Issue Four Hundred Sixty Seven – Authors Publish Magazine https://authorspublish.com We help authors get their words into the world. Fri, 01 Sep 2023 16:56:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Red Dog Press: Now Accepting Manuscript Queries https://authorspublish.com/red-dog-press-now-accepting-manuscript-queries/ Thu, 12 May 2022 13:05:33 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=19397 UPDATED September 1st, 2023: This press has permanently gone under.

Red Dog Press is a print and digital publisher based in Cheshire UK. All the books they publish are available in both formats. They are a small press that specializes in publishing thrillers, crime stories, and mysteries.

You can get a good feel for what they’ve previously published here. Their covers are generally decent and genre appropriate, but do feel “low budget”.

They have a “club” for readers to promote the work they publish.

It’s important to note that they now offer author services through a separate website- as long as they keep this completely separate from their traditional publishing arm, and do not re-direct authors there that is OK, and part of how some small presses work now, but if they re-direct a traditional submission to their author services, please reach out to us right away at support@authorspublish.com and we will update the review, and no longer recommend them.

Most of what they publish is over 70,000 words in length, but they will consider work that is a minimum of 25,000 words if it is part of a series.

All submissions must be made via email. When you submit to them they seem to be asking for a more personal version of a query letter. This is  how they phrase it: “Please use the email to introduce yourself, give us a little bit of your own history, why you started writing, and what you want from a writing career.”

You also must attach a synopsis of no more than 1,500 words, as well as the first 25 pages of your book (to the end of the nearest chapter). They will not read any incomplete submissions. They try to respond to all submissions within 4 weeks, but please be patient.

You can learn more about what they are looking for here.


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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The Pine Cone Review: Accepting Submissions https://authorspublish.com/the-pine-cone-review-accepting-submissions/ Thu, 12 May 2022 13:01:40 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=19412 The Pine Cone Review is a electronic literary journal founded and run by Susmita Paul, who is the Editor-in-Chief. Candice Louisa Daquin acts as the Poetry and Art Editor and Dr. Khusi Pattanayak is the Prose and Art Editor. They publish four issues a year. Two are themed, and two are not. The most recent themed issue was on Survival, and they’ve yet to announce the final themed issue of 2022. They are currently reading for the unthemed issue, which they refer to as an annual. They close to submission on May 20th.

You can get a feel for what they’ve previously published by reading their back issues here.

Beyond submitting to The Pine Cone Review, there are other opportunities to get involved, including submitting to Winged Seeds, which focuses on  reviews of artistic documents and exhibitions, and Ideate, which publishes opinion and editorial pieces. They are also seeking assistant editors currently, which you can learn more about here.

The Pine Cone Review is currently open to submissions of non-rhyming poetry, flash fiction, creative nonfiction, translations, visual art, and wide range of cross-genre work. All work must be previously unpublished. They do not allow simultaneous submissions.

To learn more about their formatting requests and the specific details you should include, please visit their website here.


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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Fellowships, Residencies and Writing Scholarships for May 2022 https://authorspublish.com/fellowships-residencies-and-writing-scholarships-for-may-2022/ Thu, 12 May 2022 12:59:12 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=19521

by NmaHassan Muhammad

The following opportunities all have varying deadlines, most fast approaching.

Altman Writers of Color Scholarship

The Hudson Valley Writers Center is dedicated to supporting the voices of writers of color. The Center encourages all writers of color based in the U.S. to apply for a scholarship to courses they feel will advance their writing practice and enrich their experience. Scholarships are awarded based on the funding available and strength of application. Applicants are invited to apply for scholarships up to four times a year.

Deadline for Summer Application is May 15, 2022.

For details, go here. (Note that two other scholarships are awarded, based on need, and for women writers)

Leonard and Louise Riggio Fellowship

The Rose Library offers the Leonard and Louise Riggio Fellowship to undertake research in the Alice Walker papers and related archives. This fellowship has a value of $1,000 – $2,500 with a minimum residency of 5 business days. In addition to meeting the minimum residency requirements, all award recipients will be required to submit a report of their experiences and work within the archive for the Rose Library’s Following the Fellows blog. All fellows are paid their award money 4-6 weeks AFTER completion of their visit.

