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Writers Wanted
Call for
Submissions
Writer's Markets
This is just the beginning of our
Sept calls for writers.
Look out for autumn: when the
publishing world revs up, don't fall behind.
Sponsored By
Chicken
Soup Stories Wanted about Weight Loss
Call for
Submissions
Many people fail on diets because they loose motivation or burn out. Obesity
in adults and children is becoming a problem we can no longer ignore. Have you
been told loosing weight is critical to your health? The news probably came as
no surprise, but what are you doing to make the necessary changes in your life?
Are you learning new ways to eat? Do you see the triggers and patterns in
emotional eating? Have you done more than think about getting off the couch and
working out? How important is the support of your family and friends to your
success?
Weight loss is a lifestyle change, not simply a matter of reducing calories
and fat, so relapse is part of the picture. How have you learned to be kind to
yourself when a few pounds or inches creep back? Once that weight is lost, do
you love the new you? That beauty was always there but you now share it proudly
with the world! Have you been down the road and around theblock so many times
that surgical options are the solution for you?
What you've experienced and accomplished could be the motivation and
inspiration that helps another person get healthy, feel fit and full of life
again.
Visit
www.thehealthysoul.com for story guidelines and more information about
Chicken Soup for the Soul Health Living Series: Weight Loss.
Parables
Details:
http://www.parablesmag.com/guidelines.html
A new online magazine dedicated to showcasing stellar
Christian fiction content, is now accepting submissions for its 2005 line-up.
OUR GOALS
• To Glorify the Lord Jesus in everything that we publish.
• To provide quality stories that will touch hearts and change lives.
• To provide a place to showcase noteworthy Christian fiction writers.
Please read the
Parables Submission
Guidelines page carefully and completely. Look over our
genre line-up, and read the information on our about page to learn more
about the magazine. Also, please be sure to follow the Submission
Requirements section precisely when submitting your fiction stories.
THE BALTIMORE REVIEW
2004 Short Story Competition
Details:
http://www.baltimorereview.org/contest.htm
The Baltimore Review seeks entries for its short story competition.
Send us your best literary fiction. All writers and all themes and styles are
welcome (but no novel excerpts or stories intended for children). No previously
published stories.
Multiple contest entries are allowed, but a $15 entry fee must accompany each
story. Stories should be double-spaced. The author’s name should not appear
on the manuscript. A cover sheet with the author’s name, address, phone number,
email
Deadline: Submissions accepted between August 1st
-December 1st, 2004
Fourteenth Annual Editors' Prize
in Fiction & Essay and
the Eighth annual Missouri Review
Larry Levis Editors' Prize in Poetry
Details:
http://www.missourireview.com/info/contestguidelines.php
$2,000 Fiction | $2,000 Poetry | $2,000 Essay
One winner and three finalists will be chosen in each category.
Winners will be published and finalists announced in the following spring's
issue of The Missouri Review.
Finalists in all categories will receive a minimum of $100, or consideration
for publication at regular rates.
Entry fee: $15 for each entry (checks made payable to The Missouri Review).
Each fee entitles entrant to a one-year subscription to TMR, an extension of
a current subscription, or a gift subscription (a $7 savings from the regular
subscription price). Please indicate your choice and enclose a complete
address for subscriptions.
Deadline: Entries postmarked by 15 October 2004
Words on Walls: Call for Submissions
Details:
http://www.wordsonwalls.net/submissions.htm.
Send poetry, fiction, and nonfiction that leaves us breathless to
editor@wordsonwalls.net.
Theme for Issue Four: Fool Us Once
Topic: The presidential election. Use your literary voice to express a
political opinion.
Interviews, essays, collaborative poems, stories, and mixed genre works
appreciated.
Theme for issue five --Give us some Sugar
Issue Five First Prize: Publication plus $75.00.
Issue Five Finalists: Possible publication.
Rocking Chair Reader
Simpler times, treasured memories
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: "Family Gatherings"
Details:www.adamsmedia.com/rocking.html
We invite you to submit your very own slice of Americana for consideration
in this one of a kind anthology series. (Selections begin immediately.)
Theme: "Family Gatherings" will feature 60-70 delightful stories that
revolve around family gatherings in America's small towns and smalltown
homes. From weddings and reunions to rallying around one another for support
and encouragement, "Family Gatherings" offer the perfect opportunity for
family members to bond, share heartfelt stories, and create lasting memories
through work and play.
Stories might take place during bridal or baby showers, birthdays, backyard
barbeques, graduation parties, celebrations, holiday dinners, reunions,
Saturday night card games, Sunday afternoon drives, visits with Grandma and
Grandpa, barn-raising events, harvest day, cookie exchanges, Monday morning
coffee klatches, quilting bees, camping activities, shopping excursions,
preparing for a feast, working together in the fields, attending worship
together, and vacationing, or something as poignant as sitting around the
front porch watching the sun set. We also encourage stories that depict
family support in times of need, as well as recollections of playing and/or
working together for a common cause.
What we're searching for is vivid word-weaving and great storytelling. We
want stories that travel full circle, tell a complete story, and depict
inspiration, good times, and homespun humor with the delightful flavor of
the elusive small town atmosphere we all long to recapture. If your story is
written about a small town, revolves around a family gathering, and brings a
precious memory with it, we're interested! See specific guidelines below.
(Questions and queries welcome.)
Each volume of The Rocking Chair Reader features true stories that
demonstrate life in smalltown America as seen through the eyes of widely
published authors as well as new authors. Stories are told in first person
with one main character, one supporting character, and/or written in an "as
told to" format.
