Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Call for Submissions: The Southeast Review

The Southeast Review is currently open for general submissions. For more information, please go here.

In particular, we are looking for book reviews of recent works. If you are interested, please directly email our Book Reviews Editor, Daniel Moysaenko at:
 
serbookreviewATgmailDOTcom (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )
 
for more information. 

Writing Competition: Gemini Magazine Short Story Contest

Gemini Magazine Short Story Contest

First Prize for the ninth annual Gemini Magazine Short Story Contest is $1,000. Second prize is $100 and there will also be three honorable mentions ($25 each). The entry fee is $7 per story.

Send us your most creative work! We have no restrictions on subject, style or length. All entries are read blind so everyone gets an equal chance. All five finalists will be published online in the June 2018 issue of Gemini.

Deadline: March 31, 2018.


Check out previous winners and finalists, and enter here.

Writing Competition: Jabberwock Review


Jabberwock Review invites submissions to THE NANCY D. HARGROVE EDITORS' PRIZES FOR FICTION AND POETRY

The entry fee is the cost of a subscription, and you have the chance to win $500.

We read submissions blind. Please make sure you’ve removed all identifying info from the manuscript and the file name.

All submissions are considered for publication.

DEADLINE: March 25th
(Regular submissions close on March 15th.)


Each winner (one for fiction and one for poetry) receives $500 and publication in Jabberwock Review.

Entry Fee: $15, which includes a one-year subscription

Go here for more information and to submit using Submittable.

 

Call for Submissions: Gulf Stream Magazine

Gulf Stream Magazine is now open for submissions in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for inclusion in our Spring Issue.

Deadline: April 1, 2018

Gulf Stream Magazine has been publishing emerging and established writers of exceptional fiction, nonfiction, and poetry since 1989. We also publish interviews and book reviews. Past contributors include Sherman Alexie, Hanif Abdurraqib, Tony Hoagland, Jensen Beach, Steve Almond, Jan Beatty, Lee Martin, Robert Wrigley, Dennis Lehane, Liz Robbins, Stuart Dybek, David Kirby, Ann Hood, Ha Jin, B.H. Fairchild, Naomi Shihab Nye, F. Daniel Rzicznek, and Connie May Fowler. Gulf Stream Magazine is supported by the Creative Writing Program at Florida International University in Miami, Florida.

Call for Submissions: Bifrost Review

**Calling Undergrad Lit Journal Editors/Faculty Advisors and Undergrad
Student Writers**


Deadline: Aug. 1, 2018

Bifrost Review (@bifrost_review) is the bridge between emerging
creative thinkers from undergraduate institutions and the communities
that foster them. A biannual national online literary journal based
out of Minnesota’s St. Olaf College, Bifrost is a place to showcase
excellent past and present undergraduate work through journal
spotlights, reprints, reviews, editor interviews, and the publication
of new work.


We are now accepting submissions from undergraduate students for
reprints (and potential audio adaptations), as well as inquiries from
editor or faculty advisors for nominations of "best of" work in recent
issues. Please see our submittable page for guidelines. Other features
like interviews and journal spotlights should be requested via email.
We want to feature the hard work you do!

====
Thank you for your support!

The Bifrost Team
St. Olaf College

Call for Fiction Submissions: Valparaiso Fiction Review

Valparaiso Fiction Review is seeking submissions of short stories for its upcoming 2018 issues (Summer & Winter). Submissions to VFR should be original, unpublished works that range from 1,000 to 9,000 words. There is no set deadline, and submissions are considered on a rolling basis. Current and archived issues of the journal can be found here.

Publishing since 2011, Valparaiso Fiction Review is a biannual publication of Valparaiso University and its Department of English.

Complete guidelines and submission link.

Call for Poetry and Prose: Postcard Poems and Prose Magazine

Postcard Poems and Prose Magazine

Postcard Poems and Prose Magazine once again seeks tight, gripping prose and poetry. Our author guidelines are tabbed to our home page. We use Submittable and all submissions need to come through that system so our first-reader staff can evaluate them as a team.

Our home page. Postcard Poems and Prose Magazine publishes 120-200 poems and short prose pieces annually. We judge each piece on its merit rather than author biographical information.

Call for Unpublished Novel Openings: Embark


Calling all novelists, regardless of genre!
 
