Details
Editor: David Steffen
Pay: 10 cents per word
Open July 8-22
Word range: max 3,500
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No
ANON SUBS
Description
Diabolical Plots is a SWFA-qualifying market that buys speculative fiction that leans towards startling, odd, and interesting. If you have a character-driven story with a strong inner and outer arc, this maybe a good place to submit.
Submission Hints
The editor, David Steffen, advises writers to be wary of being wordy. Tight concise prose that gives you everything you need to understand the story without overstaying its welcome, relatable characters, cool speculative ideas, all written very tightly. You don’t have many words, there is no space to waste.” The website says they are looking for: “Speculative fiction–science fiction, fantasy, and horror. Everything should have a speculative element–that includes horror. Feel free to mix in other genres at will–a fantasy mystery or a science fiction romance. And yes, we really mean it has to have a speculative element. If you submit a serial killer story with only mundane elements, even though that could be a horror story it’s not a speculative horror story and it will be rejected regardless of quality. • Things that we tend to really like: • Weird fiction • Sense of wonder • Strong character and plot arcs • Strong world-building, hinting at more to see around the edges of the story • Philosophical food-for-thought • Straightforward, easily readable style • Religion, where the story does not try to convert the reader, nor does the story demonize religion • Platonic friendship between men and women”
Insights
Looking for hints directly from David Steffen? I interviewed him and he says, "I mean, the nature of guidelines is that we try to list everything we think writers should know in them, otherwise they have failed as guidelines, you know? I hesitate to be too prescriptive in answering such questions because if I say “I would like more dark stories” then maybe I’ll get an overwhelming number of only dark stories, you know? Sending something I didn’t know I wanted is probably more likely than something I’ll say I want.
Instead, I would like to encourage writers to follow whatever weird trails their heart takes them down, even if they don’t think the result will be marketable. Some of the best fiction happens when a writer decides to stop pursuing a vague concept of “marketability” and decides to start writing whatever stuff they would love to write and would love to read (which is also really marketability but is not what people tend to think of as marketability). I think this can be hard to do, because there’s some vulnerability in showing your weird colors to other people."
Full interview here:
HINT - Click on picture to be taken to submission guidelines
Details
Open: July 1-31
Editors: Donald S. Crankshaw & Kristin Janz
Pay: 8 cents per word
Word range: 9000 max
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? Yes 4c a word
Description
We are looking for speculative stories--science fiction, fantasy, horror--with Christian themes, characters, or cosmology, and for artwork for this site.
Submission Hints
The story must have a speculative element. It needs something beyond the everyday. We love science fiction and fantasy, enjoy good ghost stories, and think there's great fiction material hidden in the mysteries of Christian theology--cherubim, leviathan, nephilim, visions, prophecy, and more. The story must engage with Christianity. We want stories with Christian characters whose faith affects their actions, with Christian themes such as grace and redemption, or with a Christian view of the supernatural. Note that we're not saying that you must be a Christian. We are not in a position to judge your faith and won't try, and we welcome submissions from authors of all backgrounds and perspectives. Nor does your story need to be unambiguously pro-Christian. If you can tell a good story that meaningfully engages with Christianity, we want to read it.
Sample Rejection
I've had three rejections from this market. One was a nice personal.
Details
Editor: Rebecca Treasure - guest editor Jadyn Straigis
July FLASH FICTION
Theme: Abandoned Castle
Open: July 7- July 30
Pay: 8 cents per word
Word range: up to 1000
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? No
Description
Apex Magazine focuses on dark and spectacular science fiction, fantasy and horror. Publishing bi-monthly, it used to be called Apex Digest and has been nominated for several awards. It went on hiatus for a while, but is back in business and accepting submissions.
Submission Hints
Apex Magazine is an online zine of fantastical fiction. We publish short stories filled with marrow and passion, works that are twisted, strange, and beautiful. Creations where secret places and dreams are put on display. We publish in two forms: an every-other-month eBook issue and a gradual release of an entire issue online over a two-month period. Along with the genre short fiction, there are interviews with authors and nonfiction essays about current issues. Additionally, we produce a monthly podcast of narrated original short fiction.”
Insight
I took a flash fiction class with Rebecca and it was outstanding. Learn more about the flash fiction editor at APEX.
