Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Seeking Volunteer Social Media Manager: The Adroit Journal

SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER

The Adroit Journal, an internationally-recognized literary and arts nonprofit organization that publishes poetry, prose, criticism, and art, is seeking a Social Media Manager to join its team. The ideal candidate will have experience with marketing, communications, graphic design, and social media management, specifically within literary arts organizations, publications, and/or presses. Reporting to the Director of Marketing, the Social Media Manager drives our social media strategy, and has responsibility for content creation and distribution across our various channels (currently Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram). The Social Media Manager oversees a team that includes two Social Media Coordinators. (Est. commitment: 4-5 hrs/week.) Note: Please include an uploaded resume for this role.

Responsibilities: 

  • Strategy: Determine platforms, approach and design aesthetic
  • Develop campaigns and lead content creation (Create graphics and collateral)
  • Maintain and update the social media calendar
  • Drive expansion of Adroit’s presence on social channels
  • Collaborate with Director of Marketing on branding strategies

Preferred qualifications:

  • Experience with other literary arts organizations, publications, and/or presses
  • Expertise with social media management and campaign strategy
  • Basic graphic design skills using Canva or similar tools
  • Interest and experience with video content
  • Knowledge of, and passion for, Adroit’s mission and extensive archive
  • Strong written and verbal communication skills

Before applying please familiarize yourself with the journal by visiting our About page, and perhaps also an issue or two.

More information and application link here.

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Writing Competition: Summer Short Story Award for New Writers


Here at The Masters Review, summer is the season for short stories. Since 2016, our Summer Short Story Award for New Writers has paired emerging writers with some of the industry’s top literary agents. Past winners of this award include Nana Nkweti, Nick Fuller Googins, Katie M. Flynn, Reena Shah, Rachel Cochran, and Claire Boyles, several of whom earned representation from one of our partnered agents as a result of this contest.

We welcome submissions of previously unpublished fiction or creative nonfiction up to 6,000 words. This year’s winners will be chosen by the acclaimed Colin Barrett, author of the collections Young Skins and Homesickness, as well as the new novel Wild Houses. 

Our contest runs from July 1 to August 25, 2024, and is open to any writer who has not published a novel or memoir with a major press. The first-place winner of this contest, selected by our guest judge, will receive a $3,000 grand prize, along with online publication. Second- and third-place winners will receive $300 and $200 respectively, along with online publication.

All finalists will receive agency review from our six partnered agencies. Participating agents include Nat Sobel from Sobel Weber, Victoria Cappello from The Bent Agency, Andrea Morrison from Writers House, Sarah Fuentes from United Talent Agency, Heather Schroder from Compass Talent, and Marin Takikawa from The Friedrich Agency.

Guest Judge Colin Barrett says, “I am delighted to judge this year’s Summer Short Story Award for The Masters Review. I first found my footing as a writer in the medium of the short story. It is a stark and yet accommodating form, a form of inward audacity, requiring the highest levels of technique, ingenuity, and measuredness, but above all it is a form that demands absolute conviction. I hope to see that conviction in the pages of the submitted stories.” 

Submission Guidelines 

  • The first-place winner receives $3,000, online publication, and agency review.
  • The second- and third-place finalists receive cash prizes ($300/$200), online publication, and agency review.
  • Submissions of fiction or nonfiction must be under 6,000 words.
  • Submitted work must be previously unpublished. This includes personal blogs, social media accounts, and other websites. Previously published work will be automatically disqualified.
  • The entry fee is $20.
  • Simultaneous and multiple submissions are allowed, though each submission requires a $20 entry fee.
  • Writers from historically marginalized or underrepresented groups are invited to submit for free until we reach fifty submissions in this category. NOTE: SUBMISSION CAP HAS BEEN MET.
  • If your submission is accepted elsewhere, please withdraw your submission on Submittable, or contact us otherwise to let us know the piece is no longer available.
  • We do not require anonymous submissions for this contest, but the guest judge will read the shortlist anonymously.
  • This contest is for emerging writers only. Writers with single-author book-length work published or under contract with a major press are ineligible. We are interested in providing a platform to new writers; authors with books published by indie presses are welcome to submit unpublished work, as are self-published authors.
  • International submissions are allowed, provided the work is written primarily in English. Some code-switching/meshing is warmly welcomed.
  • No translations, please.
  • All submissions must be double-spaced with one-inch page margins and use Times New Roman or Garamond 12.
  • The contest’s deadline is 11:59pm PDT on August 25, 2024.
  • All entries are also considered for publication in New Voices.
  • Every submission will receive a response by the end of December 2024. The winners will be announced by the end of January 2025.
  • AI-generated submissions will be automatically disqualified.
More information and Submittable portal here.

Writing Competition: Frontier Poetry Chapbook Prize

 

2024 Debut Chapbook Prize
July 1, 2024, to September 1, 2024

At Frontier Poetry, our mission is to create a space for new and emerging poets to have their voice heard. One way we are aiming to uphold this mission is through our Debut Chapbook Contest. This contest is an opportunity for emerging poets to submit their unpublished chapbook or manuscript of up to thirty pages of poetry. We are excited to read through your wonderful contemplations, nuances, emotions, and truths. The way we see it, your poetry is like a puzzle and we look forward to seeing how you put the pieces together. All kinds of poetry are welcome; we set no formal or aesthetic requirements, and we invite manuscripts that still need polishing.

The contest is open from July 1, 2024, until September 1, 2024, and the winners will be announced sometime in late fall or early winter and published fall of 2025.

