Hiya,
Firstly let me say I hope this thread can be a respectful point of clarification and discussion between authors and mods on the topics in the title.
We should all treat the mods (who freely give their time for us) with respect at all times! ❤️
Microfiction
I’ve grown confused about this category. In my opinion, poetry is kind of any “anything goes” category here, just requiring poems don’t violate Lush rules on age, consent, etc. and contains some erotic elements. With free verse, I’m sure it’s hard to judge for quality since poetry is very subjective. That said, I’m wondering if we’ve reached that point with microfiction.
The category write-up says it must tell a story and not just be an erotic thought. In my opinion, most published are erotic scenes, which readers obviously love. I don’t see many that tell a beginning, middle, and end of a story. So, when newbies try to write one, I tell them they should try to write a complete story, but they see something else.
And 100 words, like poetry, I feel needs relaxed structure. One-word sentences. Fragments. Very powerful in a micro. Some choose to write 100 words in a single paragraph, while others write short sentences. I see everything in-between published here, so should anyone be rejected for structure? And I sometimes want to tell a story as a micro and a full-length story. Is that allowed or not? The micro is not part of a series and it’s a condensed version of the longer story, not an introduction.
Is there anything we can do to give authors and mods clearer boundaries (or remove boundaries) on what’s now publishable in microfiction?
Story Rejection/Mod Editing
Firstly, are we ever going to get the capability back to see mod changes? It’s frustrating to me because if I reread after publishing and see a comma where I don’t like it, I don’t know whether to pull and fix or if mod had changed it to what it is.
Commas brings up another point of discussion. I understand Lush has set rules on age, content, consent, etc. I wonder if relaxing some edits like comma placement (except like obvious set rules in dialogue), paragraphing choices, other style choices would save time for everyone. Grammarly likes commas a set way, but as creative writers, we all know moving commas around creates a very different impression to the reader. I think using commas as pauses shouldn’t be messed with during story approval. Same as hyphens and ellipses. I’m using Jaymal as an example of an author who gives readers a powerful story with hyphens as just one of his writing devices. WannabeWordsmith is my example of using one-word sentences and fragments in an impactful way. Both these authors are award-winning and their stories would not be the same if all Grammarly edits were followed. I see published authors writing outside Grammarly rules all the time as far as some formatting, fragment, and comma choices. Thoughts?
Last item is mod editing on competition entries. Is editing allowed by the mod? I’ve received a few welcome edits by a mod on some and been rejected for a typo on another, citing the mod couldn’t edit a comp entry. What is the standard on this?
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I love writing here! Appreciate everyone involved with this site. I’m hoping to be able to write more and wanted clarification on a few points of confusion for me. ❤️