34. A shameless plug, I know.
—
I like this quote from Johne Cook, former managing editor of DKA who wrote the vision statement:
To my way of thinking, dragons represent the mystical, the unknown world, dangerous and magical and huge beyond reckoning. Knights represent the horizontal, selfless but moral humans fighting the good fight with feeble flesh and faith. Angels represent the vertical, messengers of an almighty God, purveyors of Providence, proof of the unprovable, denizens of a supernatural spiritual reality.
I was watching the end of Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers yesterday where Sam and Frodo were talking about the story that will be told of them someday. I felt an encouragement from the Lord, telling me “there are still stories of good and evil waiting to be told.” I felt it was an encouragement for me to continue with my writing, but I think it applies to DKA as well. Our species needs hope, and it has been a tradition as far back as cave paintings: Telling of the exploits of our heroes to encourage us all. Sci-fi and fantasy seem to do this particularly well. I encourage everyone who reads this to check out DKA and support them if you feel so moved. We need a place for these “stories of good and evil” to reside.
And continue the journey with the other members of the blog tour below.
Jim Black
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Kameron M. Franklin
Beth Goddard
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Karen Hancock
Elliot Hanowski
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Joleen Howell
Karen and at Karen¹s myspace
Oliver King
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Caleb Newell
Cheryl Russel
Mirtika Schultz
Stuart Stockton
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Frank Creed
Christina Deanne
Lost Genre Guild
John Otte
by Jason Joyner | Nov 1, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
From the incomparable Brad Stine:
Halloween makes no sense. The idea is that if you are tricked, you give out a treat. But it doesn’t work because THEY ALL COME ON THE SAME DAY!
Kids: Trick or treat!!
Brad: Ah, but I knew you were coming, so I wasn’t tricked. Hence, no treat.
SLAM!
What they should really do is come when you’re not expecting it. Like May. At 2 in the morning.
Kids: Trick or treat!!
Brad: (Eyes wide) Well, you got me! Here’s a pickle.
(Not necessarily word for word, but you get the idea. From his Put a Helmet On DVD.)
by Jason Joyner | Nov 1, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
From the incomparable Brad Stine:
Halloween makes no sense. The idea is that if you are tricked, you give out a treat. But it doesn’t work because THEY ALL COME ON THE SAME DAY!
Kids: Trick or treat!!
Brad: Ah, but I knew you were coming, so I wasn’t tricked. Hence, no treat.
SLAM!
What they should really do is come when you’re not expecting it. Like May. At 2 in the morning.
Kids: Trick or treat!!
Brad: (Eyes wide) Well, you got me! Here’s a pickle.
(Not necessarily word for word, but you get the idea. From his Put a Helmet On DVD.)
by Jason Joyner | Oct 31, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
I’m still contributing to the CSFF blog tour featuring DKA Magazine (Dragons, Knights, and Angels). I’ve interviewed Mirtika Schultz, assistant editor of DKA, f*i*fer, and blog buddy about the nuts and bolts of DKA. Look for how you can submit a story for moolah and the latest space missionary saga!
1. How did you come to be involved with DKA?
I won The Sword Review’s fiction contest in 2005, and that got me involved with the TSR site. DKA and TSR are sister publications, both thriving under the banner of Double-Edged Publishing. I had an active blog over at TSR for a while, and I posted in the forum. From my presence there, I was asked to be an editor. I said, “Sure.” I hang out much less at TSR, even though I won their recent poetry contest. I spend most of my time and energy at DKA.
2. What is its purpose?
Our purpose is to provide a place for the publishing of Christian science fiction and fantasy short fiction and poetry. We want to offer the CSF community the best we can of the material that’s submitted to us. We always hope to get better and better quality creative work to publish.
We also seek to nurture new talent. We offer critique and the chance for some writers to revise and improve. We sometimes publish student work that shows promise. The next generation of CSF writers needs to be encouraged.
I refer anyone who is curious about our “vision” to read the Vision Statement written by Johne Cook and available at dkamagazine.com. Just click on “vision” in the sidebar.
3. If I want to submit, do I have to have a dragon, knight, or angel in the story?
No. In fact, we tend to be glutted on stories with those elements. We crave good science fiction. However, we always will publish good stories with those three titular elements. One of the best of our recent offerings is a pure angel story with a special plot twist called “Damage” by Jane LeBak. Coming up in December (maybe January, I forget) will be a more experimental, odd tale with a space missionary that features a human and a quantum computer.
As long as the story fits our Vision Statement and is not patently offensive to Christians or disrespectful of Christian doctrine, we’re happy to look at it. We welcome submissions across the wide spectrum of fantasy and science fiction classifications.
What don’t we want? We don’t want stories that merely exist to preach. Give us good prose, good characterization, conflict, resolution–the usual craft elements. And don’t use the elements in tired, trite ways. A knight off to kill a dragon, and not much more going on but angst and fiery breathing, well, that’s a story that will bore us and earn a decline.
The level of religious “preaching” that we tolerate correlates precisely to the level of craft involved. Write a compelling story, and we are less likely to gag at sermonizing.
