Issue Four Hundred Thirty Two – Authors Publish Magazine https://authorspublish.com We help authors get their words into the world. Tue, 09 Sep 2025 14:03:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Cardinal Rule Press: Accepting Manuscript Queries https://authorspublish.com/cardinal-rule-press-accepting-submissions-till-november-1st-2021/ Thu, 20 Jan 2022 16:09:32 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=17346 Updated September 8th 2025: They appear to only accept submissions via invitation only now. More details here.

They are respected children’s picture book publisher only open to submissions during certain times of year.

They hope to empower children by telling meaningful stories aimed at 4-11 year olds. The work they publish is realistic fiction which they describe as “a genre made up of stories that could happen in our world and society.”

That means they only consider work where characters are human beings living beings that are living in places that could be real, or are in fact real. Magic does not exist in real fiction. You can see work they’ve previously published here.

They consider manuscripts up to 1,000 words in length.

They only accept emailed submissions. They have specific guidelines that you should read in full here. Their most recent submission period ended January 31st 2024. You can subscribe at their website to be notified when they reopened.


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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Nashville Review: Now Seeking Submissions https://authorspublish.com/nashville-review-now-seeking-submissions/ Thu, 09 Sep 2021 18:43:14 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=17532 Nashville Review is an established and respected online literary journal, edited by the MFA students at Vanderbilt University. They aim to keep the publication free and accessible to all readers, and to include all kinds of writing: “From expansive to minimalist, narrative to lyric, epiphanic to subtle: if it’s a moving work of art, we want it.” They publish both emerging and established authors.

Nashville Review is published three times a year, on the 1st of April, August, and December. Each online edition contains work from around fifteen contributors of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, translations, and artwork. Since launching in 2010, they’ve published 35 issues.

Nashville Review only reads literary submissions three times a year, in January, May, and September. They accept artwork and comics year-round. Submitting authors can expect a response within four to five months.

Poets may submit up to three poems, totaling ten pages or fewer. Authors of fiction may submit one short story or novel excerpt, 8,000 words or fewer, or up the three flashes, 1,000 words or fewer each. Authors of creative nonfiction may submit one piece, 8,000 words or fewer. Nashville Review accepts a wide range of nonfiction, including memoir excerpts, essays, and imaginative meditations. Authors of contemporary translations may submit up to 8,000 words of prose or up to two poems.

Authors should send no more than one submission per genre during each reading period. They only accept 750 submissions in each genre during each reading period, so submissions might close before the end of the month.

Authors published in Nashville Review are paid: $25 per poem and $100 per work of prose.

Nashville Review accepts submissions online, not via email or by post. They accept simultaneous submissions but ask that authors withdraw work published elsewhere. They do not accept previously published work.

Nashville Review only accepts submissions that adhere to the guidelines they’ve posted online. Please read these guidelines in full before submitting.

If you’d like to learn more or submit to Nashville Review, please visit their website 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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The Creative Unconscious in Writing https://authorspublish.com/the-creative-unconscious-in-writing/ Thu, 09 Sep 2021 18:42:05 +0000 https://authorspublish.com/?p=17275 — By Clive Matson

In her presentation of books for writers, Van Baalen’s choices suggest spells, enlightenment, nefarious doings, and lighthearted play. What would you think of “Cozy Mysteries,” “Steal Like an Artist,” “Beyond Fear,” “Bird by Bird,” and “Bones”? Adult versions of Dungeons and Dragons?

These books deal with magic. The ones I most admire at least dip toes into that magic, a magic that courses through our lives. And not just writers’ lives. All lives.

Some pull the reader straight into uncharted territory. Natalie Goldberg’s “Free-writes” do that, as do Dorothea Brande’s “Morning pages.” The territory, while showing eerie power, might also present us with adventures. What’s strange is that it’s rarely mentioned by name, except in the negative. To paraphrase, Writing is not about dredging up bloody bits from your unconscious.

Ah, but it might be! Some writers find they’re dealing with childhood trauma and need coaching. They need to learn how to navigate that sticky, brambly path. Is this a surprise? A surprise that the challenge involves some danger and some messiness?

The key to writing well is to commit to personal passion. To commit to authenticity. Getting there is crucial. Ways to feel comfortable will present themselves, along with techniques to keep your writing vivid. Passion will help choose techniques to suit.

The first book identifying the “creative unconscious” was Dorothea Brande’s Becoming a Writer (1934). Brande was a high-level editor in New York publishing; in her time the word “unconscious” had recently joined the common discourse.

Brande’s practical guides are layered with awe of the creative unconscious. Brande actually expected universities to disappear! The immense knowledge fostered in the unconscious would render them superfluous. This sounds fantastical, but the idea has been around more than two thousand years. Plato’s “Learning is remembering” points in the same direction.

In 1978 Jack Estes taught me how to lead a workshop. Divide the psyche into the three parts of Transactional Analysis, he said, and give them different names. The Parent becomes the Editor, the Adult becomes the Writer, and the Child remains the Child. Tell the Editor and Writer to take a walk and let the Child write whatever it wants.

We recognize this scheme as Freud’s, with everyday names. Someone in Jung’s circle allegedly called Freud’s unconscious a glory hole of repressed sexual desires. Jung’s concept is broader and accepts anything not conscious.”Anything! Your ancestors, the spirit world, the pagan world, the universe of intuition. And students demonstrate such variety from day one.

Peter Elbow’s Writing Without Teachers (1963) shows how to workshop without preconceptions. This works well for the creative unconscious. The writer, by definition, doesn’t know what the creative unconscious is doing. Elbow’s workshop listens carefully and reports which phrases work. This mirrors strengths unknown to the writer. It’s immensely helpful to shine light on a path unfolding underfoot, one the writer cannot otherwise see.

Gabriele Rico’s Writing the Natural Way expands our awareness with “Clustering.” Each spontaneous diagram becomes a portal to the unconscious. The Beat Generation’s “Automatic writing,” taken from how spiritualists communicate with the dead, and amplified by progressive jazz, also brings up the unconscious. You don’t know what’ll happen. You wade in, write the next words and soon you’re waist deep in unfamiliar, revelatory material.

My tutorial Let the Crazy Child Write! (1989) uses the original exercise, with the Child renamed “Crazy Child” as an invitation to be wild and free. Usually writers crack open a window and pull in stringers of Crazy Child energy. At mention of that moniker, though, sometimes the walls fall down and torrents of images pour through. The problem becomes keeping balance, and that’s a litmus of unconscious power. After all, the unconscious is perhaps 99% of the brain’s activity. This tutorial names the creative unconscious and, at matsonpoet.com, lists workshops that engage it fully.

Here’s an example. We have the creative unconscious devise its own prompt. First, the group chooses a dozen words, one or two from each person. Then, individually, we write one sentence per word. Next we notice which sentence has the most personal buzz.

Notice the creative unconscious chooses the words. Your adult mind might think it has agency, but it’s only recording unconscious signals. Same with the sentences. That’s two choices. The third is choosing which sentence is the prompt. And the fourth, whether that prompt is the first sentence, the topic, the central sentence, or a jumping off place – for your writing.

You’ve allowed your creative unconscious to design its own portal. A portal into its immense, unknown, authentic power. Four steps and you’re at the door.

On the door is a sign: “Jump in and join the excitement.”


Bio: Clive Matson hung with Beats in New York City in the 1960s and reconnected with the epic “Hello, Paradise. Paradise, Good-bye” at European Beat Studies Network, Paris, 2017. He wants the passions that run through us all to ripple through his poems. Visit him at matsonpoet.com and wikipedia.

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