There are only two weeks to go before the submission deadline (March 15) for the 4th issue of Embark, a literary journal designed specifically for novelists.

Send in your manuscript's opening pages for a chance to be featured.

For more information, please visit our Submission Guidelines.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Call for Submissions: Manzano Mountain Review

Manzano Mountain Review is an online literary journal based in New Mexico seeking submissions for its second issue.
 
We like writing that is honest, gritty, vulnerable. Give us plot, but not too much. We want characters like us—complicated, flawed, human. Discomfort us. Provoke awe. Melt our brains.
 
The theme for Issue No. 2 is "Summer Haunts/ Hauntings."
 
Aesthetically, the two editors, Justin Bendell and Kristian Macaron, value writing that crosses boundaries, treads unfamiliar ground, but also work that is rooted in place. Readers will find examples of this in our issues.
 
Justin likes terse, lyrical fiction with well-conceived plots. He is not afraid of genre writing (especially mysteries and westerns), though he thinks the best writing transcends genre.
 
Kristian likes writing that is exploratory, narrative, and unexpected. Words that teach and connect the reader/writer through image/metaphor/place.
 
Submissions are open to all writers.
 
We seek prose (< 3,000 words), flash fiction, poetry, visual art, and photography. We do not pay.

The deadline for Issue No. 2 is April 1st, 2018. 
 
Submit your work here.

Cordially,
Justin Bendell & Kristian Macaron
MMR Editors

Call for Submissions: Watershed Review

Watershed Review has a fall (August 1st through September 30th) and spring (January 15th through March 15th) submission period. We welcome submissions of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and art. No previously published works are accepted.
 
Simultaneous submissions are permitted, but please alert Watershed Review to a piece's potential publication elsewhere.
 
Watershed Review acquires one-time rights. All rights subsequently revert to author.
 
Submit your work here.

CNF Fellowship: The Oxford American Jeff Baskin Writers Fellowship

OXFORD AMERICAN: The Oxford American Jeff Baskin Writers Fellowship.

Deadline: March 24.

To support a debut book of creative nonfiction. $10,000 stipend, housing, and an editorial apprenticeship with Oxford American toward a 9-month residency in central AR. Alex Mar, Zandria F. Robinson, and Timothy B. Tyson to judge.

For more information, go here.

E-mail:

editorsAToxfordamericanDOTorg (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )

Phone: (501) 374-0000.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Call for Submissions: Storyscape Journal

Storyscape Journal’s free submission period is open from Feb 1st-May1st, and we’d love to see your stuff! Past contributors include Terrance Hayes, Danez Smith, and Rachel Michelle Hanson. Hanson’s essay, “Education,” won Best of the Net in 2015.

Who We Are:

Our mission at Storyscape is to blur the lines between traditional genres and highlight innovative, singular writing. Instead of publishing as poetry and prose, our categories are Truth, Untruth, or We Don’t Know and They Won’t Tell Us. Our authors decide which category they want to publish in, no questions asked.

To find out more, read our latest issue, and submit, please go here.

Call For Submissions on Theme of Embracing the Other: DoveTales

DoveTales, An International Journal of the Arts
2018 Guidelines




Our DoveTales journal is a manifestation of the Writing for Peace mission to promote writing that explores the many aspects of peace. One of our goals is to expose young writers to a diverse collection of thoughtful works by both established and emerging writers, as well as our Writing for Peace advisers.


DoveTales also features works by the winners of our annual Young Writer Competition. The journal will be released on July 1, 2018. There is no fee for submission, but please read our guidelines carefully.

Theme: The theme of our 2018 issue of DoveTales is Empathy in Art: Embracing the Other. As in our previous issues, we encourage contributors to take a broad view of the definitions of “empathy,” “art,” and “other” within the context of peace.

The reading period begins October 1st, 2017, and ends March 15th, 2018, for a publication date of July 1, 2018.

We prefer previously unpublished work, but if you feel your published piece is especially relevant to our theme, and you own the rights to it, please give us all the particulars of its publishing history so we can be sure to properly credit the previous publisher. 

Work must be submitted electronically through Submittable. Please include a 50-word third-person biography, and make sure your contact information and mailing address are current.

We are happy to accept simultaneous submissions, but please inform us immediately if your work has been accepted elsewhere.

