EmilyMiller
Halloween Cheer Capt
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2022
- Posts
- 13,224
Well at least it is my own threadsigh, we're off on a tangent again.

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Well at least it is my own threadsigh, we're off on a tangent again.
That's one of those two-person bicycles, isn't it?sigh, we're off on a tangent again.
I sort of imagine this place as existing in a spherical coordinate system as opposed to cartesian. Eventually, at some point, all tangents will find the main thread again.sigh, we're off on a tangent again.
I sort of imagine this place as existing in a spherical coordinate system as opposed to cartesian. Eventually, at some point, all tangents will find the main thread again.
I think Riemann Sphere is a great novel title.Came in to see if anyone saw updates about the story queue, left with a better understanding of analytic geometry.
AH has everything, I tell ya!
My math nerd cup runneth over todayI think Riemann Sphere is a great novel title.
left with a better understanding of analytic geometry.
You'd all be a lot more sober!What would we do without you, @onehitwanda![]()
Thank You for your quick responseI'll just do a quick response to your post, because you raise quite a few questions.
First up: yes, it's annoying to read a story that's full of mistakes. Whether spelling and punctuation, grammar, logic, consistency, style or whatever: anything that distracts the reader from the story being told creates a risk that the reader will give up.
So as writers, if we want our reader to stick with us, we should do our best to present the story in the best possible format. Even so, it's impossible to rule out all mistakes. I have 25+ years' experience as a proofreader and copyeditor, and I still leave mistakes in my stories. It happens, it's no big deal. I like to think my stories are better than most, and certainly no worse than plenty of hardcopy novels I've bought and read.
But it's also important to be aware that some stories call for an idiosyncratic style, or that some writers use a different spelling. I've had comments about typos, only to find out that the reader was objecting to my UK spelling. You mention stories without punctuation after the first thirty words: fine, but how about a stream of consciousness, or a deliberately antiquated and convoluted style? Some writers set out to try new things, or they come from a culture with different expectations of the written word. They can still produce excellent writing.
Anyway, much as I'm sure the site would love to publish quality literary works, that's certainly not a requirement. Writers publish here at all levels of literary merit, from 750 words of "I saw my sister, she was naked, we fucked" to novel-length works that would have Salman Rushdie getting out his pen to take notes. It's all good. There are readers enough to go round, and they also range from "All I want to read about is cocks and tits" to critical appreciation of cadence, word choice, symbolism and story arcs.
If you want to publish something here, don't worry about it being perfect. Nothing is perfect in the eyes of its creator or harsh critics. That doesn't mean you can't enjoy writing it, and readers won't enjoy reading it, and you won't enjoy their appreciation.
It's easy to start writing. It's so much more difficult to finish writing and publish. But worrying about your story not being perfect should never be a reason for not finishing it.
Good luck!
Many things on this site date back from decades ago. Quite possibly the rules and guidelines haven't been updated since the site was first set up. Things change, priorities change.What I am talking about is the disconnect between the Rules and Guidelines for story submission and what I see published. Nothing more. As an author I have to ask you. Is it a strain writing under that brolly?
I certainly do not want and won't get into a pissing contest with you. I am not so inclined and I am not into water sports.Many things on this site date back from decades ago. Quite possibly the rules and guidelines haven't been updated since the site was first set up. Things change, priorities change.
I'm sure Laurel would love to limit stories to those that are perfect, but the fact is that the site's priority is to publish stories that readers will read. Many don't care about the technical aspects of writing. All they want from a story is that it scratch their itch.
And don't forget that we're all amateurs here. If you want professional standards, read books and stories that have gone through a professional publishing process. You'll still find mistakes, though.
So my advice, if you come across a story that isn't to your liking, is just to click away and look for something else. There are hundreds of thousands of stories here, so you're bound to find something. And if not, write your own. That's how many of us started.
But here's something for you to consider. You say in your first post that you spent more than an hour writing and correcting it. Even so, it contains a handful of typos and at least one misplaced comma. So maybe you shouldn't be so quick to judge writers whose stories aren't perfect until you've written and published your own.
There’s a frustration at not being able to see under the lid, but I think that ultimately we have to leave them to it. A prolonged slow down will reduce author interest, which might help them catch up. If they monetise the site better they might be able to afford to pay helpers, but we don’t have any influence over their setup or corporate governance. All I know is that if was sitting in the middle of this machine for decades, I would go completely insane whether or not it was making any money…There are some long-time editors on this site, that I'm sure Laurel & Manu trust.