4. How many submissions does the site typically get in a week/month (whatever time frame you choose)?
I don’t know. Honestly, Selena Thomason is the managing editor and the Keeper of the Numbers. Nothing is “usual.” Some months we’re swamped and can barely keep up. Last month was like that. Some months are dry and we start putting the word out that we need subs.
If you have something good that fits our Vision Statment, then I urge you to send it to us. This is one of our slower weeks, possibly due to so many CSF-ers gearing up for NaNoWriMo and the holidays.
—
Check back tomorrow for more questions with Mirtika. Be sure to check out the site and some of the others from the CSFF blog tour, listed below. And Mirtika has a special offer for any who comment at her blog Mirathon, and I will extend the same offer: Those who leave a comment saying “enter me in the review drawing” will win a chance to receive a free critique from Mir. She isn’t just a pretty face, but she has judged a lot of writing competitions and has a keen eye for what makes a good story. She will critique a poem or the first five pages of a story. So leave your comments if that interests you!
Jim Black
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Kameron M. Franklin
Beth Goddard
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Karen Hancock
Elliot Hanowski
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Joleen Howell
Karen and at Karen¹s myspace
Oliver King
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Caleb Newell
Cheryl Russel
Mirtika Schultz
Stuart Stockton
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Frank Creed
Christina Deanne
Lost Genre Guild
John Otte
by Jason Joyner | Oct 31, 2006 | Blog, Uncategorized
I’m still contributing to the CSFF blog tour featuring DKA Magazine (Dragons, Knights, and Angels). I’ve interviewed Mirtika Schultz, assistant editor of DKA, f*i*fer, and blog buddy about the nuts and bolts of DKA. Look for how you can submit a story for moolah and the latest space missionary saga!
1. How did you come to be involved with DKA?
I won The Sword Review’s fiction contest in 2005, and that got me involved with the TSR site. DKA and TSR are sister publications, both thriving under the banner of Double-Edged Publishing. I had an active blog over at TSR for a while, and I posted in the forum. From my presence there, I was asked to be an editor. I said, “Sure.” I hang out much less at TSR, even though I won their recent poetry contest. I spend most of my time and energy at DKA.
2. What is its purpose?
Our purpose is to provide a place for the publishing of Christian science fiction and fantasy short fiction and poetry. We want to offer the CSF community the best we can of the material that’s submitted to us. We always hope to get better and better quality creative work to publish.
We also seek to nurture new talent. We offer critique and the chance for some writers to revise and improve. We sometimes publish student work that shows promise. The next generation of CSF writers needs to be encouraged.
I refer anyone who is curious about our “vision” to read the Vision Statement written by Johne Cook and available at dkamagazine.com. Just click on “vision” in the sidebar.
3. If I want to submit, do I have to have a dragon, knight, or angel in the story?
No. In fact, we tend to be glutted on stories with those elements. We crave good science fiction. However, we always will publish good stories with those three titular elements. One of the best of our recent offerings is a pure angel story with a special plot twist called “Damage” by Jane LeBak. Coming up in December (maybe January, I forget) will be a more experimental, odd tale with a space missionary that features a human and a quantum computer.
As long as the story fits our Vision Statement and is not patently offensive to Christians or disrespectful of Christian doctrine, we’re happy to look at it. We welcome submissions across the wide spectrum of fantasy and science fiction classifications.
What don’t we want? We don’t want stories that merely exist to preach. Give us good prose, good characterization, conflict, resolution–the usual craft elements. And don’t use the elements in tired, trite ways. A knight off to kill a dragon, and not much more going on but angst and fiery breathing, well, that’s a story that will bore us and earn a decline.
The level of religious “preaching” that we tolerate correlates precisely to the level of craft involved. Write a compelling story, and we are less likely to gag at sermonizing.
4. How many submissions does the site typically get in a week/month (whatever time frame you choose)?
I don’t know. Honestly, Selena Thomason is the managing editor and the Keeper of the Numbers. Nothing is “usual.” Some months we’re swamped and can barely keep up. Last month was like that. Some months are dry and we start putting the word out that we need subs.
If you have something good that fits our Vision Statment, then I urge you to send it to us. This is one of our slower weeks, possibly due to so many CSF-ers gearing up for NaNoWriMo and the holidays.
—
Check back tomorrow for more questions with Mirtika. Be sure to check out the site and some of the others from the CSFF blog tour, listed below. And Mirtika has a special offer for any who comment at her blog Mirathon, and I will extend the same offer: Those who leave a comment saying “enter me in the review drawing” will win a chance to receive a free critique from Mir. She isn’t just a pretty face, but she has judged a lot of writing competitions and has a keen eye for what makes a good story. She will critique a poem or the first five pages of a story. So leave your comments if that interests you!
Jim Black
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Kameron M. Franklin
Beth Goddard
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Karen Hancock
Elliot Hanowski
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Joleen Howell
Karen and at Karen¹s myspace
Oliver King
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Caleb Newell
Cheryl Russel
Mirtika Schultz
Stuart Stockton
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Frank Creed
Christina Deanne
Lost Genre Guild
John Otte