Entry fee: $25.00

The winner will receive $2,000 and publication, which includes a free, downloadable digital chapbook on our website, fifty physical author copies to share and sell, and the option to enable drop-shipping sales at Amazon, Bookshop.org, and Barnes & Noble, earning 50% royalties on your chapbook. Additionally, tens of thousands of readers, editors, and magazines will receive chapbook access through our newsletter. We aim for this award to be a springboard for your poetic career.

Guest Judge Nancy Miller Gomez will select the winner this year from ten finalists curated by our editorial team.

More information and Submittable link here.

Call for Submissions on Theme of "Road Trip": Superpresent

Recent cover image or website screenshot for Superpresent Magazine

Superpresent is a quarterly magazine of the arts. Superpresent is available free online and a limited run of print copies for each issue. Superpresent publishes poems, short stories, essays, visual art pieces, experimental art, video art, and sound art.

We accept submissions from anywhere in the world.

No fees for submission.

The theme for the Fall 2024 issue is Road Trip

We are are seeking poetry, short stories, essays, experimental art, video, sound art, all forms of visual art as well as asemic writing and textual arts of all kinds.

Submissions Due September 1st

Visual Art Guidelines: We will accept art in JPEG format.
Artwork must be 300 dpi or higher.
All artwork must be at least 8.5’’ x 11’’ to fit in the magazine.
Up to three images may be submitted
Please include titles for images

Written Guidelines : We accept submissions in DOC, DOCX, and RTF formats.
For poetry, up to three poems, one per page
Essays and short stories should be 500-2000 words.

Video and Sound Guidelines: Send a link to the video or sound file posting (Youtube, etc)
Provide a short description of the piece (up to 100 words)
For videos provide up to three still images

Include a 50-100 word bio written in the third person with your submission.

Please send your submissions to:

editor@superpresent.org

Copyright and publication specifications: First Serial Rights

Call for Submissions on Theme of "W.A.R. (We Are Resilient)": Valiant Scribe Literary Journal

 Recent cover image or website screenshot for Valiant Scribe Literary Journal

Entry Guidelines

Announcing Valiant Scribe Literary Journal Issue V: W.A.R. (We Are Resilient).
Issue V will focus on resilience in the face of war or its aftermath.

We welcome submissions of previously unpublished fiction, non-fiction prose, and poetry. Each person can submit up to 5 poems, and the word count limit per prose piece is 3,000 words.

Submissions should be in English. Submissions in other languages are also welcome but should be accompanied by an English translation.

Only digital submissions are accepted. Kindly indicate "Issue V" in the subject line of your e-mail. Please send a single Word document attachment containing* a brief cover letter with your name, 100-word third-person bio, and submission(s) to:
contactvaliantscribe@gmail.com

*Please note that everything about your submission should be in a single Word document. An introductory note in the body of your e-mail is welcome but not required. We will not consider your submission if you do not follow these guidelines.

Judgement will be blind. Valiant Scribe volunteers will anonymize entries.
Deadline: Aug. 30, 2024

Submission fee:
None.

Compensation:
Contributors will receive a complimentary e-copy of the collection and $10 per piece.

Notifications: We will notify contributors by e-mail in September.

Publication:
The issue will be published in December.
 

Call for Submissions: Bethlehem Writers Roundtable

Please read our submissions guidelines carefully before submitting your work.

Our rates for published stories: 

$50 for published featured-author stories
$20 for stories published on our &More page
$10 for poems we publish

For submissions to Bethlehem Writers Roundtable, please read the following carefully. If you have any questions before submitting your work, please contact us.

Your submissions must meet the following criteria:

  • We only accept work from authors 18 years of age or older.
  • We only accept work that has not been previously published. This requirement excludes from eligibility any work that has appeared anywhere in print, electronic formats, or online, including on personal or crowd editing blogs or websites.
  • We accept work in most genres of fiction, as well as memoir and poetry.
  • We are a secular literary journal and seek non-sectarian work.
  • We do not accept essays or other nonfiction genres.
  • We do not accept horror or erotica. This means no graphic violence, no overt sexuality, and no hard expletives. We are looking for G, PG, or PG-13 rated material according to the MPAA.
  • We welcome excellent writing from diverse voices and experiences regardless of race, gender or gender identity, sexual orientation, nationality, ethnicity, religion, disability, or age (except that authors must be 18 years of age or older). In keeping with our standards of inclusivity, we reserve the right to refuse to publish work that might be harmful to any member of a marginalized group.
  • We only accept work written in the English language.
  • Please submit only one story or one poem for consideration at a time. Do not submit more than one story or poem until after you receive a final response to any prior submission. Once you receive either an acceptance or rejection, you are welcome to submit a different work to us.
  • Your manuscript length must be 2,000 words or fewer (not including the title, author name, or contact information).

No fee is required to submit your work to Bethlehem Writers Roundtable.

Before you submit your work to us, please note our conditions for publication:

1. If we accept your work for publication, you grant Bethlehem Writers Roundtable first serial publication rights to your work, and permission to retain it in the magazine’s archives and/or to publish it in any print publication of a single issue or a compilation of issues of Bethlehem Writers Roundtable. In consideration for this grant of rights, Bethlehem Writers Roundtable will publish your work in its online magazine. The copyright of the work remains the property of the author, who, one month following publication of the work by Bethlehem Writers Roundtable, is free to publish the work elsewhere. Upon any subsequent publication, the author will ensure that work is accompanied by the following statement: “This work was originally published in the Bethlehem Writers Roundtable, the magazine of the Bethlehem Writers Group, LLC.”

