


I decided, as an experiment, to publish this right away as a short story ebook on Amazon Kindle. Is he losing his mind, or experiencing the birth of a new alternate reality via binary fission?
DOODLE CAR ON THE WALLET PAUL SMITH LICENSE
James Oleson is beginning to see everything in perfect duplicate - two identical models of cars which are the same down to scuff marks and license plate, two old philosophy books with the same torn pages and inscription in old ink, and twin mail men. "The Other Car," which I just wrote a little over two weeks ago, is coincidentally almost the same length, and is in the same slipstream, new weird, science fantasy corner of the science fiction genre. The Sci Phi Journal paid me 5-cents per word for this story. For example, my most recent sale of this sort was for my 5500-word story, "The Wallet," to Sci Phi Journal #4, which was just published last month.

I sold the story to a magazine - whether print, or more recently, online, or both - for a payment per word, usually 5 to 10 cents per word. All of the 40 short science fiction and fantasy stories I've published since 1991 - you can see a list of most of them here, at the Internet Speculative Fiction Data Base - were published the good old-fashioned traditional way.

Hey, I don't usually talk much inside baseball here about my science fiction writing - how and why I make decisions to get my stories published in this place or that, or try to get them published - but I thought you might enjoy a little of the story behind the story of my recently published The Other Car, which I put up as an ebook on Amazon about two weeks ago.įirst, as some of you may know, this is the not way I've ever published my short stories.