I also roped the man who owns this fantastic dark magazine company into answering a few questions. Ps. I just took his class on tone in short fiction and learned about a whole new layer of story telling. https://www.apexbookcompany.com/collections/online-workshops
Details
Editor: Aleksandra Hill
Open
July 15-Aug 15
Pay: 10 cents per word
Word range: under 5000
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
khōréō is a quarterly publication of stories, essays, and art: fantasy, sci-fi, horror, and any genre in between or around it, as long as there’s a speculative element. The speculative element should be integrated into the piece—a random mention of a ghost on page 12 of 16 isn’t going to be the right fit.
Submission Hints
khōréō is dedicated to diversity and amplifying the voices of immigrant and diaspora authors and artists. We welcome, but do not require, a brief description of the author’s/artist’s identity in their cover letter. We invite you to submit if you identify as an immigrant or member of a diaspora in the broadest definitions of the terms. This includes, but is not limited to, first- and second-generation immigrants, refugees, asylum seekers, undocumented migrants, persons who identify with one or more diaspora communities, persons who have been displaced or whose heritage has been erased due to colonialism/imperialism, transnational/transracial adoptees, and anyone whose heritage and history includes ‘here and elsewhere’.
Insight
They've held one story of mine that was ultimately rejected (but then picked up by App Lit.) Here it is if you want to know what got very close...
Read Soul Storm flash here
SHAMELESS SELF PROMO
Get all three on Amazon.
Details
Editor: Snowy Franklin
OPEN ongoing
Pay: $50
Word range: 5000 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? no
Description
Tagline: I guess you could say Flunk Magazine is an Australian literary journal with a dirty little secret... We like Genre Fiction.
Send your submissions to flunkmagazine@gmail.com in DocX or PDF format. 12pt font and double spacing
Submission Hints
They have a funny little creature on their website called Glorb. He gives these hints.
Sci Fi
Science Fiction short stories must have technology that makes Glorb think "Hmmm, that doesn't exist yet." This technology should have a meaningful impact on humans, and be logically coherent, so that Glorb is convinced by the proposed result of the technological advancement. Remember, technology is nothing without the earth friends who wield it. Hence, science fiction must have humans with hearts that battle against, or with, this "technology" (loosely defined though it may be) to achieve a change, for better or worse, that is measurable and dramatic, or so Glorb thinks.
Fantasy
Fantasy short stories should give Glorb a feeling of awe and wonder. It should make Glorb go "Wow, amazing!" This is usually achieved through the use of magic: magical people, creatures, objects, etc. The world, or setting, is of great importance, so extra care must be excreted when building one for a fantasy story. Glorb is old fashioned, and likes a heroic protagonist, evil villains, quests, mentors, royalty, mysterious rogues that wear hoods and smoke pipes in dark corners. Glorb is sad, that not many people submit Fantasy Short Stories, and he wishes to read more of them.
Horror
Horror short stories, as a rule, must be sufficiently horrifying so as to give Glorb nightmares. This may begin with elements of the uncanny or the unfamiliar: a sense of strangeness that causes fear, accompanied by an overall miasma of suspense and terror. Other elements often used are gore, interminable violence, death, monsters, and supernatural beings like vampires. Glorb hates vampires. It may also be a purely psychological phenomenon, delving into the darker psyche of earth friends, exploring guilt, insanity, or existential dread. The earth friends in these stories must confront these varied and horrifying elements and emerge changed, for better or worse... Quite often the worse, or so Glorb thinks.
Insight
Thank you to my friend Akis for this find! They will also look at Crime, Mystery and Gothic fiction.
Details
Theme:Mushrooms, Spores, Fungus, all that rots in the dark
Open July 1-July 15
Editor: Rachel A. Brune
Pay: 5 cents per word
range: 3000 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
Crone Girls Press originally began as a Facebook Group for fans of speculative fiction, hosted by speculative fiction author and writing coach Rachel A. Brune. As the idea took hold to publish an anthology of horror fiction in honor of her favorite fall holiday, Rachel began soliciting stories of dread, despair, and doom, all of which made for some uplifting reading. Upon receiving some truly terrifying–and excellent–material, she decided to go for broke and start working on an anthology series that would feature work by established and debut authors … from the darker side of speculative fiction.