Contributors maintain all rights to their work, but grant Writing for Peace the right to publish work in both hard copy and e-book formats. Contributors will receive one complimentary hard copy of the journal. Should the piece be re-published later, we would be grateful for a mention.

Past themes include Occupied (2013), Contrast (2014), Nature (2015), Family and Cultural Identity (2016), and Refugees and the Displaced (2017).


Fiction and Nonfiction:

We consider short fiction and personal essays with a unique voice. We do not accept genre fiction. We welcome flash fiction, nonfiction, and lyric essays, as well as translations, with the author’s permission (if applicable). Though the guidelines can be flexible for extraordinary work, published short stories and essays should not exceed 20 manuscript pages. Please submit one story or essay at a time.

Poetry:

We consider poetry of any style. Please limit poetry submissions to no more than three poems per issue.

Interviews:

We welcome theme-appropriate interviews with activists and writers who add a unique approach or voice to the conversation. Please send queries to editor@writingforpeace.org with “DoveTales Query” in the subject heading.

Art and Photography:

We welcome your art and photography submissions. Please submit them in jpeg format through the link below, and include a short cover letter describing why you feel your images are suitable for the DoveTales theme.

Submit to Writing for Peace

Call for Submissions: Apple Valley Review

Deadline: March 15, 2018 

Apple Valley Review is reading submissions of short fiction, personal essays, and poetry for the Spring 2018 issue (Vol. 13, No. 1). Flash fiction, prose poetry, fabulism, and translations are welcome. Published work is automatically considered for our annual editor's prize, and pieces from the journal have later appeared as selections, finalists, and/or notable/distinguished stories in Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, Best of the Net, Best of the Web, storySouth Million Writers Award, New Poetry from the Midwest, and Wigleaf’s Top 50 (Very) Short Fictions.


The current issue, previous issues, and complete submission guidelines are available online.

Call for Submissions: ARC PAIR PRESS


ARC PAIR PRESS is a publisher of limited-edition, perfect-bound prose. We publish short collections of fiction, nonfiction, novellas, and long essays. We call our books "mini-books" because they are longer than the usual chapbooks but shorter than full-length collections or novels.
 
We are now accepting mini-book manuscript submissions. Please send prose manuscripts of 40 - 80 pages to:
 
 
and see our guidelines here. Payment is 25 copies OR $150 + 10 copies.


The deadline is May 1, 2018.

Call for Submissions: Uproot Literary Journal

Uproot is an online literary journal whose main interest lies in place. More specifically, in moving from place to place. We’re interested in geological and emotional estrangement, displacement, alienation, longing, and all of the other contradictory feelings associated with moving to a new/old location. We are especially interested in work from a multiplicity of perspectives.

  General Submission guidelines: 

● We are especially interested in hybrid works, including flash fiction, prose poetry, and the lyric essay. Our only limitation is that submissions fall under 5,000 words and contain no more than 6 individual works.
● Please submit work as either .doc/.docx file or PDF file as attachments.
● We do not accept work that has been copied and pasted into the body of an email.
● Please submit a brief 60 word bio written in the 3rd person.
● Please send only original, unpublished work. We do not count work on your personal blog as published.
● We do accept simultaneous submissions.
● If your work is accepted elsewhere please let us know so we can retract your submission.
● We do not accept multiple submissions. We will only accept one submission per person per submission window.
Our current submission window for our next issue is January 30, 2018-April 1, 2018.
*
Please send submissions to:


 uprootmagATgmailDOTcom (Change AT to @ and DOT to .)
 
Thanks for reading!
Uproot

Call for Submissions to Anthology re: Simone Weil: Orison Books


CALL FOR ANTHOLOGY SUBMISSIONS RE: SIMONE WEIL
 
Orison Books invites submissions of work that engages the life and writing of Simone Weil, 20th-century French mystic, social activist, and theologian, for a forthcoming anthology.
 
We are interested in literary work in all genres, including poetry, essay, drama, and hybrid-genre work. Authors or publishers may submit previously published or unpublished work. The anthology will be co-edited by George David Clark, Luke Hankins, Susan L. Miller, and Jessie van Eerden. Contributors will receive a complimentary copy of the anthology upon publication.
 
