Why Some Writers Stall After Early Success
Early success is supposed to be motivating. A first publication. A contest win. A personal note from an editor you admire. These moments feel like proof: I can do this. And often, they are. But sometimes , that early success becomes a strange kind of…
Posts by Gideon Smith
Preparing for a Convention Panel (Without Losing Your Mind)
Being invited onto a convention panel can be flattering—and surprisingly stressful. You want to sound smart. You want to contribute. You don’t want to freeze or ramble or realize halfway through that you have nothing useful to say. One of…
My first pro-rate sale of the year just went live - Anomaly Magazine. Been trying to crack that market for a while now. :)
Microfiction (300 words).
Dystopian medical SciFi.
www.patreon.com/posts/deleti...
The Quiet Grief of the Story That Almost Worked
Last year I had 10 'Holds' from magazines for short stories - but only one turned into an acceptance in the end. This taught me that there’s a particular kind of disappointment that doesn’t get talked about much in writing circles: the story that…
Excited to share, I am one of the ten finalists for the 2026 Jim Baen Memorial Prize #sciencefiction
So honored!
Thank you @bfbzine.bsky.social for being such a great editorial team to work with!!
My piece 'Honesty to a Vulture' in Issue 8 now online!!
www.baublesfrombones.com/honesty-to-a...
Are There Really “Stages” to a Writer?
People love labels. In writing circles we talk casually about beginners, emerging writers, mid-career authors, established voices. These terms get used as shorthand, but rarely do we stop to ask: what do they actually mean? For many people outside the writing…
Why “Write What You Love” Is Only Half the Advice
“Write what you love” is some of the best writing advice you’ll ever hear—and also some of the most incomplete. And with Valentine's day coming, it seemed an apropos theme for today. On its own, the advice is freeing. It gives permission. It pushes…
Why Characters Matter More in Genre Fiction
Writers often talk around a distinction between literary and genre fiction without ever quite naming it. To me, it hinges on the relative importance of theme vs character. In literary fiction, characters are expected to be fully realized,…
Had a great time at #MarsCon this weekend — thanks to everyone who came to the panels on magic systems, fighting in fiction, and science in SF. Really fun discussions.
Voice Isn’t Something You “Find”—It’s Something That Survives Revision
Writers talk about voice the way people talk about buried treasure. As if it’s something hidden inside you, waiting to be uncovered if you just dig deeply enough. Find your voice. Trust your voice. Don’t lose your voice. That…
Year in Review 2025: A Year of Middle Grounds, Big Leaps, and Quiet Transformations
For the last few years I’ve made a habit of writing a New Year's “Year in Review” post—a way to remind myself that even when the milestones aren’t the ones I once imagined, the work still matters, the trajectory…
Your Approach to Rejection Matters Less Than That you Risk it
It’s often said that moving is one of life’s top stressors—right up there with divorce and death. Having endured a move earlier this year (complete with nightmare movers and chaos in cardboard), I can confirm that’s no exaggeration. But…
Just a quick heads up, as I am part of the slushers for Flash Fiction Online, the 2026 submission schedule just posted. Sharpen your pencils! (dust off your keyboards?)
www.patreon.com/posts/2026-s...
When an Acceptance Turns Sour
One of the most thrilling moments in a writer’s life is receiving that long-awaited yes—an acceptance letter after dozens, maybe hundreds, of rejections. It’s the kind of moment that’s meant to be savored, a bright spark of validation in a career often defined by…
Why Rejection Doesn’t Mean Your Story Is Bad
As a slush reader for various speculative fiction magazines, I’ve learned one fundamental truth: taste is messy. It’s subjective, inconsistent, and often deeply personal. If you’ve ever submitted a story and been rejected in the first round, you’re in…
Thrilled to be in this anthology - not just because I loved the piece they accepted from me, but because its an awesome TOC of authors I admire!!
This is the magic of social media - I had no idea one of my fav authors had a new book coming out! Retweeting for others who loved the Pact and Pattern series and want more from the author :)
Free to read now, my strange little story that found its home at @crepuscularmag.bsky.social !
When Revision or Feedback Kills the Magic
As a slush reader, one of the most heartbreaking things I’ve experienced is seeing a story I loved—a story that stood out from the pile, that felt fresh and alive—come back as an R&R (revise and resubmit)... and lose everything that made it special. It’s…
The Myth of the ‘One Piece of Advice’
To be succesful at writing, I've come to believe that its more your ability to juggle, than anything else that will help you. But there’s a peculiar myth that runs through popular culture—the idea that success boils down to one secret, one golden rule, one…
Thank you @crepuscularmag.bsky.social for giving voice to this little piece! I can't think of a better home for it :)
The Creative Power of Chaos: Why Randomness Makes Your Writing Stronger
Writers love control. We plan plots, build worlds, craft character arcs, and agonize over word choice. Writing can feel like architecture—careful, precise, calculated. But sometimes, we need a little chaos. Enter randomness.…
Off to #dragoncon tomorrow to receive the Baen Fantasy Award! Very excited to meet the Baen folks as well as anyone from here who might be there!
dragoncon.org
Writing Is Like Going to the Gym: Why It Gets Harder, Not Easier—and What to Do About It
When you start going to the gym, it’s hard. Your muscles ache. You’re not in the habit, so every visit feels like a chore. But then—suddenly—it starts to click. You feel stronger. You might even look a little…
It's #QueerPit and my incredibly talented friend @abbookster.bsky.social has a great pitch - go go A.B. !
Would love to read this! Such a great, rich concept! :)
The Struggle of Long-Form Writing: How to Overcome Midway Meltdowns
Earlier this year, I found myself hitting a wall with my longer writing projects. I don't mean my novels here, I'm referring to the longer short story, novelette territory. The same issue kept cropping up: I'd get to about 7,000…
Just got an acceptance from @crepuscularmag.bsky.social ! Very happy this strange little piece found a home. :)
I’ve written a lot of stories no one read
This week, one of them got noticed
Traitor to the Wolfguard Creed won the 2025 Baen Fantasy Adventure Award
Thank you to everyone who’s encouraged me along the way.
And to my fellow #writers Keep writing. Believe in yourself. Moments like this are gold :)