Issue One Hundred Fifty Nine – Authors Publish Magazine https://authorspublish.com We help authors get their words into the world. Tue, 13 Aug 2024 18:23:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Three Themed Calls for Submissions https://authorspublish.com/three-themed-calls-for-submissions-ending-june-15th/ Thu, 26 May 2016 17:01:57 +0000 http://www.authorspublish.com/?p=5922 The following two literary journals and one anthology are all seeking submissions. All are interested in creative writing focused on very different themes. Hopefully one will connect with a theme you already write about. All three publications close to submissions on June 15th

Fiolet and Wing

This anthology will collect domestic fabulism poems by female identifying writers. Domestic fabulism is the incorporation of real and surreal elements into domestic realms. Submit up to five poems at a time.  The anthology will be published in 2017.

Learn more here: http://fioletandwing.wix.com/fioletandwing

Eye of The Telescope

Eye to the Telescope is a quarterly online journal publishing science-fiction, fantasy, horror, and other speculative poetry. They are seeking submissions for their male perspective issue.  The issue will is guest edited by a female and will explore the male perspective through SF poems written by men and male-identifying persons, as well as male-persona poems written by anyone.

Learn more here: http://www.eyetothetelescope.com/submit.html

Prodigal

A respected online literary journal that has published many famous poets and writers. They always curate work related to a theme. This time the theme is film. They want all prose pieces to directly relate to film in some way. They are open to poetry concerned with film, motion, and projection. The deadline for submissions is June 15th.

To learn more visit their website here: https://prodigallitmag.submittable.com/submit

 

 

 

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Five Tips for Submitting Your Work for Publication https://authorspublish.com/five-tips-for-submitting-your-work-for-publication/ Thu, 26 May 2016 16:56:46 +0000 http://www.authorspublish.com/?p=5848 If you’ve never sent your creative writing out to a literary journal before, the experience can be intimidating. Many productive writers try to avoid submitting; however there is no real way around it if you want to get your work out into the world.

This article contains five tips for submitting your work.  I have been submitting for six years now. After submitting for so long, these tips are still a touchstone for me. They always help me keep on track.

My first tip is to set a submission goal for yourself. Set it somewhere that seems reasonable to you: perhaps five submissions to different magazines per month. I often exceed my per month goal, because once I reach that point, I want the feeling of accomplishment to linger. Soon those submissions will really start to add up. The more experience you have submitting, the faster you get; as you progress it becomes easier to submit your work. I often have 40 submissions out at a time. Three of the most respected authors I know suggested that this was one of the ways that they became successful. I don’t know why 40 is the magic number, but it seems to be the case.

My second tip is to create submission packets. If you are a short story writer you don’t need to do this, since most journals only consider one short story at a time. However if you are a poet, journals generally want between 3-5 of your poems to consider at a time. I have 5 packets that each contain between 4-5 poems. I always reserve two packets to submit to places that do not accept simultaneous submissions. The rest I submit to multiple places.

My third tip is to keep track of what you submit and where you submit it to. I keep a Word document that keeps track of which journals I have submitted to, what poems I have submitted to them, and when I submitted these poems. I write down which poems have been accepted and where. I document which journals have rejected certain poems. I update this ‘submission tracker’ every time I submit, otherwise I might submit the same poems to the same journal twice, or submit poems that have been accepted elsewhere, or any similar minor disasters. Make sure you regularly update this document; otherwise it will get out of control. I have included a sample of a very small submission tracker:

Sample Submission Tracker:

Pending:

The New Yorker, Submitted September 28th. The Living(short story)

Perception, Submitted September 28th, My Teeth, Superman, Pumpkin Bread (poems)

Acceptances:

Waterhouse, Submitted Jan 14th, 2013. Ham, Companion, Uma Thurman (poems).

Accepted Companions:

Block Review, Submitted Jan 25th 2013, Ready (short story).

Rejections:

Three Penny Review, Submitted Jan 7, 2012. Timer(short story).

Apple Journal, submitted Jan, 7, 2013. Pancakes for Dinner(short story)

My fourth tip is to create a couple of biographical statements. When you read submission guidelines, which vary from site to site, almost all of them will require that you include a brief biographical statement and a cover letter. Most submission guidelines are very similar, so as long as you have a biographical statement and a cover letter on a standby it should take you very little time to submit.