Send submissions as a Word, RTF, or PDF document along with author information to:
 
weilanthologyATgmailDOTcom (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )
 
Deadline: August 1, 2018

Call for Submissions: FLARE: The Flagler Review

Deadline: March 31, 2018

FLARE: The Flagler Review is looking for evocative, compelling fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and artwork for its Summer 2018 online edition. Want to be part of it? Submissions are now being accepted. FLARE is the award-winning literary journal at Flagler College in St. Augustine, Florida. We seek new, up-and-coming, and established writers and artists.


For more information, visit our website.

To submit, go here.

Fellowships: LONGLEAF Writers Conference 2018

LONGLEAF Writers Conference 2018: Fellowships in Creative Nonfiction, Fiction, and Poetry

FELLOWSHIP details: Applicant must have at least one book published in the last six years, and should be actively publishing work in established literary magazines and/or have other awards of merit. This fellowship covers full tuition (all events, readings, workshops, etc. are covered for fellow) for the conference as well as superb lodging near one of the most beautiful beaches in Seaside, Florida.

Deadline: March 1, 2018

· Please note: Travel stipends and meals are not included at this time for fellows, but most activities and events have some food and drink available.

· Please see application page on our website for details:

· Conference dates: May 13-20, 2018

· APPLICATION FEE: $22 through submittable.


Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Scholarships: Sundress Fiction Writing Retreat

Scholarships for Sundress Fiction Writing Retreat 

The Sundress Academy for the Arts is excited to announce its Summer Fiction Writing Retreat, which runs from Friday, June 15 to 17, 2018. The three-day, two-night camping retreat will be held at SAFTA’s own Firefly Farms in Knoxville, Tennessee. This year’s retreat will focus on generative fiction writing and include two break-out sessions “Conflict and POV as Perspective” and “Writing the Travel Narrative,” plus discussions on kicking writer's block, publishing, and more.

A weekend pass includes one-on-one and group instruction, writing supplies, food, drinks, transportation to and from the airport, and all on-site amenities for $250. Tents, sleeping bags, and other camping equipment are available to rent for $25. Payment plans are available if you reserve by April 17, 2018; inquire via email for details.

The event will be open to writers of all backgrounds and provide an opportunity to work with many talented, published fiction writers from around the country, including Mary Miller and Jeanne Thornton.

Mary Miller is the author of two collections of short stories, Big World (Short Flight/Long Drive Books, 2009), and Always Happy Hour (Liveright, 2017), as well as a novel, The Last Days of California (Liveright, 2014), which has been optioned for film by Amazon Studios. Her stories have appeared in the Oxford American, Electric Literature’s Recommended Reading, McSweeney’s Quarterly, American Short Fiction, Mississippi Review, and many others. She is a former James A. Michener Fellow in Fiction at the University of Texas and John and Renée Grisham Writer-in-Residence at Ole Miss.

Jeanne Thornton is the author of The Black Emerald and The Dream of Doctor Bantam, the latter a Lambda Literary Award finalist for 2012. She is the co-publisher of Instar Books and the creator of the webcomics Bad Mother and The Man Who Hates Fun. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in n+1, WIRED, WSQ, CURA, and other places. She lives in Brooklyn. Find her online here.  


We have one full scholarship available for the retreat as well as limited 20% scholarships for those with financial need. To apply for a scholarship, send a packet of no more than (15) pages of prose along with a brief statement on why you would like to attend this workshop to Erin Elizabeth Smith at :

erinATsundresspublicationsDOTcom  (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )

no later than April 10th, 2018. Winners will be announced in late April.

Space at this workshop is limited to 15 writers, so reserve your place today.

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Author Learning Center Webinars: Book in A Year

At last, I can share the big news I have been sitting on for months!

I'm pleased to announce that I have been hired as a fiction consultant for the exciting new program, Book in A Year, offered by the Author Learning Center. Beginning in March, ALC (and yours truly) will be presenting webinars at least once a month to guide you through the process of writing a draft of your novel in a year. Each webinar is presented live but will be taped so you can review it again at your leisure.

A look at the line-up for March and April, 2018:

March 8, 2018, 1:30 p.m. ET: "Getting Started with Fiction"
Even though you may have a great idea for a story, it can be daunting to transform that idea into a full-length novel. In this first webinar for Book in A Year—Fiction, we will explore what you need to do to prepare for this project. We will look at narrowing your focus and defining your story idea, setting (reasonable) writing goals and how to stay on track. We will also cover tips for researching your story, identifying your primary audience and genre, and mapping out a basic outline or framework.