Submission Hints
Hard Sells:
Rape
Metastories about writers, horror writers, being in a horror movies, anything that references self-aware characters
Stories that rely heavily on one character telling the story to another character
Any stories that open like this: https://www.janefriedman.com/5-story-openings-to-avoid/
Query letters that spell the editors’ names wrong
Stories that are only tangentially situated in the horror genre
Insight
They do have some posts on their website going in depth on what they are looking for.
"Why is this important to know? Word count. I’ve received a number of stories that don’t fit the word count, and while I’ll open and give them a quick read (or at least the opening paragraph), if the story doesn’t fit the word count, it will start from a disadvantage. More on this in the second part.
Also – if you think about a mix tape (I’m really showing my age here, but whatever), how exciting would it be if someone gave you a mix tape of all the same band? I mean, it might be fun, but you might as well buy the album, right?":
Details
Open till Sept 30th
Editor: Zaq Cass
Pay:$100
word range: 6000-10,000
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
Looking for horror stories that involve technology.
Submission Hints
None! The editor did tell me he won't be too strict on word count.
Insight
New market for me. The editor Zaq is responsive.
Details
Open July 1-July 14
Editors: Justine Norton-Kertson & Brianna Castagnozzi
Pay: 8 cents per word
range: 1500-7500
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
“Solarpunk at Work” exploring what labor, economics, and our relationship to work looks like in solarpunk futures.
Solarpunk Magazine publishes hopeful short stories and poetry that strive for a utopian ideal, that are set in futures where communities are optimistically struggling to solve or adapt to climate change, to create or maintain a world in which humanity, technology, and nature coexist in harmony rather than in conflict. We also publish solarpunk art as well as nonfiction that explores real world, contemporary topics and their intersection with the solarpunk movement for a better future.
Submission Hints
Our fiction editors are interested in works that stir readers with themes of defiance, change, and achievement. This effect isn’t likely to come via high concept utopias alone, but rather, from vibrant characters whose struggles affect the reader. Speculative elements should be apparent but not dominating; our disbelief suspended not by necessity, but immersion. Any genre of science fiction, interstitial fiction, magic realism, or fantasy has potential as a solarpunk forum—we welcome robots and elves with equal excitement.
Justine gave me this tidbit in my interview: I’d also like to see more stories that are set further out in the future and explore pitfalls and problems within communities that have already, by and large, successfully adapted to or solved climate change and are well on their way toward the utopian ideal.
Insight
Justine Norton-Kertson is the co-editor-in-chief of this magazine and they took the time to give me to the inside scoop on how horror can work with solarpunk.
Details
OPEN July 1 -July 7
Editor: Charles Tyra
3c a word
Word range: 1000-6000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No
Description
Cosmic Horror Monthly is seeking Cosmic Horror, Lovecraftian, Weird stories, original only. If you aren’t sure if your work qualifies, submit it and we can decide. No subject is off-limits and we do encourage writers to try and push the status quo.,
At this time, we are strongly favoring stories with a contemporary narrative style. Lovecraftian themes and mythos works are welcomed but try to avoid Lovecraft pastiche and styles mimicking that of his writer circle from the early 20th century. In terms of style, we are fans of Laird Barron, John Langan, Mike Allen, Hailey Piper, etc.
Submission Hints
Most types of horror are welcome but we do prefer the work have a science fiction or otherwise cosmic philosophical leaning. If you aren’t sure if your work qualifies, submit it and we can decide.
My Insight
No luck for me yet with this market.
Details
Editors: Shingai Njeri Kagnunda & Eleanor R. Wood
OPEN July 1 -31
Pay: 8 cents per word
Word range: up to 6,000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints: Yes
Description
PodCastle is looking for quality fantasy fiction. If you’re a writer with a speculative short story that you’d like to hear narrated by one of our performers, we’d like to see it.
Submission Hints
PodCastle is looking for fantasy stories. We’re open to all the sub-genres of fantasy, from magical realism to urban fantasy to slipstream to high fantasy, and everything in between. Fantastical or non-real content should be meaningful to the story
My Insights
I haven't managed to break into the Escape Artist's roster of pro podcasts yet. But I've sent another one over!!! Fingers crossed.
