1. Announcement The first Tildes Short Story Exchange is now open to submissions! As previously announced, the first edition of the Tildes Short Story Exchange is now open to submissions! Click...
1. Announcement
The first Tildes Short Story Exchange is now open to submissions!
As previously announced, the first edition of the Tildes Short Story Exchange is now open to submissions!
Click here for all the information!
1. Introduction
I have, on many occasions, considered creating a fiction writing and feedback exchange workshop on Tildes. As these things often go, I exaggerated my plans, detailing them endlessly without ever putting them into action. This post is an attempt to break the cycle of procrastination, and I am doing so by forcing myself to adopt a much simpler approach.
2. Goals
The main goal of the Tildes Short Story Exchange is to allow people to get feedback on their short stories. Is it any good? How can I improve it?
3. Why only short stories?
Although there are many writing genres people like to share, short stories are among the most practical. They can be read much more quickly than novels and novellas, and their evaluation is simpler than what poetry requires. A simple, defined, and easy-to-understand prompt is conducive to creation. Every month, participants will know that the Tildes Short Story Exchange is a place to get feedback on short stories. They will feel compelled to write as a result.
4. Position on LLMs
This is a workshop for humans. Producing human connection is one of its main goals. Because of that, all submissions must be human-generated, both in full and in part. That said, LLMs can be used for the same things traditional tools such as Google Docs or Microsoft Word have been used for in the past: proofreading. Additionally, it is allowed to use LLMs to assist in translating into English text that you wrote yourself.
5. About the submissions
For the purposes of the TSSE, a short story is a work of fiction with 7,500 words or fewer. This is based on the classification by both the Hugo and Nebula awards. Stories that go a little above that will, of course, be accepted within reason. All submissions must be in English.
6. How to submit your short story
You may use any website, blog, format, or platform to share your story!
If you are inclined to share a PDF, please also share your story in a format that is open, allowing it to be easily converted and better displayed on mobile devices such as phones, tablets, Kindles, etc. Some good formats for that are .docx, .rtf, .odt, .epub, .mobi, .txt, .md (markdown)
.
If you are sharing your story on something like Google Drive or Microsoft Office Online, make sure to set the appropriate permissions!
I will make an effort to read and provide feedback on as many submissions as I can, and if you share it in an open format, it will at the very least have me as a reader!
You may also use detail markdown blocks to paste your story on Tildes itself (see "Expandable sections" in the Tildes docs here).
7. Example submissions
All short story submissions should be top-level comments on this post.
I drafted below an example submission that I encourage you to use. There are a few additional suggestions in there!
Title: My Super Cool Story
Genre(s): Science fiction, romance
Expected feedback: In this story I need feedback on story, language, everything. You can be as ruthless as you want. I can take it!
File: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ffWEjR7qP3Gfn693cLvOaRujetl6b_5x/
Title: The Day My Dog Died
Genre(s): Drama
Expected feedback: I'm really insecure about the ending. This is a very personal story—be gentle with me!
File: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ffWEjR7qP3Gfn693cLvOaRujetl6b_5x/
8. How to provide feedback?
All feedback should be a direct response to short story submissions.
Feedback should always follow the guidelines put forth by the writer, but anything that is not explicitly prohibited can be understood to be allowed. There will be no strict rules on how feedback must be written, but I would suggest that everyone provide something potentially helpful to the improvement of the story. That is, of course, highly subjective.
9. How are rules going to be enforced?
Given that I am a regular Tildes user with no administrative privileges, all rules in this project will serve merely as guidelines that I suggest participants follow. There will be no enforcement or consequence for not following the guidelines. That means there will be no score, and no “feedback points” will be awarded. It is suggested that everyone seeking feedback provide at least one piece of feedback prior to posting their own story. But that will be entirely based on the “honor system,” and no admonitions will be made toward those who seek feedback without providing it.
10. What will be the schedule?
The TSSE will feature one post on the 1st day of each month. This is to help with mnemonics so people always remember when it will happen. That will help them get their “creative mojo” working every month.
Exceptionally for this first edition, given that it is already May 3rd, the Tildes Short Story Exchange – First Edition will go up next Monday (May 5th) and remain as the current post until June 1st, when it will be replaced.
Within that period, everyone will be free to post their short stories and their feedback at their own leisure.
The schedule may change to once every two months if there is not enough activity.
2. Quick info
This is the beginning of a permanent short fiction workshop on Tildes! Anyone is welcome to post their short stories and get feedback on them. For more information, please click on the information box above or visit the introduction post.
The TSSE will feature one post on the 1st day of each month. Exceptionally, this first edition will be up from today (Monday, May 5th) until June 1st, when it will be replaced.
During that period, everyone will be free to post their short stories and their feedback at their own leisure.
3. How to submit your short story
You may use any website, blog, format, or platform to share your story!
If you are inclined to share a PDF, please also share your story in a format that is open, allowing it to be easily converted and better displayed on mobile devices such as phones, tablets, Kindles, etc. Some good formats for that are .docx, .rtf, .odt, .epub, .mobi, .txt, .md (markdown)
.
If you are sharing your story on something like Google Drive or Microsoft Office Online, make sure to set the appropriate permissions!
You may also use detail markdown blocks to paste your story on Tildes itself (see "Expandable sections" in the Tildes docs here).
4. Example submissions
All short story submissions should be top-level comments on the TSSE posts.
I drafted below an example submission that I encourage you to use. You are not forced to follow this model—feel free to add any information you want in your submission.
Click for the examples
**Title**: My Super Cool Story
**Word count**: 949
**Genre(s)**: Science fiction, romance
**Expected feedback**: In this story I need feedback on story, language, everything. You can be as ruthless as you want. I can take it!
**File or link**: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ffWEjR7qP3Gfn693cLvOaRujetl6b_5x/
**Title**: The Day My Dog Died
- **Word count**: 1500
**Genre(s)**: Drama
**Expected feedback**: I'm really insecure about the ending. This is a very personal story—be gentle with me!
**File or link**: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ffWEjR7qP3Gfn693cLvOaRujetl6b_5x/
5. How to provide feedback?
All feedback should be a direct response to short story submissions.
Feedback should always follow the guidelines put forth by the writer, but anything that is not explicitly prohibited can be understood to be allowed. There will be no strict rules on how feedback must be written, but I would suggest that everyone provide something potentially helpful to the improvement of the story. That is, of course, highly subjective.