2. Authors of stories published through our regular submissions process will receive $50.00 USD for featured authors, or $20.00 USD for stories published on our &More page and $10.00 USD for poems. (N.B.: no payment will be made for stories published because they have won or placed in any Bethlehem Writers Roundtable Short Story Award competition, nor to stories written by members of Bethlehem Writers Group.)

3. By submitting to the Bethlehem Writers Roundtable, you certify that you are eighteen (18) years of age or older, the work is solely your own, original work, it is unpublished in any electronic or print format, it does not encroach on any trademark or copyright, and it does not libel or defame any entity living or dead. You acknowledge that using artificial intelligence can lead to plagiarism for which you will be held fully and solely accountable. You will indemnify and hold Bethlehem Writers Group, LLC harmless from any claims, causes of action, damages, or judgments arising out of publishing your submission.

4. If you are selected as the “Featured Author” in one of our editions, you will also have the opportunity to list your “Top Ten . . .” on a topic of your choice, subject to the editorial approval of Bethlehem Writers Roundtable. This is an opportunity to tell readers a little more about yourself or your writing by selecting a topic that highlights your interests.

5. Bethlehem Writers Roundtable reserves the right to refuse to publish any story, memoir, poem, author bio, or “Top Ten . . .” that we, in our sole judgment and discretion, determine does not meet our needs or standards, or that has content unsuitable for our readers.

6. Please note that Bethlehem Writers Roundtable reserves the right to make minor copy edits to submissions. Any offer of publication is contingent upon satisfactory editing when deemed necessary by the editors of Bethlehem Writers Roundtable. Even so, submitted work that is not well edited or copy edited prior to submission will not be considered for publication.

7. Bethlehem Writers Roundtable will make every effort to notify authors of our decisions about whether we wish to publish their manuscripts within two months of submission. Many authors will hear much sooner.

8. Simultaneous submissions are permissible, but if your work is accepted for publication elsewhere, please notify us immediately (using our Submission/Contact form) to remove your work from further consideration.

9. If you withdraw a manuscript from consideration or we decline to publish a manuscript, please do not submit it again. Please feel free, however, to submit your other unpublished work that meets the criteria set out above.

Upcoming Roundtable themes:

We are open for submissions. We will close on September 30, 2024, with accepted submissions to run in our Winter 2025 issue.

If accepted, your story will be placed in the most appropriate issue as determined by the Chief Editor.

Earlier submission within the submission window greatly improves the chance of publication.

For Prose (as described by editor Jerry McFadden)

We are an “old fashioned” editorial crew: we love stories. We admire great writing; we swoon at beautifully worded sentences and lovely descriptions, and chuckle at clever metaphors–but we always choose a great story over all of that. We constantly receive great character sketches, serious mood pieces, wonderfully written scenes that in the end are just wonderful scenes or elegant reminiscences.… And we judge all of this by one simple standard–where is the story?

What’s a story? A character (or characters) that we care for (or hate) in a conflict (plot) that leads to a plausible resolution that has an emotional effect on the character and on the readers. For us, a terrific story trumps even superior writing. The writing quality may be less outstanding than in the character sketches, mood pieces, scenes, or reminiscences, if the story pulls us in and makes us root for the character as he/she wrestles through a conflict.

This does not disqualify memoirs or reminiscences, as long as they are told as a story–a real-life story. You are the character fighting through a conflict which changed you somehow. If this hadn’t happened, you wouldn’t be trying to tell us about it.

So send us a story, real or imagined. Give us great writing, but more important, give us a great story. We will love you for it.

For Poetry (as described by editor Paul Weidknecht)

We enjoy reading poetry at the Roundtable and are intrigued as to how poets translate their work from the various themes we offer. We understand the nature of much poetry is personal, often highly so, making the process of what goes into accepting or rejecting a poem difficult to define. Poets might rightfully ask, “What makes a good (publishable) poem?” To which editors might deliver the easy answer, “We know it when we read it.” Of course, that answer is too slippery to be of any value, so here are some observations about poetry and how poets might refine their work:

While prose can stand a degree of dilution, poetry is concentrated. From speaking with poets at writer’s conferences, I’ve heard that word—concentrated—come up time and again. In a poem, possibly due to its brevity compared to a short story, readers roll around the ‘flavor’ of words in their minds, sort of like a literary sommelier. Word number and choice are important, as poetry readers (read: editors) don’t skim.

Poems addressing emotional issues, i.e., the tragedy of losing a loved one, are most effective when they reach out, causing the reader to reflect in a similar way, and hopefully, compelling multiple readings. A silent nod by a reader might be one of the best compliments a poet can receive.

Other items of which poetry is fine; its originality is refreshing—as long as you keep the interest of someone reading that abstractness. When a poem becomes too much of a puzzle, reading it becomes a chore. A poem is not a piece of flash fiction with line breaks; short stories do that better. Read the poem out loud. How does it sound? Does it stumble along under the leaden awkwardness of worn phrases or does it ascend in the inspiration of inventive language and imagery?

Perhaps the two most important rules regarding the creation of poetry, or any other piece of creative writing, are the most obvious to understand and simplest to do: keep rewriting your own work; keep reading others’ work.

Submission form and more information here.

Call for Submissions: Typehouse

Recent cover image or website screenshot for Typehouse

We are seeking submissions that grab us and convey a unique perspective and honest insight into our world. We are especially interested in underrepresented voices of all kinds, and we want to see submissions from writers and artists of all races, sexualities, nationalities, religions, and genders, as well as disabled and neurodivergent creators. 