Details
Submissions Open: July 1st-Aug 1st
Theme: Demagogues
Editor in chief: Eda Obey
Pay: .015c a word,$37.50 max
word range: 2500 or less
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No
Description
This season's theme is Demagogues. Demagogue is defined as a political leader who seeks support by appealing to the desires and prejudices of ordinary people rather than by using a rational argument. Some synonyms for a demagogue are fanatic, fomenter, hothead, incendiary, inciter, instigator, politician, rabble-rouser, radical, rebel, revolutionary, troublemaker. It's an election year in the US. Things are promising to get weird and/or violent. The rest of the world looks like their having the same fight coming to their doors.
Submission Hints
I want stories from the female gaze (think Aliens, Resident Evil, Hereditary, Tank Girl). I’m tired of reading what men want to do to us. I want to read what we want to do to them. Bring me smart female protagonists whose first inclinations are not to seduce the guard to get out of situations; they’ve got skills, they can get violent easily. I’m fine with them developing over the course of the story into someone like that, but please don’t revert to clichés unless you have your tongue firmly in your cheek. Please don’t use graphic rape for fridging purposes. If it’s part of a character’s backstory or development, fine, but don’t shoot the damn dog just to piss off your main character.
My focus is horror, supernatural, and creeping dread. I’m not averse to extreme/slasher horror. I always love a bit of sci-fi or dystopia, but it’s not our focus, so if it’s your venue, make it scary. If you spackle a layer of women’s issues into it, even better; disenfranchisement, slut-shaming, trans violence, racism, misogyny, sex work exploitation, inequitable emotional work and housework, whatever exists in this world that pisses you off, feel free to put a metaphorical ax between its eyebrows.
My Insights
Eda Obey is one of my favorite people. She is outrageous, compelling, fierce and brilliant. She published my story "Lucy and the Cosmic Comet Ride" and I also featured one of her stories on my podcast, along with two fairly outrageous interviews.
Details
Editor: Storm Michael Humbert
OPEN June 12- July 12th
Pay: 8c a word
Word range: 5000 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
"Thank you for the opportunity, but..." is a place we've all been. That moment of rejection. In work, in hobbies, even with friends. Rejection can hurt - but it's also just another window into a different opportunity. If one door closes there are still other doors in the house; just find a different room. The goal of Calendar of Fools is always both to publish great fantasy and science fiction and give something back to the writing and reading communities, and Intergalactic Rejects is no exception. This time, instead of tips, we're bringing a little solace, some hope, a possible home for your own misfit stories, and valuable perspective to help you through the down times - those times when it seems like all the emails close a door.
Submission Hints
Calendar of Fools is seeking your rejected stories for the Intergalactic Rejects anthology. Sometimes you have a really good story that just hasn’t found a home among the markets and magazines. It doesn’t mean the story isn’t wonderful; it just didn’t fit their needs.
If you want more HINTS check out my interview!!
Insight
Storm Michael Humbert is the editor of this anthology and funded it with a Kickstarter. He is also someone I met at Superstars. Totally amazing fellow. Here is my interview with him for some real insight:
Details
OPEN June 1- July 15th
Pay: $50
Word range: 500- 3500 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
A black cat approaches, do you eagerly cross its path, or run in the opposite direction? From the superstitious to the unlucky, from a witch's familiar to a soul stealing grave robber, black cats have captured our imagination and remain solidly in the realm of the dark.
Dazzle us with your best black cat story or poem. A black cat or a clowder of black cats must be featured predominantly in your story and not simply set decoration. Think outside of the box and show us something we haven't seen before.
Submission Hints
Genres: horror, dark fantasy, sci-fi, erotica, weird westerns, cyberpunk, steampunk...we're open to all but prefer dark fiction.
You submit on a form
Insight
I got my R really quickly and tried to send another story in. No go. Only one sub allowed.
Three books. Thirteen stories in each from Angelique Fawns and the most talented guest writers she could find.
Details
THEME: LEVIATHAN
OPEN now till Sept 30th
Pay: $125-$200
Word range: 3,000 -6,000 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
We’re looking for original weird tales set in the Victorian period that explore the human (and inhuman) experience through the lens of horror.
Some clarifications:
Victorian: There is a tendency to view the Victorian Age as beginning and ending with the reign of British monarch Queen Victoria (1837-1901), but this is so strict as to be crude. Rather, the period will be what is referred to as The Long Nineteenth Century (1789-1914), which begins with the French Revolution and ends just short of World War I. This expanded timeframe serves to foreground the transformations that took place within British society and brings those changes into stark relief.
