Have I mentioned before that I was a weird kid?
While most boys my age were probably watching MTV or Alf, I used to listen to Golden Age radio shows, and I was into detective stories in a BIG way.
No surprise then that I tried my teenage hand at a noirish novel. The private eye's name was Charlie Madison, and he had a very unique sense of humor—due to the plethora of typos I made as I banged away on a manual typewriter.
One of my goals this year was to write a new Charlie Madison detective tale, but I wanted to take it in a speculative direction. The final product ended up being 10,000 words, and at that length, I wasn't sure where to submit it.
Then I stumbled across a link to Criminal Element on Tor.com, and I figured, "Why not?" —without expecting anything more than a form letter rejection.
A month later, I received the following:
Dear Mr. Fowler,
Allow me to introduce myself. I am a senior editor with Tor Forge Books and Liz Edelstein passed on your story for consideration of publication on the CRIMINAL ELEMENT site. I think that there is a lot of good material here but also think that it needs a bit of tweaking before we might be able to publish. I am wondering if this is something that you would be willing to do. If so, I can send you my notes.
All best,
Claire Eddy
Can we say . . . stupefied? A TOR editor was contacting me?
Needless to say, I jumped at the chance to work with Ms. Eddy. After a couple rewrites, "Girl of Great Price" was accepted for publication, and I signed the longest, best-paying contract of my writing career thus far.
Cowabunga!
Cowabunga!

27 comments:
Cowabunga! For sure. I am very happy for you. I think all writers were "unique" kids. I know I was. Just like I know I was a young fan of Noir like you.
I even wrote a Noir supernatural flash fiction just for my blog. Here's the link if you're interested. Check it out if only for the great photo of Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake :
http://rolandyeomans.blogspot.com/2011/11/black-hearts-are-cold.html
Holy wow! Awesome news, man! Seriously cool, and it is most definitely well deserved. Hope you're having a great holiday season.
Yeeha!!! I'd be patting myself on the back right now - or having a drink :)
Whoo hoo!!! Great news, Milo! :)
As for weird kids? Well, let's just say that if I was in elem school/high school now, I'd be one of those kids that everyone was just a little bit concerned about. I'd probably have a standing appt with the guidance counselor. :)
Awesome, Milo!! You are indeed the most successful author I know.
And I understand Dani Greer contacted you last week about a guest spot about Write1Sub1?
Milo has entered the building!
That is one hell of a christmas present.
Cowabunga, dude! A-MAZING.
(And Alf! Haha, that takes me back!)
You are on a ROLL, man. Although I think I was one of those watching ALF. And maybe Voltron too.
Roland: Funny you mention Alan Ladd -- BOX 13 was my all-time favorite radio show. I'll be sure to check out your flash.
Tony: I don't know if it's well-deserved, but it's definitely been a long time in the works! I like being able to share the characters that have been with me for a while.
Marcy: Or both? Thanks!
Madeline: And we can trace it all back to a love of Stephen King's work, right?
Alex: Working on it, sir! Dani Greer? Not yet...
Martin: Mos def. I am truly grateful this story will see the light of day.
Jennifer: How about Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?
Jay: Thunder Cats too, perchance?
Congratulations, Milo! I've been a long-time reader of Criminal Element. Good stuff, and quite the accomplishment. Go you!
Congrats!
By the way, if you're a crime fiction fan, you might think about checking out Detectives Beyond Borders. It got me reading mysteries again.
Holy hell, Tor? Massive, massive congratulations, Milo.
Congratulations! I just found your site through Jay's. Seems I stumbled upon at a good moment. Best of luck to you!!
Hoorah for you Milo! I'm delighted for you. I love that you keep getting successes one after the other.
BTW have you ever written haiku for:
http://samsdotpublishing.com/scifaikuestguide.htm ?
Stephanie: Thanks; I'm stoked.
Loren: Sounds good to me.
Shane: Thanks, man.
Dafeenah: Thanks for stopping by.
Madeleine: Oh yes indeed, that's one of my favorites -- and they pay a buck per haiku!
LOL! I just scooted back to say I just read some of yours and Doms. (a deja vu moment I think) well done! I'm going to have a go too :O)
Congrats, Milo! Hard work and persperistence pays off. :)
Madeleine: Go for it! Teri Santitoro is a great editor to work with.
Tim: You know it, dude.
Thoroughly well-deserved, and I am fascinated and inspired that stories from one's youth can be resurrected (although all I can renenber about mine is that the heroine was called Dimsie Maitland)
Outstanding!
Awesome! Who doesn't luv a good detective story? I'm also a suck for film noir:)
Sandra: That is one cool name.
Deborah: Gracias!
Mark: That's what I was going for -- but more Blade Runner than The Big Sleep.
Fantastic news! And I love, love, love that Charlie Madison had his beginning when you were a teenager!
*Squeeeee!*
... yeah, that pretty much says it.
Robert: It's always a great day when one of my original characters hits it "big."
Katey: =]
Wow! Please remember me when you are rich and famous :) Congratulations.
Thanks, man. Wealth and fame currently aren't on my radar, but I'd sure welcome a book deal.
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