Genre fiction submissions are welcome, particularly speculative fiction.

General Submissions are $3.00, with no-fee submission periods during certain weeks in the year, and are closed in December. (Note: Check our schedule online.)

Feedback submissions are on hiatus for a while, we will announce when they reopen.

Visual Art submissions remain open all year-round.

***IMPORTANT***
We will not read work that contains racist, sexist, misogynistic, queer/homophobic, transphobic, or ableist language or content, and fees will not be refunded.

General Guidelines:

  • All written submissions should be saved in.docx or .doc format with contact information and the work’s title and word count in the document.
  • We are all writers and artists, so simultaneous submissions are encouraged, but please let us know immediately if it has been accepted elsewhere.
  • Previously published work will not be considered, and this includes work published on social media and personal websites. If it is available publicly online it has been published. You will be asked to certify this on your submission. Work found to have been previously published will be declined and no fees will be refunded.
  • Please submit to only one written category, and please wait two months from your response to send us more written work.
  • Visual arts submissions may be made along with written submissions, with a one-month waiting period for more visual art after a response is received.
  • We do not accept work that has been created in any way with AI, and you will be required to certify as such on the submission form. Work found to have used AI will be declined and no fees will be refunded.

Prose Submissions: Regular Submissions: There is no strict word count, although we most frequently publish fiction and nonfiction between 500-5,000 words. For regular submissions we accept up to three prose submissions per author as long as the total number of words is less than 7,500. All genres and subjects are welcomed and encouraged.

Poetry Submissions: Regular Submissions: Up to six poems are accepted per submission, and all forms are encouraged.

Visual Arts Submissions: We like to see artwork and photography in all media and of all subjects. Up to six visual arts submissions are accepted at once. You may also submit a writeup of your work.

Please pay attention to this! Previously published work will not be considered, and this includes work published on social media and personal websites. If it is available publicly online it has been published. We receive a LOT of previously published artwork, and you will be asked to certify it has not been published on your submission. Work found to have been previously published will be declined and no fees will be refunded.

We do not accept work that has been created with AI, and you are required to certify that on the submission form. Work found to have used AI will be declined and no fees will be refunded.

The Nitty-Gritty If we have accepted your work, please wait until the next submission period to submit again.

We are currently paying $5 per contributor, as we work to return to consistent publication.
Typehouse takes first publication rights exclusively for six months, with non-exclusive archival rights thereafter. All other rights revert to the author upon publication.

If a piece is reprinted please be sure to acknowledge Typehouse as its first publication.

Etc. Typehouse is published in digital form in March, June, September, and December.

Submit your work here.

Call for Submissions on Theme of "Live & Learn": The Writers' Journal

The Writers’ Journal Announces Vol. 1: Live & Learn

We are excited to begin accepting submissions to our first journal collection entitled Live and Learn. Learning is a lifelong endeavor, where each passing year brings us new lessons and insights in which we continually evolve and grow. How often have you said, “If I only knew then what I know now.”

We welcome that story, that learning experience, and we encourage new and experienced writers to share their work.

Theme: Writers are welcome to submit memoir, fiction, creative nonfiction, and prose poems in which someone has learned a lesson: i.e., a story about why you should have swiped left on that dating website, swallowed the words better left unspoken, or read the Crazy Glue instructions more carefully. Whatever your experience, we welcome your work. Be creative, think beyond the obvious, and surprise us. Whether your story leans towards the whimsical, practical, or fanciful, we look forward to reading your submissions. However, no gratuitous sex, violence, or hateful rhetoric is acceptable, and no AI-generated stories or poems, please.

All work must be: 

  • Related to the theme: Live & Learn
  • Previously unpublished online or in print
  • 150 to 1,000 words written in English
  • 12-point New Times Roman font, double-spaced with only one space between sentences, and attached to an email in Word doc format
  • Submitted by authors 18 years of age or older
  • Original – No AI-generated stories

Please attach your story to your cover letter, add your email address, and 3rd person bio of no more than 50 words.

The subject line of your email must include the author’s name, genre, and title of the piece (i.e., John Doe, Memoir, “My Lesson”).

The Writers’ Journal is free to submit to and will be free to read online. Hard copies will be available for purchase. If your submission is accepted, we will require your written authorization prior to publication in our journal.

Submit your work and any questions to:

submit@writers-journal.com

by September 1, 2024.

Call for Submissions of Reprints: Bulb Culture Collective

Submissions Are Open!

We will publish one selected piece every Tuesday and Friday on this website and promote each post on our social media.

We are aiming to respond to all submissions within two weeks. If you haven't heard from us after that point, please reach out by replying to your original submission email.

What you should send:

Send submissions as a .doc/.docx or pdf attachment to:

bulbculture@gmail.com 

with the subject "Submission - [Last Name] -[Genre]"

1 (one) piece of previously published poetry (regardless of form, theme, or length) OR 1 (one) prose piece up to 5,000 words (Fiction, Non-Fiction, CNF, Reviews, etc)

We do not have any style or thematic preference and will gladly read any work that falls within the guidelines. If you are unsure of the suitability of your piece, just send it!

Work that was previously published (regardless of when it was published) by a journal that has since gone dark or if circumstances have made your work unavailable online for any reason. You must retain the rights of this work.

Work that was previously published, regardless of journal status, as long as the work was published in 2022 or before.

Bulb Culture Collective will not tolerate any form of abuse or work that encourages or promotes hate or bigotry, including and not limited to racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, etc.