April 5, 2018, 1:30 ET: “Fleshing Out Your Fictional Narrative”
A novel consists of chapters and scenes, but what do you need in those sections to make your story come alive? How do you hook readers with the first chapter? How do you get readers to turn the page at the end of a chapter? In this webinar, we will analyze the structure of powerful chapters and strong scenes within those chapters. We will also begin “blueprinting your novel” by filling in the details of important plot points. Finally, we will look at the story board and how you can use this method to track your story development.

April 26, 2018: “Solving Common Writing Problems”
After the first fifty pages or so, almost every writer struggles with moving their story forward. There are lots of ways you can stumble, and in this webinar, we will look at some the most common story problems, including the big issue of writer’s block. Other writing problems we will address include: tense, point of view, character development, dialogue, pacing, and maintaining the tension.

To register, go here.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Call for Poetry Submissions: Rockvale Review

Rockvale Review is currently seeking poetry submissions for Issue Two.
Our reading period is January 1 - March 31, 2018.


This issue has a Featured Photographer, Michelle Casady, who will pair each accepted poem with one of her photographs.

The photo and poem will appear together on our website and in our print magazine available through MagCloud.
Please read our submission guidelines (we read blind!) before you submit.
We look forward to reading your poems!

Writing Competition and Call for Submissions: Razor Literary Magazine

Razor Literary Magazine and the Fiction School podcast are now accepting entries for the 2018 FICTION OPEN contest! 
 
This unique collaboration between a lit mag and podcast brings broad exposure to our contest winner. The winning works will be published in the Fall 2018 issue of Razor Literary Magazine and the author will be a special guest on an upcoming episode of Fiction School. 
 
Winners will be chosen in three categories:
Flash Fiction ($1 entry fee)
Short Story ($2 entry fee)
Novella ($10 entry fee) 
 
In addition, contestants can receive feedback from editorial staff on their entries for an additional fee ($15 flash fiction and short story/$30 novella). All entries will be considered for publication in Razor. Deadline for entries: May 15th! 
 
Razor is also accepting submissions free-of-charge in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art for our general submission pool. Deadline for general submissions is Feb. 15, 2018.
 
See full contest guidelines here
Submit here.

Call for Submissions: Helen


Open Call for Submissions! Deadline is June 1, 2018.
 
 Helen: a literary magazine is open for submissions.
 
We’re looking for flash fiction that opens us up in unexpected ways, poems that enrich us, artwork and photography that challenge and dazzle us, and essays that pour us into your world.
 
We appreciate polished work in all genres and actively seek pieces that explore themes such as hope and perseverance.. Our issues include poetry, flash fiction, essays, personal narratives, art, and photography.
 
Flash Fiction : 50-1,500 words
Poetry : 8 poems (12 page limit)
Essays & Personal Narratives : 50-1,500 words
 
No theme or genre restrictions. Send in your best!
 
Link for Main Submittable page.
 
Check us out at our website.

Call for Submissions on Theme of Trauma: Bloodletters Literary Magazine

Bloodletters Literary Magazine – A Space For Healing is a journal for those who have been affected by physical, mental or emotional trauma. We are currently seeking your best unpublished personal essays and nonfiction narratives dealing with trauma.

The trauma spectrum is long and broad. Trauma means living with and through abuse and assault. It’s being violated. It’s being held at gunpoint. It’s returning home after facing the horrors of war. It’s being physically or emotionally tortured. The definition of trauma is very individual, and different for everyone – the experiences may be diverse, but the effects are often the same.

Tell us how you endured, moved on, and got past your trauma. It could help someone else understand and come to terms with their own experience.

Please visit our website for more information and to get a feel for the kind of writing we seek.

Send submissions to: 

bloodletterslitmag[AT]gmail[DOT]com (Change [AT] to @ and [DOT] to . )

View our submission guidelines.

Call for Submissions on Theme of Caregiving: Michigan Quarterly Review

Michigan Quarterly Review is currently seeking submissions for its upcoming Caregiving Issue (Fall 2018). Writers and artists who are themselves active caregivers are especially encouraged to submit. Guest editor will be Heather McHugh.