Deadline is May 25, 2022.

For details, go here.

(For other Stuart A. Rose Library fellowships, visit here.)

Eliza Moore Fellowship for Artistic Excellence

This award includes a $10,000 individual grant, and a 2 – 8 week stay between Monday, June 12, 2023 – Saturday, November 18, 2023 at Oak Spring. Suitable applicants will be early career artists who show exceptional promise, and the award is open to visual artists, literary artists, dancers, and musicians. This award is not open to individuals who will be enrolled in undergraduate degree programs in 2023. The Fellows will have ample time and space to work independently on their projects during their stay. The only requirement during the Fellow’s time at Oak Spring is to give one 20 – 30 minute presentation to Oak Spring staff and any other Fellows, residents, or other program participants who might be on site. Application materials include: a resume/curriculum vitae (two pages max), a 200 – 300-word statement on your artistic practice, a statement of 200 – 300 words stating how your work relates to Oak Spring Garden Foundation’s mission to “perpetuate and share the gifts of Rachel (“Bunny”) Lambert Mellon, including her residence, garden, estate and the Oak Spring Garden Library, to serve the public interest”, and work/writing samples.

Deadline is May 26, 2022.

For details, go here and here.

The Center for Fiction/Susan Kamil Emerging Writer Fellowships

The Center for Fiction/Susan Kamil Emerging Writer Fellowships is a one-year fellowship for early-career New York City-based practitioners who are at a critical moment in their development as fiction writers. The fellowship includes a grant of $5,000, editorial mentorship, access to write in their Writers Studio, and the opportunity to meet with editors, authors, and agents who represent new writers at monthly dinners, among other benefits.

Deadline is May 30, 2022.

For details, go here.

AIR–ARTIST IN RESIDENCE

AIR–ARTIST IN RESIDENCE Niederösterreich offers living and working spaces for architects, visual artists, musicians and writers in Krems an der Donau for a period of one to three months. Studio apartments and a monthly stipend of €1300 shall be awarded based on the premise that foreign artists are to be given the opportunity to work in Lower Austria and get to know different art and cultural institutions in the country. By bringing foreign artists in contact with the Austrian artist scene, AIR–ARTIST IN RESIDENCE Niederösterreich seeks to contribute to the internationalization of art in the country and to promote a process of interdisciplinary exchange in the arts. This international exchange takes place primarily on an institutionalized level once a year during their open call.

The basic prerequisite for funding is a degree in a field of art. If the applicant does not have a university degree, proof of equivalent ability must be provided through his or her artistic career. In any case, the applicant must demonstrate regular artistic activity in the proposed areas of funding. Applicants can be artists from the areas of visual arts, music, sound art, literature, and architecture. Austrian artists and artists residing in Austria are not eligible to apply. A Literature application includes: portrait photograph (JPG format, max. 1 MB), résumé (PDF format, max. 1 MB), sample texts (PDF format, max. 7 MB), planned project (max. 6,000 characters). An 80% attendance at AIR–ARTIST IN RESIDENCE is compulsory.

Deadline is May 30, 2022.

For details, go here.

HelpTeaching.com Scholarship

The HelpTeaching.com Scholarship is for aspiring teachers who are current high school or college students located in the United States or Canada. For the $1,000 worth of the scholarship, applicants are required to submit a short story or informational article (400-800 words) for young students. Stories and articles will be rated from 0-5 based on the following criteria (for short stories for children): creativity/innovation; value to students; quality of content; grammar, spelling, and punctuation.

Deadline is June 1, 2022.

For details, go here.

2022 Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowships

Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowships in the amount of $25,800 each will be awarded to five young poets through a national competition sponsored by the Poetry Foundation. Established in 1989 by the Indianapolis philanthropist Ruth Lilly and increased in 2013 with a gift from the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Memorial Fund, the fellowships are intended to encourage the further study and writing of poetry. Applicants must reside in the U.S. or be U.S. citizens and be at least 21 years of age and no older than 31 years of age as of April 30, 2022. Applications must be through Submittable; applications via email are not acceptable. If you have difficulty using Submittable, please email: fellowships@poetryfoundation.org.