Please include a brief cover letter and third person bio in the body of your email. You must include the name of the original publication and publication date of the submitted piece in the email so we can respectfully credit the original publisher, even if they are no longer active.

Please only send one piece for us to consider at a time. Wait until you hear from us before sending more work our way. We want to read your work, but we want to give it the consideration and time it deserves. Once we have responded, feel free to submit again any time.

Please note any applicable content warnings. We REQUIRE content warnings for any work containing material related to sexual assault, sexual abuse, and domestic abuse.

Your work remains yours. We will post it and archive it on your behalf on our website. It will remain archived unless you choose to remove it.

We will never charge submission fees and, unfortunately, we are unable to pay contributors at this time, though we would love to get to that point in the future. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to reach out to us at:

bulbculture@gmail.com

Saturday, July 20, 2024

Call for Submissions: DuFrank Lit

cover of DuFrank Lit Issue 1 published in June 2024

DuFrank Lit is a semi-annual online journal. Please read our mission statement regarding the type of work we seek for publication.

We accept submissions through our online form.

Submission Requirements: 

Submit online during open periods: January 1-March 31 and July 1-September 30. 

We accept the following:

  • Fiction (up to 5,000 words)
  • Flash fiction (up to 500 words)
  • Your email subject should include the type of submission and its title. Send submissions as word or pdf attachments with the title and word count in the header.
  • Include a brief (250 words or less) bio in the body of your email.
  • Persons of all voices and backgrounds are encouraged to apply. However, currently we only publish in English.
  • We accept simultaneous submissions, just let us know as soon as possible if your work is accepted elsewhere.
  • We do not offer payment for publications.
  • No previously published or AI generated work.
  • We ask for first-publication rights for online and print. Contributors may republish their work citing DuFrank Lit as the original publisher. We retain the right to re-publish online or in print in an anthology.

Call for Submissions on Theme of "Perspective": NOMADartx Review

 painting of a feminine figure wearing a suit and sporting a mustache

Our NOMADartx Review considers and curates fresh voices in arts and literature that address creativity and the creative process. We review all media of visual art and submissions of original written work in fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction/personal essay, interviews, and reviews.

Categories:

1. Fiction, Personal Essay & Poetry: For general prose and poetry submissions, please note that while we welcome writing of any length, we are more likely to publish pieces under 5,000 words. Please limit your submissions to one per reading cycle.

2. Industry Specials: For our "Industry Specials" column, we seek innovative voices to discuss or demonstrate tools to help creatives grow their personal goals and careers. Emerging and working creatives regularly face challenges in time, funding, work value, work-life balance, and more. We're looking to publish articles that address these concerns from personal experience or collective wisdom. NOMADartx Review is seeking these subtopics, especially:

Promotion, connections, and effective ways to sell work and services;
Pricing time and/or physical works;
Artistic processes and tools;
Guides to style and/or program-building;
Access assistance for useful programs (physical and digital);
Resume and portfolio builders;
Confidence and self-worth;
Grant-writing and residency advice.

3. Critiques, Interviews, & Reviews: for works of an analytical nature, we’re looking for observers to share reviews and inclusive opinions about bodies of work, galleries, art houses, communities, creatively-geared sites, and more. While the focus is not limited to emerging creatives, projects, and businesses, NOMADartx Review is seeking new and exciting approaches that are lesser-known, such as articles addressing:

Explorative considerations of shows and exhibits, educational centers or projects;
Interviews with emerging creative people;
Creative reviews on singular or collective pieces by one person or collaborations;
Philosophical or social considerations of oeuvres and styles not specific to one artist.

4. Visual Art: please limit submissions to 5 pieces per reading cycle, prepared in .jpg or .png format. The resolution for images should be greater than 70 dpi. Please include your artist statement in the cover letter area, linking your submission to themes of the magazine.

General Submission Guidelines:

Please email submissions directly to:

info@nomadartx.com

We cannot accept paper submissions at this time, unless you are an incarcerated writer or artist. In that case, please mail work to: 

NOMADartx
809 S. Mann Ave
Tucson, AZ 85710
  • While we welcome writing submissions of any length, we are more likely to publish prose under 5,000 words.
  • Please prepare writing submissions in one letter-sized document, using a standard typeface (e.g., Times, Helvetica, Arial) and font size (12 point). All files must be uploaded in PDF or Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) formats. Please do not include your name anywhere on your manuscript (rather, include it in the cover letter). Please DO include page numbers.
  • For visual art: please limit submissions to 5 pieces per reading cycle, and prepare your files in .jpg or .png formats. The resolution for images should be greater than 70 dpi.
  • We reserve the right to pair accepted visual works alongside written pieces or other artworks, and curate multiple works into groups for features. Additionally, we may select certain works to feature, in part or whole, in banner areas of the NOMADartx site.
  • We are open to simultaneous submissions, but please email us to let us know as soon as your work is accepted elsewhere.
  • We may occasionally republish previously published work, as long as this does not conflict with previous contracts. However, you must indicate previously published work when you submit.
  • Responses will be provided as promptly as we, with a small staff, are able to provide them. Please do not email us about the status of your work until at least six months after submission.
  • Although NOMADartx Review does not request exclusive rights to accepted work, we do request the right to preserve your work online in our archives for the lifespan of the magazine. If the work we publish is later republished, we request that you note its initial publication in NOMADartx.
  • NOMADartx Review is currently an all-volunteer publication and we're unable to provide payment at this time. However, we are passionate about promoting great art, and will submit contributor work for appropriate literary and art prizes!

Thank you for your interest in NOMADartx & The NOMADartx Review, and in helping to build creative community! 

