Every so often – though
certainly not as often as I should - I go on a serious trawl of the internet
for literary journals, magazines, websites and competitions, searching for
places to send my short stories. A few months ago, on one such mission, I came
across the website Stories for Homes, which was requesting submissions of short
fiction for an anthology of the same name on the theme of ‘home’.
Immediately, one of my
stories, Unsettled, popped to the
forefront of my mind: it concerns a house, a community, and an outsider - themes I thought might sit well in the anthology. However, it is also a retelling of a famous fairy tale, and given that the book was being produced to raise funds for the homeless charity Shelter, I wondered whether the editors might want to stick to more realist(ic) stories to reflect the serious nature of the cause.
Still it was worth a shot,
I thought, so I sent off Unsettled with
a rather sheepish this-might-not-be-quite-what-you’re-looking-for
disclaimer, and was therefore doubly delighted when, shortly afterwards, I
learned it had been accepted for the anthology.
(The story behind Stories for Homes – from its pitch to
publication - is rather fascinating in itself, as described by Debi Alper on her website here.)
Given that the book was being put together for charity under significant time pressure, we writers were then paired up over cyberspace by the editors/organisers/superwomen, Sally Swingewood and Debi Alper, and asked to look over one another's work. Although editing is a large part of my day job, at the time of this request I was holed up in a French chateau with sporadic internet access (ghostwriting larks...) and so a little worried about how I was going to find the time/means to pull off a decent editing job.
Fortunately, I was paired with Isabel Costello, who I later discovered runs the excellent book blog On the Literary Sofa. Isabel’s wonderful story, Half of Everything, about a woman coming to terms with the breakdown of her marriage during hurricane
I am very proud to have been involved in the Stories for Homes book,
and in awe of the people who worked so hard to pull it all together. It's strange to think that I stumbled across its website when looking for a home for one of my stories. I couldn't have predicted that search would lead me to such an exciting project, one that will hopefully make a big difference to people in desperate need of a place to call their own.
Stories for Homes promo by Imran Siddiq

Lovely blog! I'm so pleased your story found a home in the anthology. One point, Amazon take a cut of the sales price so Shelter don't get the full £5. 100% of the royalties go straight to them though. And yes, the paperback is coming soon and will be a hefty 654 pages! It's the fault of the lovely authors who, like you, wrote wonderful stories we couldn't resist including. With hindsight, we really should have split it into 2 volumes. Ah well, you live and learn (hopefully).
ReplyDeleteThanks, Debi! And I've amended the part about royalties, thank you for clarifying that.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see the paperback - I think the longer the better, as there's quality to go with that quantity! Plus, it will make a nice chunky Christmas present to keep people amused through the cold, dark months. :)
That is a really great project to have been involved in and a cool, original idea for raising awareness. Good work on finding such a good home for your story. It will be lovely to see the paperback when it is out!
ReplyDeleteThanks, JBad, you 'trusted writerly friend', you.
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