This period usually takes England as its geographical norm, and often a particular city: London. But for the purposes of this anthology, the region will also include Scotland, Ireland, Wales, as well as India and the furthest reaches of the British Empire. There is considerable scope here, and the period is rich in conflict and upheaval, which any excellent story cannot do without.
Submission Hints
Show us primitive science, at once enlightened and profane, the obscure craft of learned mutilators who frighten all, even the dead. Or the Resurrection men, who do their bidding by midnight, and fear more moonlight than the noose.
Give us tales of
strife and privation, loss and alienation; rural homesteads replaced by hypnotic
topographies of stone and glass, cloaked in smog; of choking workhouses and tumbledown tenements. Show us who built this world, mixing mortar with bone, but
won’t inherit it. Takeo us where rail and steam cannot, where clockwork minds are setadrift from empire—from themselves.
Transport us to the endless plains and ragged
mountains of Kabul, where leviathans clash for the soul of Central Asia. Give us immigrant tales: ex-lives, diasporic fugitives—what did they leave behind, and what did they bring with them? Give us your silent biographies of the obscure and unseen.
The Menagerie:
What makes this period particularly special for us is that, without it, contemporary horror would simply not exist—at least, not as we know it. Here, the canon of horror prose fiction was born, not least its blighted offspring: weird fiction. Its menagerie of monsters has endured, too.
I speak here of pale bloodsucker, vengeful spirit, and shambling undead, to name a few. Each one hints at the myriad anxieties peculiar to the Victorian mind: disease, death, immigration, poverty, science, the brute pace and condition of life, and in the background, the steady decline of religious faith.
These beloved critters have been written about endlessly, such that even the classics have an already-read quality. They’ve also been filmed for modern audiences millions of times, and in ways that bear ever less resemblance to the novels. When something becomes familiar, it loses its ability to shock and unsettle. In other words, we’re not looking for stories that rewrite the classics, specifically vampire stories.
Horror: It now feels trite to say, but good horror is about trespass and transgression more so than it is about transcendence. It confronts themes, images, and ideas that people would rather avoid than confront but elicits in the reader a sense that they cannot look away.
Weird: The term “weird” should be understood to mean a certain sense of breathless and unexplainable dread, of outer, unknown forces present, a suggestion of the defeat or suspension of the laws of nature which have hitherto served to protect our minds and bodies (and souls) from the assault of chaos. By its very nature, weird fiction should invoke in the reader a sense of profound uneasiness and dread, it should hint at the inability of the human mind to comprehend the true nature of existence, and it should cause us to question the stability of our faith in the established laws of nature.
Insight
I know nothing about this market, but LOVE the concept of this one.
Details
Press: Obsidian Butterfly LLC
Editor: Gevera Bert Piedmont
OPEN: June 1 - July 30
Pay: $25
Word range: 500-6,000 max
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? No
Description
The stories we are looking for are all about Deep Ones. But not just “I met a Deep One and I fainted because the Innsmouth Look is just that jarring to my fragile psyche.” We want stories that are truly about Deep Ones: Deep One pirates willing to raid some truly unusual ships, beach bums sharing a smoke with a new friend. How do you handle the call to the sea when you live in Kansas? How did encounters with Romans, Vikings, and rum runners play out? Maybe they were the Sea People leading to the Bronze Age Collapse. Did they sink the White Ship that messed up English Royal succession? Or what or a more distant, perhaps primordial past? The “non-fiction” should be articles about aspects of Deep One culture, biology, history and everything in-between.
Nothing from New England or South Pacific seas unless you give us a time period we haven’t seen before. Dive deep and grasp the Weird.
Submission Hints
They are calling the project The Altas of Deep Ones. "A cultural, geographic and unnatural history. Dive Deep into the Weird." They are also looking for poetry and non-fiction. Check the sub page for rates.
Insight
The editor contacted me and asked me to promote this call. It sure looks interesting! I wrote a story just for this call about a Deep One Merwoman into BDSM.
Details
Editor: Joshua Fagan
Probably closes Sept 1
8c a word
Word range: max 1200
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No
Description
Orion’s Belt is a literary speculative-fiction online magazine. We specialize in the strange and poignant and awe-inspiring, stories that have a cosmic scale and intimate personal stakes. Currently, we publish fiction only, one story per month. All stories must be 1200 words or less.