--Happy Arting!
The NOMADartx Crew

Call for Submissions on Theme of "Zodiac": Moonflake Press

 Recent cover image or website screenshot for Moonflake Press Online

read through our guidelines and send us your work to:

submissions@moonflakepress.com 

While we welcome everyone’s work, we do have set themes for each issue. We announce them on social media as well as on here. You don’t need to be so literal but please don’t send us work that has no correlation whatsoever. That being said, as long as your work checks the following boxes, we can’t wait to read it!

- Please send one email per genre. For example, send one email with a poetry submission and a SEPARATE one with fiction.

Please use 12 pt font such as Garamond, Times New Roman, Baskerville Old Face...

POETRY
✦ Your editor is Fran Fernández Arce ✦

▸You can rhyme or not, we don’t mind.

▸Maximum 5 poems per writer.

▸No longer than 10 pages total.

FICTION
✦ Your editor is Cyrine Sinti ✦

▸Minimum 100 words

▸Maximum 1500 words

▸Any use of non-English words is fine, just pop the English meaning in a footnote for us.

CREATIVE NONFICTION

We accept micro-essays, personal essays, memoirs, travel writing, diary entries, anecdotes and your own literary take on true, factual stories!
✦ Your editor is Shayal Kaur ✦

▸Minimum 1000 words

▸Maximum 1500 words

▸Any use of non-English words is fine, just pop the English meaning in a footnote for us.

astroflakes

Theme: zodiac

DEADLINE: Rolling

​astroflakes is a yearly mini-issue featuring zodiac-themed prose and poetry.

​Subject Line: astroflakes - Zodiac sign - genre

(example: astroflakes - Leo - poetry)

In the email, introduce yourself briefly, and attach your submission as a word document. Our maximum word count is 1,000 words.

​Please make sure that your submission corresponds to the vibe, definition, or personal connection to the zodiac sign that you are submitting for.

(Writers may submit work for up to three different signs in three different emails!)

We look forward to reading your wonderful astrological writing!

- Submissions which don't stick to the guidelines will not be opened or answered.

We don't make any money off Moonflake Press and we pay for everything ourselves.

Call for Submissions: Consequence

Recent cover image or website screenshot for Consequence

Submissions are welcome during the spring (January 15 – April 15) and fall (July 15 – October 15) reading periods*, and will be considered for our print publication (Consequence journal), our website (Consequence online), or our blog (Consequence substack). Please note that all subs need to address in some manner the consequences of war or geopolitical violence.

If you have questions, please check out our FAQ page. If you still have questions after reading that, please send us an email via the form at the bottom of this page. Thank you.

*Translations is open year-round

Poetry
Print: $20 per piece
Online Feature: $50
Substack: $30

We love any and all forms of poetry so no restrictions here.

Up to three poems per sub

Nonfiction
Print: 1-4 pp—$30
5-10 pp—$40 | 11+ pp—$50
Online Feature: $50
Substack: $30


Interviews, Critical & Personal Essays, Narrative Nonfiction, and everything in-between < four thousand words

Translations
The same pay scale and guidelines as listed for the corresponding genre (e.g., a translated poem follows the Poetry guidelines)

Please note: Translations have additional sub requirements, which are listed on our submission platform.

Fiction
Print: 1-4 pp—$30
5-10 pp—$40 | 11+ pp—$50
Online Feature: $50
Substack: $30


Short: < five thousand words Flash: < a thousand words (regardless of the no. of pieces)
Excerpts: < five thousand words

Reviews
We pay for reviews, though primarily publish ones we solicit. We’re open to pitches, though, so if you have a review idea for a book, movie, play, etc., that’s related to craft and/or our themes—please reach out to our Reviews Editor here: reviews@consequenceforum.org.

Fifteen hundreed to three thousand words

Art
Print: $200 for eight-page spread
$100 for the cover
Online Feature: $50
Substack: $30


We’re interested in all forms and mediums, though graphic narratves tend to work better online.
 
More information and submission link here.

Writing Competition: The Toni Beauchamp Prize in Critical Art Writing

The Toni Beauchamp Prize in Critical Art Writing

Surveying the scope of critical art writing today, the board, advisory board, and editors of Gulf Coast recognize the significant lack of venues and support for young and mid-career writers working across the United States. The Toni Beauchamp Prize in Critical Art Writing seeks to address this lacuna by bringing exposure to writers who are dealing with the spirit of the age and unafraid to ask difficult questions.

The 2024 Beauchamp Prize will be judged by Leslie Moody Castro.

Grounded in both scholarship and journalism, critical art writing occupies a specific niche. The best examples appeal to a diverse readership through an accessible approach and maintain a unique voice and literary excellence. The Beauchamp Prize will consider submissions of work that have been written (or published) within the last year. A variety of creative approaches and formats to writing on the visual arts are encouraged, and can include thematic essays, exhibition reviews, and scholarly essays.

There will be one first place prize of $3,000 dollars, and two runners up, awarded $1,000 each. The winning essay will be featured in GC's printed journal, and the two runners-up will be considered for publication.

Deadline August 31st

Entries for the Toni Beauchamp Prize in Critical Art Writing should be a single piece of prose, written in English, not exceeding 1,500 words.

Submission Guidelines

- Click here for online submissions accepted via Gulf Coast’s Submittable
- Submit your work as a single .doc, .docx, or .pdf file.
- All work submitted must have been written or published within the last year.
- It is the author's responsibility to secure image permissions and, when applicable, reprint permission if the submission has been previously published.
- The contest will be judged blindly, so please do not include your bio, your name, or any contact information in the uploaded document. This information should only be pasted in the “Comments” field.
- There is currently no entry fee.