Prose submissions: 5,000 words maximum

Poetry submissions: 8 pages maximum

Submit work for this issue through March 31, 2018.

More info here.



Call for Submissions: Arkana

Dear overlooked, misunderstood, or silenced writers,

Arkana , the journal of mysteries and marginalized voices published by the Arkansas Writers’ MFA Program, is now reading for its fourth issue! Please send us your fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, illustrated narrative, short scripts (for the stage or screen), translations, artwork or whatever other mixed-genre strikes your fancy and you think will strike our fancy too.

We want work that reflects our mission: to seek and foster a sense of shared wonder by privileging art that asks questions, explores mystery, and works to discover and uncover the overlooked, the misunderstood, and the silent. We’re especially looking for work by historically marginalized writers, such as writers of color, writers in the LBGTQ community, and writers with disabilities.

So if you feel like we just described you or your writing, we want to hear from you! We accept work from writers of all shapes and sizes, no matter their background, place of origin, or education/career level—we have published writers with MFA degrees and writers still in high school, writers from our home base in Arkansas to writers from across the world. Plus, we nominate our writers’ work yearly for the Pushcart Prize and for other prizes, such as Best of the Net. We also include an audio feature on our website, so if you’re published, you’ll get a chance to literally have your voice heard.

For more information, check out our submission guidelines here.

And it doesn’t hurt to read through the journal for yourself, just to get a feel for what kind of stuff we’re into.

Still have questions? Shoot us an email at:

arkanamagATgmailDOTcom (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )

or look us up on Facebook or Twitter, @ArkanaMag.

We can’t wait to read your work!

All best,
The Editors

Writing Competition: 2018 Cowles Poetry Book Prize

Announcing the 2018 Cowles Poetry Book Prize

Deadline: Entries must be submitted by April 1, annually.

Reading Fee: $25 payable through our Submittable page.

Award: $2,000 and 30 copies for the author, publication by Southeast Missouri State University Press and distribution of a full-length poetry manuscript with a full-color perfect-bound cover.

Manuscripts submitted to the contest will be read and judged anonymously.

Visit our website for additional information.

Submit here.


Writing Competition on Theme of Intoxication: Creative Nonfiction

Intoxication
 
Deadline: February 26, 2018
 
Seeking altered states might be one of the oldest human hobbies—for better and for worse—and we’re looking for stories that capture the widest possible range of experiences and voices. Whether you (or someone else) were tipsy or wasted, soooooooo drunk or just a little high—on life, or love, or power, or something else—we want to hear your story about being under the influence.
 
As always, we’re interested in stories that are more than mere anecdotes, and we love work that incorporates an element of research and/or makes a connection to a larger story or theme. We welcome personal stories as well as profiles, and above all, we are looking for narratives—true stories, rich with scene, character, detail, and a distinctive voice—that offer a fresh interpretation or unique insight into the theme.
 
If we’re being honest, we’re also especially hoping for some happy (or at least lighthearted, if not downright funny) stories—a mix of uppers and downers, as it were.
 
CNF editors will award $1,000 for best essay and $500 for runner-up. All essays submitted will be considered for publication.
 
Guidelines: Essays must be previously unpublished and no longer than 4,000 words. All essays must tell true stories and be factually accurate. Everything we publish goes through a rigorous fact-checking process, and editors may ask for sources and citations.
 
There is a $20 reading fee, waived for current subscribers.** You can also submit and become a subscriber, extend your subscription, or give a gift subscription by submitting $25 to include a 4-issue subscription to Creative Nonfiction (US addresses only). Multiple entries are welcome ($20/essay, becoming a subscriber is recommended instead) as are entries from outside the United States (though due to shipping costs the rate will be higher if you choose to include a subscription--$43 to Canada or $60 elsewhere).
 
To submit by regular mail:
 
Postmark deadline: Monday, February 26, 2018.  
 
Mail the essay and cover letter to:"Intoxication"
 
c/o Creative Nonfiction
5119 Coral Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15224
 
To submit online:

 
Deadline to upload files: 11:59 pm Eastern Time, Monday, February 26, 2018. Go to our website
for more information.

Call for Submissions: Pithead Chapel


Pithead Chapel is an online journal of fiction, nonfiction, and prose poetry.

We’re currently seeking submissions for future issues. Please visit our website to learn more about us and our submission guidelines.