Speculative fiction for us encompasses a wide range of fiction that includes non-realist elements. While we focus on science-fiction and fantasy, we’re open to slipstream, horror, magic realism, myth retellings, surrealism, superhero stories, and all other fantastical genres and subgenres.
The “literary” qualifier simply means we like stories focusing on internal and interpersonal conflicts. Don’t give us people saving the world unless you can make us care about the people doing the saving. It also means we want stories that are sharply, intelligently written. We highly prize the craft of writing. This doesn’t mean you have to be Faulkner or Shakespeare, and it certainly doesn’t mean we want stories peppered with purple prose and thesaurus-words. It does mean that we care as much about form as we do about content. How a story is told is as important to us as what it is about.
Speculative fiction gives us the opportunity to imagine other worlds, but we can also use it to help us better understand our own little blue marble floating through the depths of space.
We follow in the tradition of science-fiction pioneer Darko Suvin and his concept of “cognitive estrangement,” in which the strangeness of different worlds provides readers with a lens through which to observe the strangeness in our own worlds. This is more than mere allegory. It’s an awakening to a higher level of awareness. In our view, the best speculative fiction does more than offer escapism. It facilitates a better understanding of the self and the other.
Submission Hints
All stories must contain significant speculative elements. This does not mean all sci-fi stories must have lasers and rockets. It just means a non-speculative story doesn’t become speculative if you include a single line clarifying the story takes place on Mars.
My Insight
I've had 23 rejections from this market. But three of my stories got close. They were the more unusual and artsy of my pieces.
Details
Infested Publishing
OPEN till July 31
Pay: $25
Word range: 2000-4000
Simultaneous submissions? no
Reprints? no
Description
Infested Publishing says, "We're working-class creatives who understand the power the arts have to liberate hearts and minds. We have grown tired of the treatment of writers by some who take as much care as factory owners seeking profit.
We wish to work alongside the many supportive publishers present in our community while reducing the need for faceless, AI using chancers looking to take the majority of your profit while investing so little.
Now, we are small and do not expect to make big waves, but what we can promise is we will not make empty promises, nor will we do too much too soon. Your realistic expectations will be met with support and enthusiasm unless you are a bully or a creep."
Submission Hints
Send us your best (previously unreleased) 2,000 to 4,000 word speculative fiction with a leaning towards horror/sci-fi or a combination of both. We want something strange and unusual. There’s just one catch… Your death has to feature somewhere within the story.
Insight
I sent in a story and got a quick R. (I do appreciate getting the band-aid ripped off quickly...) Thinking about sending in another. Just have to pick a character to kill. Hmmm.
Details
Themes: Stories to Take To Your Grave: Wandering Souls Edition (pay $20 plus hardcover)
Horrors from the Execution Chamber (Charity Anthology benefiting Witness to Innocence (pay $10 plus digital copy)
OPEN June 1- July 15
Pay: see above
Word range: 2000-5000
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? no
Description
Stories to take to your grave: We’re looking for horror stories of all subgenres about souls wandering the earth after being separated from their bodies, but before arriving at their final destinations (though part of the story may take place pre-death or post-arrival)
Horrors from the Execution Chamber: We’re looking for horror stories of all subgenres about executions, public or private, ancient or modern. The execution does not have to be completed, nor does it have to be government sanctioned. An execution for our purposes is a willful decision to end a life as a consequence for the condemned’s actions.
Submission Hints
At Undertaker Books, we tend to make decisions based on what we would like as writers. One of the things that drives D.L. crazy is when an anthology opens a call and only gives him a month to get a story together. Can he do it? Of course. But it usually means dropping everything to grind out the story (with little time for revision and edits). And that isn’t always possible. With that in mind, we’ve decided to post the details for our remaining anthologies for which we will hold open calls in 2024. This will let you know what we’re looking for in terms of subject and length, and when we will be accepting submissions for those calls.
Insight
I also got ANOTHER quick R here.
“I support you 100 percent. You're doing a great job, this type work really is work and is important. Thanks!"
Can Wiggins
Join my substack at https://angeliquemfawns.substack.com for additional calls! I send out the new ones as I find them… plus any tidbits I learn from relentlessly chasing down editors and industry pros.