Call for Submissions from the Black Diaspora: Arcanum Magazine

Arcanum is the secret language shared by the African diaspora…

We are a global collective of Black creatives making space outside the margins. We are the storytellers, the healers, the offbeat, and unconventional. We are an intersectional community whose mission is to uplift the work of our peers.

Arcanum Magazine is a digital and print magazine for creative writing, visual art, cultural criticism, and journalism by and for the Black diaspora. Just because we are Black artists does not mean our work has to be based in tragedy, and edited for mass consumption. It should also be funny and joyful and risky and heartwarming. All those things we are, so often, not allowed to be. Arcanum is liberation, here we exist freely.

Our mission is to platform and pay Black people for their work. A portion of the creative work by Arcanum Magazine contributors will be free and accessible online.

Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis. There is no fee to submit.

We believe anything created by a Black person, is a Black subject!

Most importantly, we will pay you for your work.

More information and submission link here.

Call for Collaborative Submissions: Icebreakers Lit

It’s chaotic good. It’s giving Furbies howling at the blood moon. It’s that reoccurring dream you keep having about David Bowie as Jareth the Goblin King in Labyrinth (just me?).

We like 80s and 90s nostalgia, nods to pop culture, and vulnerability. We like good writing that doesn’t take itself too seriously. We also like being surprised and things that don’t quite follow the rules so, if your work is none of this but you think we’ll like it, send it anyway. This space is for letting creativity flow without getting in our own heads.

At our minty liquid core, Icebreakers is about fostering connection within the lit community. As such, general and themed submissions should be the work of two or more authors / artists (no max). If you’re coming to the party with collaborators already in mind, great! If not, please see our “Spin the Bottle” opportunity for artists 18+.

Please submit all work through our Submittable page.

In addition to these more “formal” submissions, all work created through our Ice Ice Baby Collaborative Challenges on Twitter will be published on the website.Icebreakers is interested in poetry, flash, art, fiction, essays, CNF, that weird little thing you wrote in your notes app but don’t know what to call, etc. We want your art, and we know that art comes in many glorious forms. We aren’t too picky about rules, but to keep this reasonable, here are a few requests:

- Poetry – up to 3 pieces in any form, any length

- Micro and flash fiction – 3 pieces per submission
- Visual Art – up to 3 high resolution images

- Short fiction, CNF, and everything else – 1 piece per submission, 2500 words or under (unless stated otherwise in calls for submissions) 

We also accept simultaneous submissions and previously published work. Just let us know if you’re published elsewhere so we can do a little celebratory dance with you.

If accepted, you grant us first publication and archival rights, and the rights always return to you AND your writing buddies. Please be cool and credit (and tag!) Icebreakers Lit if your work is published elsewhere in the future. We love celebrating you. Seriously.

Unfortunately, we are not YET a paying market.

Call for Submissions: The Baffler

Do you have the negative capability to contribute to The Baffler? Send your pitch through this page. Muckraking, stem-winding, take-downing, doomsaying, and howling with indescribable pain are all to be expected and duly considered—so long as they don’t lack humor. 

We’re not interested in covering celebrities; personal journeys of self discovery; attempts to mark generational touchstones; think-pieces that set out to vindicate some slick new Concept or coinage; conspiracy theories; anything occurring solely on Twitter; those dreams you tried to turn into a story while you were stoned and depressed; and “creative nonfiction.” No, thanks.

Poetry with grace and fiction with personality are most welcome; anything that sounds like an academic “workshop” or writers’ “colony” will be printed out and lit on fire.

All contributions to The Baffler are paid (a little).

Submit your work here.

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Podcast Interview: Book Shop Chats

Many thanks to Victoria Hopkins for inviting me to speak on her podcast, Book Shop Chats. With the recent fire, floods, and general mayhem in my town, I've been slow to post this, but here it is. Enjoy!

Book Shop Chats--Episode Four: Jeanne Lyet Gassman

Saturday, July 13, 2024

Artist Residencies: Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts

The mission of the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts is to support established and emerging writers, visual artists and composers by providing working and living environments that allow uninterrupted time for work, reflection and creative growth and to present and support arts-related programming that expands public awareness and appreciation of the arts. 

Since 2001, KHN has hosted more than 50 working artists each year which include a combination of visual artists, writers, composers, and interdisciplinary artists. Each has found privacy in which to create along with ample opportunities to interact with fellow artists in a vibrant and friendly community located in the rolling bluff country of eastern Nebraska.

The Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts is a program of the Richard P. Kimmel and Laurine Kimmel Charitable Foundation.

The Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts awards up to seventy juried residencies per year to established and emerging visual artists, writers, composers, and interdisciplinary artists from across the country and around the world. Residencies are available for 2 to 8 weeks stays. Each resident receives a $175 stipend per week, free housing, and a private studio. 

Deadline: September 1, 2024 

More information and application portal here.

Writing Competition: Orison Books Best Spiritual Literature Awards in Poetry, Fiction, & Nonfiction

THE BEST SPIRITUAL LITERATURE AWARDS IN POETRY, FICTION, & NONFICTION

Each year from May 1 – August 1 we accept entries of unpublished single works in three genres (poetry, fiction, & nonfiction) for consideration for The Best Spiritual Literature Awards. The winner in each genre will receive a $500 cash prize as well as publication in Best Spiritual Literature, an annual collection of the finest spiritually engaged writing that appeared in periodicals the preceding year. (The unpublished work selected for The Best Spiritual Literature Awards will be featured alongside the reprinted material.)