Perhaps, if they have time and interest, could take on some of their workload in reviewing stories and making sure they're acceptable for publication.
I know this'd be thankless, with probably no money involved and, for all I know, this is already happening.
I’m assuming you didn’t get the work sent back for any reason.35 days is crazy. As with most stuff posted here, this is pure speculation, but it does feel like some stories have gotten ‘lost’ in the submission process.
The general recommendation is to just wait, and PM Laurel (you’ve done both). But I’ve also now seen three people say that they withdrew their submission, deleted it, recreated it, and resubmitted. That led to a published story for them. Of course that’s not guaranteed, or even recommended.
It seems an extreme approach and goes against the collective wisdom. But after 35 days I would consider extreme measures. You’re not getting anywhere with your current approach.
It would seem your point is valid. When a story is submitted, we can assume it goes into a queue for review. Perhaps a glitch prevented the story from reaching the review queue, perhaps there are more than one queue and that an internal transfer process failed, or that one of the queues was accidentally cleaned.35 days is crazy. As with most stuff posted here, this is pure speculation, but it does feel like some stories have gotten ‘lost’ in the submission process.
The general recommendation is to just wait, and PM Laurel (you’ve done both). But I’ve also now seen three people say that they withdrew their submission, deleted it, recreated it, and resubmitted. That led to a published story for them. Of course that’s not guaranteed, or even recommended.
It seems an extreme approach and goes against the collective wisdom. But after 35 days I would consider extreme measures. You’re not getting anywhere with your current approach.
Based on the anecdotal evidence in this and other related threads, I am just about convinced this has to be some kind of glitch in their file management system, that is somehow concealing these stories indefinitely from the reviewers. I don't know, perhaps erroneously and perpetually reshuffling them to the bottom of the pile? Not really enough of a IT geek to guess how this would happen.It would seem your point is valid. When a story is submitted, we can assume it goes into a queue for review. Perhaps a glitch prevented the story from reaching the review queue, perhaps there are more than one queue and that an internal transfer process failed, or that one of the queues was accidentally cleaned.
After 35 days, I would pull and resubmit, then get back to everyone as a test result. That other more recent stories are also slow may be an indication that other issues exist.
And in today's nightmare fuel...FWIW - on hearing that some Halloween stories had been approved for Oct publishing already, whereas mine has been in Limbo for 12 days, I’ve pulled and resubmitted it.
Will also report back here as to how it goes.
Based on the anecdotal evidence in this and other related threads, I am just about convinced this has to be some kind of glitch in their file management system, that is somehow concealing these stories indefinitely from the reviewers. I don't know, perhaps erroneously and perpetually reshuffling them to the bottom of the pile? Not really enough of a IT geek to guess how this would happen.
And it's beyond bizarre that they seem to be ignoring the discussion here. I haven't seen any comment anywhere indicating anyone has been told they're 'looking into it'.
But you're right; 36 days is long enough to just sit and wait. I'm going to pull my submission and resubmit, and see what happens. Wish me luck. I'll let you guys know how that works out for me.
I too noticed some pages refusing to populate, late last night, but was done and just went to bed.I'm not a techy person either, but I *can* say that there were server errors on the site last night as I tried to log in to submit my most recent story. I could not log in and then when it finally let me log in, I could not access my dashboard, I just got stuck in the authentication screen where it's checking...whatever those four things it checks are before it lets you get to your works. It's not out of the realm of possibilities that something glitched and a queue is not functioning as expected - I've had that happen in jobs where we had a ticketing queue and things just got lost in cyberspace until the client updated them asking what our problem was.
It's easy to say that we want to see more monetization on the site to allow for paying help but at the same time, what would that do to the reader experience? Would we end up with the same AI ads you see on places like pornhub? Do we really want that? Clearly Laurel and Manu don't.
I think I'm just on the bandwagon hoping that everything is okay *and* that folks are taking breaks when needed. I can't imagine reviewing all of these stories can be easy work and being so far behind the scenes, it feels thankless (and I've only been on this side of the equation for such a short time!).
The story side had an outage for some time last night.I too noticed some pages refusing to populate, late last night, but was done and just went to bed.