Aoife’s Kiss, Late 2008/Early 2009.. (7th acceptance)

I’ve nabbed my 7th print magazine acceptance to Sam’s Dot Publishing — a teaser for my soon-to-be released short story collection.  This teaser story will appear in either late 2008 or early 2009, and in the magazine AOIFE’S KISS (edited by Tyree Campbell).  The teaser will coincide with the release date of my first short story collection.  A second collection is already completed, and a third is in the works. 

AOIFE’S KISS – SAM’S DOT PUBLISHING

RECENT ISSUE(s) FEATURING LAWRENCE DAGSTINE
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ORDER HERE:

http://www.samsdotpublishing.com/purchasecenter/magazines.htm

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

Sein Und Werden, Summer 2008… (2nd acceptance)

Today’s acceptance is to Rachel Kendall’s very popular existentialist and surreal literature publication, Sein Und Werden.  Available in the UK.  They not only feature experimental prose, but artwork and poetry in their print version(s), too.  Each issue has featured renowned names in the British short story arena, and has its own unique theme.  Next issue’s theme is a “mathematical-meets-speculative” one, if I’m not mistaken (or ologies). The current issue is themed: Clandestine Encounters.

This would be my 2nd upcoming appearance…

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Details Here: http://www.kissthewitch.co.uk/seinundwerden/sein.html

Previous Issues featuring Lawrence Dagstine…

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Happy Cinco de Mayo…! 

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

Silverthought Press, May 2008… (acceptance)

My most recent acceptance comes to the May update of Silverthought Press Online, and it should last straight through the end of June.  In total, this would be my 59th acceptance with them — yes, that would be correct, fifty-nine — over the past three years.  Silverthought is not only an online webzine and peer review/writing discussion forum, but ALSO an independent publisher of high quality novels and anthologies.  They’re well known for breeding talent in the short story arena.  And they’re now a paying press, too. 

Silverthought Online; May 2008

www.silverthought.com

May 2008’s update features fiction by: Kimberly Raiser, Gayla Chaney, Lawrence R. Dagstine, Thomas Henry Dylan, Isaiyan Morrison, Justin Oldham, Mike Philbin, Pavelle Wesser, and excerpts of David S. Grant’s new books and an exclusive interview with the author.

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

Jupiter SF, October 2008… (5th acceptance)

My latest acceptance for the month of April 2008 is actually my 5th over the last two-three years to editor Ian Redman’s ‘JUPITER SF’.  It’s one of the UK-Small Press’s most widely read hard science fiction publications, and probably just behind Interzone.  Published quarterly, they are now in their fifth year of existence.  In today’s marketplace not too many small magazines last that long but, due to its popularity, JUPITER has defied those odds. 

JUPITER SCIENCE FICTION

Previous Issues Featuring Lawrence Dagstine

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ORDER HERE: www.jupitersf.co.uk

I’ll be coming their way again in October 2008…

Authors featured over the years include: Lavie Tidhar, Gareth D. Jones, Gustavo Bondoni, Kristine Ong Muslim, Edward Rodosek, Allan Ashley and Andrew Hook, Lawrence Dagstine, Nigel Atkinson, Jim Steel, Gary McMahon, Lee Clarke Zumpe, Aurelio Rico Lopez III, Eric S. Brown, Lee Moan, Peter Tennant, Davin Ireland, and Christina Sng. 

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

Whispering Spirits #18, April 2008… (acceptance)

The following acceptance was last minute…  Whispering Spirits invited me to be Feature Author for their April 2008 edition.  This would be my fourth acceptance with them in total.  Edited by Diana Cacy Hawkins, the semi-annual webzine has become a talented showcase of ghost stories, dark poetry, and tales of the supernatural.  My story is available as a PDF download, and this edition contains an extra ten pages worth of juicy fiction.

Whispering Spirits: April 2008, Issue #18

http://whisperingspirits.dragynspice.com/issue.html

Featuring Fiction & Poetry by: Lawrence Dagstine, Wayne Summers, G.W. Thomas, Mary C. White, Kristine Ong Muslim, and Lanaia Lee.