One of your biographical statements should be under 50 words and the other should be under 100 words in length. Once your work has been published in various literary journals you should include some of the most recent or prestigious journals in your biographical statement. However, you should not include all of them, that would just be overwhelming and it would come off as unprofessional. Below are examples of biographical statements of less than 50 words, one contains journal names, one does not.

Sample Bio 1:

Maria Smith resides in the rural Pacific Northwest. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous places, including: Tin House, The Liner, and Echolocation, and the anthology Tidelines. Her second chapbook Pancakes for Dinner is forthcoming in 2014 from Hawthorne Press.

Sample Bio 2:

Joshua Thomas is a poet, editor, and recovering New Yorker who now lives in Idaho. Joshua once wrote a sonnet every hour for twenty-four hours straight. He loves to hike, cook, and read.

My fifth tip is to create a standard cover letter for all the journals that you are submitting to. A cover letter should be as simple as possible; an editor does not have a lot of time and does not want to be bogged down by the details. If I am submitting to a journal I particularly like, I will include a note about why I like it. Sometimes journals will request that I include additional information such as titles and word count in my cover letter and I will cut and paste that information in.  Otherwise my cover letter is almost identical to the sample letter.

Sample Cover Letter:

Dear Editors,

The following poems are for your consideration.

Thank you for your time,

Katharine Hathaway


Note: This is an excerpt from the book Submit, Publish, Repeat. We highly recommend the full book to all writers interested in publishing. Get your free copy of the book here.

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Soul Mate Publishing: Now Seeking Book Manuscripts https://authorspublish.com/soul-mate-publishing-now-seeking-book-manuscripts/ Thu, 26 May 2016 16:52:23 +0000 http://www.authorspublish.com/?p=5841 Soul Mate is a romance eBook publisher. They have only been around for a few years but have published a number of books in that time.  They encourage authors to blur genre lines and to experiment. They respond to every manuscript submitted correctly, personally. They try to respond to all submissions within 4 weeks.

Soul Mate seems to focus exclusively on publishing eBooks for the kindle market place. Most of their covers are good, not great. The focus of the website seems to be on selling more books, not recruiting more authors. Although a lot of information is available about the individual editors there is very little information on the website about the company as a whole.

They publish all the following romance sub genres, action/adventure, chick lit, contemporary, erotica, fantasy, historical, inspirational, new adult, novellas, paranormal, sci-fi, suspense, time travel, urban fantasy, women’s fiction, and young adult.

They encourage potential submitters to read all the editor profiles seriously and then to submit to the editor that best fits your novel.  You can see the editor profiles here. Out of the ten editors, only one is currently closed to new submissions.

In the body of your query letter make sure you include your contact information, the genre, a brief summary of your story, and any contest wins or publishing credits. Also attach a synopsis and the first three chapters of your manuscript.

You can learn more at their website. They are currently only accepting submissions from existing Soul Mate authors or when an author is directly requested by an editor.

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Horsethief Magazine: Now Seeking Submissions https://authorspublish.com/horsethief-magazine-now-seeking-submissions/ Thu, 26 May 2016 16:49:31 +0000 http://www.authorspublish.com/?p=5930 Horsethief is a new online magazine of poetry. At Horsethief, they believe every poem has a life of its own. As Dean Young says, “What I know of form can fill a thimble, but what form knows of me will be the end of me.” Horsethief aims to create a digital space that honors each poem’s innate wisdom—its natural evolution and dissolution, its intuitive interaction with the reader. They also hope to preserve the art of print publishing by releasing artfully crafted chapbooks and full-length hardbound books each year. Their publications showcase both emerging and established writers, celebrating a diverse assortment of voices. To get a sense of their style, you can read past issues online.

Horsethief Magazine is published monthly online. Each edition features ten to twenty pages of poetry. They are accepting submissions right now for their fourth issue, and their current reading period will end on May 31.

Poets may submit up to ten pages of poetry for publication in Horsethief Magazine. Horsethief accepts submissions online, but not via post or email. Submitting poets can expect a response within about one month.

In the future, Horsethief also plans to publish two to four chapbooks each year under the imprint Horsethief Books. Interested poets may submit chapbook manuscripts 30 to 42 pages in length. Additionally, Horsethief Books hopes to publish two to four hardcover books of poetry each year, and poets may submit full-length manuscripts, 40 to 120 pages in length.

If you would like to learn more or submit to Horsethief, please visit their website at http://www.horsethiefbooks.com/submissions/.

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