Issue Four Hundred Eighty Seven – Authors Publish Magazine https://authorspublish.com We help authors get their words into the world. Thu, 29 Sep 2022 15:31:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Hedge Apple Halloween Contest: Now Seeking Submissions https://authorspublish.com/hedge-apple-halloween-contest-now-seeking-submissions/ Thu, 29 Sep 2022 14:58:28 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=20671 Hedge Apple is a literary annual published by Hagerstown Community College in Maryland.  Students and faculty work together to produce the journal, which is published both online and in print. Some issues are themed, and past themes include: “The Wilderness/The City,” “Personal Identity,” and “Paradigm Shift.”  You can read the journal online to get a sense of what they publish.

Right now through October 15th, Hedge Apple is seeking submissions for their Halloween Contest. Submissions can be “festive or fierce,” but should broadly address the theme of Halloween and/or October. Authors may submit via email, 1,000 words or fewer of poetry or prose. Hedge Apple does not accept submissions with gratuitous gore.

The winners of the Halloween Contest will be announced on Halloween morning and published on Hedge Apple’s website.

Hedge Apple is also open for general submissions, but please note that they only read these submissions from January through April. This means that although authors may submit now, Hedge Apple won’t respond to general submissions until January 2023. (Again, this is for general submissions only. Hedge Apple will respond to Halloween Contest submissions by October 31st.) Authors submitting from January through April, however, can expect a response within two weeks.

For general submissions: Authors may submit poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Although Hedge Apple considers manuscripts of all lengths, they prefer writing that’s 5,000 words or fewer. Authors published in Hedge Apple’s print edition receive a complimentary copy.

Hedge Apple accepts submissions via email, not online or by post. They accept simultaneous submissions but ask that authors withdraw work published elsewhere.

Hedge Apple only accepts submissions that follow the guidelines they’ve posted online. Please read these guidelines in full before submitting.

If you would like to learn more or submit to the Hedge Apple Halloween Contest, please visit their website here.

For more information about general submissions, please click here.


Bio: Ella Peary is the pen name for an author, editor, creative writing mentor, and submission consultant. Over the past five years, she’s written hundreds of articles for Authors Publish, and she’s also served as a copywriter and copy editor for a wide range of organizations and individuals. She is the author of The Quick Start Guide to Flash Fiction. She occasionally teaches a course on flash fiction. You can contact her at ellapeary@gmail.com.

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Upper Room: Now Accepting Manuscript Proposals https://authorspublish.com/upper-room-now-accepting-manuscript-proposals/ Thu, 29 Sep 2022 14:57:24 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=20697 Upper Room is a Christian press that focuses on “Christian spiritual formation.” The work they publish is designed to appeal to both clergy and lay people. It is designed with individuals and small groups in mind.

They “seek writers who offer insights and guidance on these topics: prayer and other spiritual practices, spiritual formation, Advent and Lent studies, living a faithful Christian life, relationships, healing and wholeness, aging, and creativity and spirituality.” To learn more about what they are actively publishing, visit their bookstore here.

Upper Room was founded in 1935 as a daily devotional guide, it has grown significantly over the years; the press is just one part of a larger non profit, inter-denominational organization. To learn more about the press and the organization as a whole, go here.

As a press, Upper Room encourages “the use of inclusive language in reference to God and humanity”. They are only interested in nonfiction proposals and are not interested in fiction or poetry.

They only accept proposals via the post, and they outline what they expect proposals to include here.


Emily Harstone is the author of many popular books, including The Authors Publish Guide to Manuscript SubmissionsSubmit, Publish, Repeat, and The 2021 Guide to Manuscript Publishers.

She regularly teaches three acclaimed courses on writing and publishing at The Writer’s Workshop at Authors Publish. You can follow her on Facebook here.

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Simple Strategies for Building a Daily Writing Habit https://authorspublish.com/simple-strategies-for-building-a-daily-writing-habit/ Thu, 29 Sep 2022 14:53:36 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=20400 By Emily-Jane Hills Orford

We’re not all morning people. Some of us are more alert in the afternoon and evening. I’m a morning person and I’m also a creature of habit. Routines get me going, and make me feel like I’m accomplishing something and getting the day off to a good start. And by having a good start means getting my writing going for another productive day.

In this busy world, it’s so easy to get distracted and lose focus, to dither away one’s time and get nothing at all accomplished. With a routine, a plan, you can work around life’s obstacles (and believe me there are quite a few) and still keep on track, keep the writing going. But, that’s not all. There’s more to a writer’s life than just writing and it’s important to fit in all those basics to make your writing your own success story. So, here’s how I do it – in theory, anyway. As long as I write every day, I know I’ve had a successful, productive day.

My Routine:

  • I write before I eat or drink. Since I’m allergic to coffee, I learned to live without that caffeine boost to get going. As soon as I’m up (after I let the dog out, of course), I’m writing. First, I do my daily journal entry. I find writing in my journal first thing ensures that I write in my journal daily. Then I plunge into my current novel-in-progress.
  • I break and do the routine internet browse, looking for news items that might spark some ideas, checking the weather, catching up with friends and, most important, reading all those wonderful rejections that flood every good writer’s inbox.
  • Time to really rise and shine. Breakfast, feed the dog and walk the dog. Great time to refresh the brain cells and use my four-legged muse as a sounding board to new ideas.
  • Back home, well awake now, it’s time to plunge into the smaller writing projects: book reviews, short articles, short stories. This fills most of the morning with a break before lunch to do something else creative like needleart or gardening.
  • Lunch and I’m back to checking messages and browsing the internet, searching for new possible publishing possibilities.
  • Time to edit – every writer’s worse nightmare.
  • And, then there’s the perpetual PR, the marketing we all must do in order to get our name out there.
  • Not done yet. I need some quality, quantity, reading time (other than reading for book reviews). All good writers must read as much as they write, wouldn’t you agree?
  • Okay – let’s add in some television, not that there’s much to choose from. I prefer the old re-runs to current shows as there’s more plot and character development in the older shows.
  • And, now the day is over. I feel comfortable, satisfied with what I’ve accomplished.
  • Oh! And those interruptive phone calls? Friends, family, and the annoying spams? That’s what call display is for. Let the phone ring (or turn the ringer off) and follow your routine until you have time to chat. There’s nothing worse than being besieged by a friend who will talk your ear off for an hour (or more) and halt your productive creativity.

When your routine fluctuates, due to a medical or dental appointment, make sure you have a notebook and pen/pencil handy. Yes, I mean a real, paper-type of notebook; there’s nothing quite so satisfying as sitting and whiling the rime away jotting notes in longhand in a real book. Make sure you always carry something with you to write down ideas – or to simply write. There’s nothing worse than waiting in a doctor’s office for an hour with nothing to do but stare at the fake pictures on the surrounding walls. The notes you jot down may be fuel for your next bestseller. Or, they may be that illusive descriptive paragraph or character sketch you’ve been struggling with for days. Just write: even jotting down to-do lists is writing; it’s keeping your creative brain cells active while you fill in the ominous wait times. There may be nothing you can use from this jotting exercise, but at least you’re writing.


Emily-Jane Hills Orford is a country writer, living just outside the tiny community of North Gower, Ontario, near the nation’s capital. With degrees in art history, music and Canadian studies, the retired music teacher enjoys the quiet nature of her country home and the inspiration of working at her antique Jane Austen-style spinet desk, feeling quite complete as she writes and stares out the large picture window at the birds and the forest. She writes in several genres, including creative nonfiction, memoir, fantasy, and historical fiction. http://emilyjanebooks.ca

 

 

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