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

________________________________________________

In other news, I’ll also be appearing in four more spec-fic anthologies between this year and next (about the first two, for now).  One, which has already found a publisher is, SATIRICA: An Anthology of Satirical Speculative Fiction.  When I get more details, publishing information, lineups, stuff like that, I’ll be sure to post it.  Next, another SF anthology worth reserving, and edited by Darlene Oakley, would be: EISODOS STATION and Other Adventures.

DEMO COVER BELOW:

Coming Soon…

Other New Entries: “Books & Anthos”

Escape Velocity #3, April 2008… (appearances)

Well, various  Web-based messageboard communities almost collapsed a second time yesterday because certain folks just weren’t sure whether or not Lawrence Dagstine was going to appear in ESCAPE VELOCITY, Issue #3.  Check the Table of Contents, I’m there.  I had mistakenly been left out due to a ‘substitute story email being missed’ or crossed somehow.  It seems Escape Velocity has changed its word lengths, too, and they now prefer much SHORTER works.  My original story for them was just too long, and somehow no communication came of this.  But, thanks to Robert Blevins, editor for the magazine, the problem has been solved

ESCAPE VELOCITY; April 2008, Issue #3

The Magazine of Science Fact and Fiction

www.escapevelocitymagazine.com

http://www.lulu.com/content/2315462

So, the sky is not falling…

Featuring work by: Sheila Crosby, Dean Grondo, Kevin Gordon, Michael Penncavage, Branden Johnson, Barbara Krasnoff, Michael Anderson, Ivan Pavlov, Ben Cheetham, Shaun A. Saunders, Lawrence Dagstine, Magdalena Ball, and MORE. 

Escape Velocity #3 also contains lots of juicy non-fiction, such as an article on the The Mars Statue, a special tribute to Science Fiction legend Arthur C. Clarke (which, with its stunning full color pictures, makes the issue worth every nickel), and full coverage of the Northwestern Science Fiction Convention… NORWESCON 31. 

A review of Escape Velocity #1 at THE FIX (according to the editor, mine was one of the best stories; scroll down): http://thefix-online.com/reviews/escape-velocity-1/

In other news, I have a LOAD of acceptances and great news coming your way.  Queries for roughly two more short story collections, a possible novella deal, I’m working with an agent (wouldn’t you like to know who he or she is)… And if you missed my last entry, well, guess what? Here it is again.  I’m Feature Author for THE WILLOWS for their March 2008 issue!

https://lawrencedagstine.com/2008/04/05/the-willows-magazine-march-2008-feature-author/

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

The Willows Magazine, March 2008… (appearances)

A little late at the presses, but it’s finally here.  The Willows Magazine, March 2008 issue.  My Feature Author Issue! And I’m not the only surprise.  You’ll find pre-World War Two/Victorian Horror and Dark Fantasy stories by names such as: G.D. Falksen, Paul Marlowe, Matthew Stiles, Orrin Grey, Skadi meic Beorh, and Lawrence Dagstine…  Oh, and plenty more literary all stars and splendors await you, as we revolutionize today’s weird fiction.

The Willows Magazine, edited by Ben Thomas, is now published bimonthly. It’s one of the freshest and fastest growing publications to hit the Lovecraftian world since… well, since Weird Tales itself!

THE WILLOWS MAGAZINE; March 2008

Feature Author: Lawrence R. Dagstine

 

 www.thewillowsmagazine.com

Subscribe or buy your copy today!

Also, other issues available:

 

From The Willows Magazine homepage:

     Through the work of rising authors like G. D. Falksen, Lawrence Dagstine, and Paul Marlowe, we are also pioneering the genre of “steampunk horror,” in which elements of the golden age weird tale or Gothic romance are combined with an elegant 19th-Century proto-science-fiction aesthetic, such as that embodied by Welles, Verne, and the earliest pulp writers.

     We love work set in Victorian times, in the European countryside, in a twisted fairyland, in the underbelly of an enchanted city, aboard a triphibian ambulator, or in the ruins of an undiscovered civilization.