Submit up to 3 poems (10 pp. max), 1 story (up to 8,000 words), or 1 work of nonfiction (up to 8,000 words). You may submit in multiple genres, and/or submit multiple entries in each genre.

Entry Fee: $12
Submission Period: May 1 – August 1

Electronic submissions via Duosuma only.

Do not include any identifying information in your manuscript or file name. Original English work only; no translations. Finalists will be selected by the editorial staff at Orison Books, and a winner will be selected in each genre by the judges: Sarah Ghazal Ali (poetry), Amit Majmudar (fiction), and Susanne Paola Antonetta (nonfiction). Current or former students of the judge in the genre in which they are submitting, or anyone with a close personal relationship with that judge, are not eligible to submit. The editors also reserve the right to select no finalists, in which case all entry fees will be refunded to contest entrants.

Submit your entry here.

Call for Submissions on Theme of "Fresh Start": Thread

Size matters. An alternative literary magazine in the poem and micro prose space. Thread publishes:

Fiction (Micro)

Flash Nonfiction

Poetry

Pays $20 per piece

Deadline: July 31, 2024

THREAD is an experiment in micro-publishing by Chill Subs run entirely on social media. Here's how it works: TAG: @threadlitmag anywhere on the Threads platform where you have posted your micro, poem, or mini-essay. These can be published on your profile, as a comment, anywhere. 

If we're tagged, we'll see it. If we " ♡︎ " the work, it is a rejection. If we repost the work, it is an acceptance. 

Issues released monthly It will be designed for Instagram and posted to Threads Lit Mag's feed. Each month, we will promote these issues through our Chill Subs network with a reach of 25,000+ followers.

We nominate for Best Microfictions. This is our fun little experiment. We hope you enjoy it.  

Call for Submissions: Pithead Chapel

Pithead Chapel electronically publishes art, literary fiction, nonfiction, and prose poetry monthly. At present, we only accept submissions under 4,000 words. All submissions that follow our guidelines below will be considered for an upcoming issue. Because of Submittable’s costs and policies, we cap our submissions at 300 per month across all genres, and will close our windows early if we reach this cap, re-opening on the 1st of the following month.

Cover Art: Previous issues have featured paintings and photography–both realistic and abstract. Browse our archives to get a sense of what we like.

Images have to be 600×760 (600 pixels wide by 760 pixels tall), and 72 ppi. We can resize images, but we don’t pad our images, and the image needs to take up the entirety of the cover. If the image doesn’t fit our size, we will need to crop it.

Fiction: We only accept one story per submission and this includes flash fiction. Please make sure the word count doesn’t exceed 4,000 words. In addition, please only send one submission at a time. If your submission is declined, please wait one month before sending us a new piece. If the guidelines aren’t followed your story will be returned at our convenience, unread.

Nonfiction: We’re interested in personal, memoir, lyric, flash (short-shorts), and experimental essays; we aren’t interested in critical essays. Please make sure the word count doesn’t exceed 4,000 words. In addition, please only send one submission at a time. If your submission is declined, please wait one month before sending us a new piece. If the guidelines aren’t followed your work will be returned at our convenience, unread.

Prose Poetry: We only accept prose poem submissions (1-3 prose poems in a single Word document); no traditional forms (sonnets, sestinas, villanelles, limericks, etc.). If you send us a traditional, lineated poem, we will automatically decline it. In addition, please only send one submission at a time. If your submission is declined, please wait one month before sending us a new piece. If you need to withdraw any individual poem (and not the entire submission of poems) from consideration, please email us at:

pitheadchapel@gmail.com

and let us know the title(s) that are no longer available.

Simultaneous Submissions: We do accept simultaneous submissions; however, please let us know immediately if your work has been accepted elsewhere.

Rights: If your work is accepted by Pithead Chapel, you’re granting us First Serial Rights, along with nonexclusive Electronic Archival Rights, to showcase your work indefinitely on our site. At the time of publication, all rights revert back to the author. If you republish the work elsewhere, all we ask is that you please credit us as the first publisher. (Authors can learn more about how rights work here.)

Editing: Pithead Chapel reserves the right to edit manuscripts for grammar or clarity issues without notification if necessary. If a manuscript requires a substantial amount of editing, we will notify the author of such changes for review before publication.

Response Time: We’ll try to get back to you as soon as possible about your submission. If you haven’t heard from us in two months then query us; otherwise, please be patient. We are doing our best and giving each submission the attention it deserves.

Payment: Currently, we don’t pay contributors. We don’t get paid either. We hope to pay our contributors someday but as of now we can only publish and help promote your writing.

Please adhere to these guidelines when submitting to Pithead Chapel: 

  • Name, email address, and phone number appears on the first page of the story or prose poem
  • Work is double spaced and has a 12-point font (preferably Times New Roman)
  • Document is saved as a rtf, .doc, or .docx file (we will not accept any other file types)
  • Work has page numbers (this doesn’t apply to prose poem submissions)
  • Pithead Chapel doesn’t consider previously published work (this includes journals, blogs, etc.)
  • Please don’t send us genre fiction; we aren’t the market for it
  • Please only send one submission at a time. If your submission is declined, please wait one month before sending us a new piece.

All submissions must be sent through Submittable 

Please note that Pithead Chapel might temporarily close submissions from time to time—so always check this page for updates before submitting. If you need to contact us please send us an email at pitheadchapel@gmail.com.