One of our themes this month is "what's new in publishing." While it may not be new to publishing -- and if our dear friend Merriam-Webster is to be trusted, it's not a new concept generally -- the novelette is new to me.
Since the pandemic has been a strain on my creativity, my editor suggested I pursue writing a short. "A short story?" I asked. "No, no. A short," she replied. "A novella?" I queried. She patiently explained the concept of a story that is longer than a typical short story, yet shorter than a traditional novella. She called it a "coffee cup read." It wasn't until I was musing about writing about this overall topic this month that my google searches revealed that I could be calling my latest release a novelette, which sounds so sweet and dainty. A novelette, I've learned, is often light and romantic or sentimental. And indeed the novelette I released in late October for the holiday season is both romantic and sentimental. It is meant to hearken back to a simpler time and provide readers with a cozy, nostalgic holiday story.
I wasn't sure a shorter format narrative arc -- whether short story, novelette or novella -- would suit my style at all, as I tend to write long (read: verbose and prone to using complex sentence structures). To my happy surprise, it did. As it's set in Iceland in December 1944, it's also perhaps appropriate that I wrote the first draft during Texas's Winter Storm Uri (I thankfully never lost power, but did lose water for several days). They aren't yet written, but the other three novelettes in this series are generally plotted, and I'm ready to dive in with the next one. This will be my Arctic quartet in time -- each of the four Macalester sisters serves as a Red Cross Girl in a different Arctic location, with the story centered around a different holiday. In this first novelette, my heroine Elise is serving in Iceland at Christmas time in 1944.
Elise Macalester is convinced her shy, girl-next-door personality prevents her from being the kind of Red Cross Girl that helps soldiers forget war and guarantees she’ll never be open enough to fall in love. In a moment of uncharacteristic boldness to reunite brothers torn apart by combat, she reconnects with a handsome stranger with whom she shared one enchanting dance months earlier. But self-doubt and unspeakable tragedy prove formidable enemies to the heart.
Tommy Towson believes his service as an Army radar technician at an Icelandic weather station is less noble than that of men serving in combat -- men like his beloved older brother, Mike. Their bittersweet reunion, along with a second-chance encounter that challenges him to hope, proves a bigger test of Tommy’s courage than anything on the battlefield.
The first in a planned quartet of Clubmobile Girls Shorts set in the Arctic, At His Side for Christmas transports the reader to an often-overlooked wartime locale, in an era that continues to exert a hold on our hearts during the holidays. Fans of “A Christmas Story,” “It’s a Wonderful Life,” “Miracle on 34th Street” and old television favorites such as “The Waltons” will enjoy this nostalgic and festive step back in time.
You can find At His Side for Christmas, and my other Clubmobile Girls novels, on Amazon. You can learn more about me and my writing on my website or by following me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.
2 comments:
Interesting post, Eleri. I too wrote a "short" rather than 90K+ story this year. You finished yours. Mine is still waiting for me to show back up and do edits. Finished I'll be close to 20K or perhaps a bit over or maybe more "over" than I think now.
Elise and Tommy's story looks like a few tears may be shed by the reader but all will be well by "The End"
Eleri,
So happy you found the Novelette. I've always thought of the progression from short stories to novels as the following.
Short Story - 2,500-5,000 is typical, but up to 8,500 is often considered still a short story
Novelette - 8,500 to 15,000
Novella - 15,000 to 40,000
Novel - 40,000+ (though many publishers won't accept a novel unless it is at least 50-55K)
I've always had a problem writing short. It seems once I became an adult with a lot more life experiences I could no longer write short. I'd often be invited into an anthology with a 5K word limit and would write a story that was 8,500 or more. That's when I learned about novelettes.
I think novelettes serve a great purpose for all those side stories, like the one you mention here that you want to tell but don't easily fit into a novel. I hope you will collect them and put them out as an anthology or collection at some point. You can certainly put them out individually in ebooks or give them away for promotions. I love the whole idea of something that takes place in the Arctic.
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