     If your favorite authors are those who initiated and maintained the unique movements of weird fiction and proto-SF, and those who continue these traditions today, The Willows is the place to read tales you will enjoy, and to submit your own work! We warmly welcome new writers, but we also print pieces from established authors.

 

www.thewillowsmagazine.com

Other New Entries: “Magazine Credits”

Barren Worlds, SF Anthology… (Author Line-Up!)

I’m pleased to announce that I have an author line-up for Hadley Rille Books’ forthcoming science fiction anthology, BARREN WORLDS.  This is a themed anthology, and it’s about planets or futuristic locales which are barren, empty or, more or less, feature lonely people.  Edited by Eric T. Reynolds (with Adam Nakama), Hadley Rille’s speculative fiction collections and authors have gone on to be nominated or recommended in the past for the Nebula Award.  So their books are worth the cover price, and there’s a lot of stories to choose from. 

-Science Fiction Stories of… BARREN WORLDS-

Edited by Eric T. Reynolds (w. Adam Nakama)

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www.hadleyrillebooks.com

Eric T. Reynolds Livejournal:

http://ericreynolds.livejournal.com/

BARREN WORLDS SF Author Line-up (29 stories): Drew Arrants, Adele Cosgrove-Bray, Geraint D’arcy, Lawrence R. Dagstine, Tristan Davenport, Graham Fielding, Ginny Gilroy, C.E. Grayson, Rob Haynes, Jasmine Hammer, Erin Hartshorn, Martin Hayes, Geoffrey Maloney, Mary Ellen Martin, Tracie McBride, Ken McConnell, Kevin James Miller, Shane Nelson, Michael H. Obilade, Sue Penkivech, Shauna Roberts, Lawrence M. Schoen, Ted Stetson, Gene Stewart, David Tallerman, Andrew Tisbert, Geoffrey Thorne, William Blake Vogel III and Christopher Woods.

Other New Entries: “Books & Anthos”

Lawrence Dagstine: 300 Publishing Credits…!

As I am typing this, I’m looking over my shoulder.  There are hundreds of magazines and old fanzines, contributor copies and duplicates, scattered across my couch and living room floor.  My name is either plastered on the covers, inside the table of contents, or a story of mine is illustrated between the pages.  I took them out tonight — all of them — along with a nice tall glass of zinfandel, to celebrate my 300th! Imagine, 300 fiction acceptances to paying, print, and online venues.  A road I had set out on some twelve years ago.  And here, in my 34th year of life, some 250 short stories later, I did it.  I really did it…

I’m looking once again at the floor in amazement.  There are so many of these publications that I can’t even imagine how this whole writing bug started again; I can’t even get across the room to my kitchen, which just goes to show you how much of a fire hazard they are.  Most of them are Small Press, a publishing level I hold dear to my heart and have a ton of respect for.  Many of the names in these magazines have gone on to become well-known superstars in the world of fiction — some even with book deals  — and this is how it starts really.  It’s the way it happened with names like Ray Bradbury, Theodore Sturgeon, Brian Aldiss, A.E. Van Vogt, Isaac Asimov, Stephen King, H.P. Lovecraft, Frederick Pohl, Philip Jose Farmer, Robert E. Howard, Robert Silverberg, John Campbell, and about a thousand others.  These writers of science fiction, fantasy, and horror have one thing in common.

They all started out submitting to short story magazines or fanzines.

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I guess now it finally comes down to compiling that extensive bibliography of mine.  Then again, what if I want to go for short story no. 350 or 400? At the moment, DF Lewis holds the record for most accepted speculative fiction in an individual’s lifetime.  Des Lewis has about 2,500 to 3,000 publication credits, I believe.  Prolific author Ken Goldman is just around the corner from reaching 500.  And here I am, I’m sure with a few talented others, at the 300 mark.

I’ve been asked quite often what it’s like to be a writer. Do I enjoy the writing lifestyle. Yes and no was my answer.  It’s a very antisocial, reclusive field.  It’s also a terrible addiction, like drugs or alcohol.  It’s a demon.  The one that haunts you and makes you pour your soul out on a keyboard at three, four in the morning.   And when you write at a pace like I do, you tend to get burned out rather quickly.  Some folks tell me: “Wow, so you’re an author.  I wish I could be a writer.  I’ve always wanted to live that sort of life.”