The two application materials as a single file (pdf, doc, docx, txt, rtf, wpf) should be submitted: an approximately 500-word introduction (that addresses your studies of poetry so far and/or the poets who influence your work, the ways in which you engage with your community and your goals for the future) and ten pages of poems. You may include published poems and multiple poems on one page, but must not exceed ten pages.

Deadline is June 2, 2022.

For details, go here.


Bio: NmaHassan Muhammad is a children’s author and poet. He enjoys reading picture books, chess, comedy, and combat sports for inspiration and leisure. He writes from Minna, Nigeria.

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Pursue That Grant https://authorspublish.com/pursue-that-grant/ Thu, 12 May 2022 12:57:57 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=18950 By Elaine Russell

As a little girl I was drawn to stories. I didn’t care if my teacher was reading them to me or if my dad was. I was always captured in the imaginary tales recited to me. So naturally, I was always making up little stories for school as a kid. Truly, most writers are voracious readers, many of us want to emulate our literary heroes. It is what drew many of us to the craft.

It was only natural that by my teens I would find myself creating tales of my own. I was in writing classes all through high school.

Then the unavoidable happened, I married, had kids, put everything else on hold so that my husband and I could put food on the table and take care of our family.

It isn’t hard to fathom that decades would inevitably fly by before I’d find myself longing to get back to writing. After my divorce I enrolled at Pierce College in Lakewood, Washington and did three semesters of writing classes.

I had only ever submitted my work to the college’s SLAM magazine at Pierce, which publishes art, poetry, and short stories from the students at the school and my poem “The Jay” was published. I’m very proud of that AA degree, but the divorce changed the course of my life just as getting married did. Now the mother of three kids and starting over, I knew one thing for certain, I wanted to write. I want to be published,  to have readers of my poetry, short stories and novel-in-progress.

One thing I have learned about the literary world is that we are a true family of one accord. A published writer friend of mine, without my knowledge, nominated me for one of the Splendid Mola Tiny Grants awards. It’s a grant given to writers in all facets of their career and the only criteria is that you must be nominated by another writer to be considered for the grant.

I would never consider applying for a writer’s grant, not with the impending fear of rejection staring back at me. We writers must grow accustomed to rejection, it is a part of the nature of writing, but still – the thought of one of those letters coming back was disheartening. No matter how great you think you are, all you need is that one rejection letter to bring you back down to earth. And now as I pursue the process of submitting, my rejection letter collection – or as I call it – the toilet paper dispensary, grows faster than the weeds in my garden.
Usually, if you are an author pursuing the craft, you experiment with every avenue, and grants lie somewhere on that street. I was not prepared to pursue the grant, but to my surprise, I received the email notifying me that I had indeed become the recipient of the Tiny Grant. I didn’t even know what that meant when I read through it. My writer friend followed up with a “surprise, you got it” email after he had been notified as the person who submitted the nomination.

Sometimes it takes something that ‘tiny’ to push you into taking the next step. Writers need that push sometimes, encouragement never hurts. Later, I did apply and received a scholarship to attend the 19th annual (virtual) James River Writers Conference, October 9, 2021, and will be attending the 2022 Northern Colorado Writers Writing Heights Writers Conference Scholarship in Ft. Collins, Colorado in April. Talk about a boost.

This may read as a memoir, but it truly is not. Positive acknowledgement, no matter how small, feeds something in us literary artists. I basked in that small fifteen minutes of glory and enjoyed the title ‘grant recipient’. It isn’t every day a grant falls into your lap, but sometimes it takes something small and unexpected to help kick you into gear.

If you’ve mulled over applying for a grant, you should do it. If you haven’t, you should find one to apply for. They are all over the internet and most writers’ conferences offer them under many categories, BIPOC, women, LGBTQ +, single mom, etc. The process is straight forward, the chances great – but the final acceptance – totally rewarding. Do it.


Bio: Born in Canada but now a US Citizen, stories intrigued Elaine Russell at a very early age. Her voracious literary appetite would eventually lead to writing, from poetry, short prose and eventually a novel in progress. You can find her online at https://tinyurl.com/ElaineRussell

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