No, you don’t! Trust me.  If you’re looking at it economically these days, you’ll most likely make more money flipping burgers at McDonalds. The reason we do it is because we have no choice, and we put ourselves in this hole.  A pit filled with storytellers.  So if you decide you want to get into it more seriously, well, tread lightly.  Oh yeah, and let’s not forget the depression, the mixed bag of emotions, and the less-than-exciting, hair-pulling moments that go with the job title writer!

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With the Internet and technology rapidly changing the environment we live and work in, if someone were to ask me what does writing resemble most nowadays, I’d have to say muckraking, or just compare it to three professions: Baseball, Professional Wrestling, and Hollywood Acting.

If baseball were truly about writing, I would be David Wright.  I’m just one of those young Amazin’ Mets, catching flyball acceptances and paid homeruns to center.  But there’s really no difference between the two professions.  You have your minor league players and your major league players, and here and there a writer proves himself by hitting a certain average.  Coaches and teams talent scout and, after a certain amount of time, bring a writer up to the majors and offer them a deal.  And like the N.Y. Yankees and the Boston Red Sox, writing has its own little cliques and rivalries, too; this part, however, can be blamed on the Internet.

I remember being a fan of wrestling years ago, back when the Rock and Stone Cold Steve Austin were still members of what became the WWE.  I remember being a fan of Edge (Adam Copeland), back in 2000 when he wrestled the Dudley Boys and the Hardy Boys in those TLC tag-team matches.  Back then his partner was Christian, and they were rookies to the sport, trying to win belts and pay their dues, get their acceptances like with writing fiction.  Now look at Edge.  He’s the WWE’s recent World Champion.  It takes a long time, but if Edge were an author, well, he’d have earned his way to the top of the ladder and got his novel deal by now.  So yeah, wrestling, too, is very much like writing. 

Then last you have Hollywood Acting.  I write for a buck and to entertain in print, which I suppose makes me a freelancer.  If I were an actor or actress, regardless of the script, I’d probably be Samuel L. Jackson or Angelina Jolie.  Why? Because the way I submit stories to anywhere and everywhere, these two famous people take any role available.  But then you have the slightly more conscientious Hollywood alumni: Denzel Washington, Anthony Hopkins, Tom Hanks, Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe, Cate Blanchett, and Leonardo DiCaprio.  They choose their roles and scripts carefully; hell, Daniel Day Lewis stars in a movie once every four years and is nominated for it every time.

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Writing is really a love-hate sort of relationship with me.  One day I like it, the next I just don’t.  Which is why on people’s requests I decided to return to my artistic roots and start up Soberiffic Arts (2009).  I miss drawing…  And now with computers and Adobe Photoshop, so much more can be expressed and done with it.  But I’ve always been creative.  Next year I also plan on taking a break from short stories, returning to examine my potential with the novella, turning fiction into memorable art rather than freelancing for fiscal purposes, take my time now that I have all these magazine credits and an actual publisher, kind of like actors do, and choose my roles carefully.  And don’t think gunning for the three-hundred mark wasn’t a personal goal of mine.  Hey, I’ve already got the Bronze, I have a decent amount of Silvers, and now just feels like the right time to go for the Gold… 

Somewhere between all these acceptances I forgot to mention one of the most important things.  I became a father.  Family beats out all the successes of the written word any day.  You know why? Because in the end, none of this matters.  This is just filler.  You live for the moment.  It’s here today, gone tomorrow.  And so are we. 

So here it is, one last time.  Three hundred publishing credits.  Or, as I call it, The 300, for tonight we dine in hell…!

Fellow readers, I bid you good night…

…and until my next acceptance.

Lawrence R. Dagstine

p.s.: For those of you wondering where No. 300 came, just click the link below.  It came to Midnight in Hell (www.midnightinhell.com), for their Autumn 2008 Issue…

https://lawrencedagstine.com/2008/03/09/midnight-in-hell-september-2008-acceptance/