We are all individuals with complex mannerisms and different methods of
doing things, yet we share essential and fundamental characteristics that
solidify who we are and connect us as a nation. American traditions and
cultures are a part of our heritage. "Family Gatherings" is Adams Media's
way of helping us all reconnect with our roots.
Submission Guidelines:
500-1,000 words in length true, upbeat, and positive set in small town America
we have particular interest in stories set between 1900-1955 (or as told
from that timeframe)
each story will reflect small town traditional values please send a cover
letter, the name (and state) of the small town your story takes place in, a
short 3-4 line bio, and a complete address and phone number where you can be
reached, as well as a current email address with each submission email is
preferred; no attachments please (copy and paste your submission into the body
of an email) email to rockingchairreader@adamsmedia.com
you may also submit your story to
Rocking Chair Reader
Adams Media
57 Littlefield St.
Avon. MA 02322
or by fax to 508-427-6790
Authors will receive byline and bio, copy of the book, plus $50 for each
accepted story, or $250 for the story selected as the lead story.
Additionally, ten stories from various places across the United States will
be chosen as stand-out stories and each will be followed by a special
two-page town profile, which will include historical facts and/or vignettes
from local historians. Future volumes are planned; suggestions welcome.
What we do not want are stories that involve the supernatural, New Age,
miracles, graphic material, or violence. We also do not seek stories
previously published in anthologies (with the occasional exception of small
regional publications).
Everyone has a story that bears repeating. We invite you to share your story
with the world through The Rocking Chair Reader, and help us captivate the
heart of America with a series we are sure will quickly become another Adams
Media bestseller.
Deadline: September 10, 2004
Desire in Transition: An anthology by, for and
about partners and potential partners of
trans(gender/sexual), intersex, and gender queer people
Partners and potential partners of gender queer people are extremely diverse and
rarely visible as a group. We are people of all genders (trans and otherwise),
people of all sexual identities (straight, lesbian, gay, bisexual, pansexual,
trans-sensual, s/m, vanilla, some of us still searching for terminology and some
happy without it), not to mention body sizes and shapes, races, ethnicities,
health statuses, physical abilities, economic classes and so on. Part of our
invisibility is that there doesn't seem to be a simple name for the one thing we
have in common. "Homosexual" might work for similarly gendered trans people in
relationships, but not all of us with differently gendered preferences are
comfortable with
"heterosexual," and "transsexual" is already taken.
It's time for an anthology to begin to illustrate who we are (in all of our
diversity), the issues with
which we struggle, and what we're doing to make the world a better place. We
imagine this book as a
beginning of a conversation among lovers of gender variant folks and the varied
communities to which we
belong.
So, I'm looking for writing (essays, memoirs, stories, poetry, etc.) on the
following topics or others that
you believe would be important for such a book:
Coming out stories (How has your thinking about your sexual identity and
relationship changed over time?
Did a partner you were already with, come out as trans? Or, did you find a
pattern in the types of
people you were attracted to? What have you come out as? Have you come out more
than once, with more than
one sexual identity? How did others react when you told them? What were your
hopes and fears in coming
out? How have they come true or not? Did your partner or ex come out to you? And
how did you react?)
Relationships (Is there anything special about trans or differently gendered
relationships? How have your views on relationships changed with your partners
and/or identities? Changes during transition, trans people telling their
partners, non-trans partners' transitions, how to be a political ally to your
romantic partner/s, inter-racial relationships,
internet dating, monogamy and polyamory, commitment ceremonies, state-sanctioned
marriages, domestic violence…)
Creating Community (Where do we fit, and how have our communities responded? How
have our non-trans-identified communities adjusted or changed? Who has come into
our lives that we might not
otherwise have met? What barriers have obstructed our efforts to create
community, and how have we dealt with them? What has been fun or fabulous about
your gender community?)
Organizing for Social Change (What kinds of trans/partners political organizing
are we doing? What tips do we have for others? How do we work with and in
existing political organizations - queer, people of
color, labor, feminist, fat liberationist and other movements? How has being a
partner of a trans person fit with and/or changed and/or enhanced your political
analysis?) At present payment is 2 copies upon publication
Submissions should be no more than 15 pages (double spaced) or 3700 words.
Send paper versions to:
Natalie Patrice
643 Hamlin St. NE #6
Washington, DC 20017
or electronic ones to nptucker@yahoo.com
Deadline October 15, 2004
Long-Term Friendships
Some people come into our lives and leave quickly, but some stay a while and
leave footprints in our souls and we are never, ever thesame. – Unknown
One of the greatest gifts in a person’s life is a long-term friendship. These
friendships are to be treasured and valued for their longevity. Friends cannot
be bought or bartered. Only a return of like-sentiment
maintains the relationship.
A call for submissions related to the theme of long term friendships.
Story length: 1,500-2,000 words
Point of View: preferably first person
Style: narrative, positive, anecdotal, dramatic, or humorous, but true and well
written,
No previously published stories,
After publication, rights revert back to author; may submit multiple stories,
Manuscripts will not be returned without an SASE,
Finalists will be notified after the submission deadline has passed,
Each submission must include:
Story title,
Author's name,
Author's mailing address,
Author's phone number,
Author's email (if available),
Author's bio,
Word count.
Submissions must be typed in 12 point type,
No electronic submissions.
Stories will be edited as necessary.
Submissions should be mailed with SASE to:
Editors
A Measure of Words
94 Wheeler Road
Hollis, NH 03049
Deadline: February 25, 2005
THE BALTIMORE REVIEW
2004 SHORT
FICTION COMPETITION
Details: http://www.baltimorereview.org/contest.html
Prizes :
First Place: $500 + publication in The Baltimore Review
Second Place: $250
Third Place: $100
Submissions accepted between August 1st -December 1st, 2004
Springfield
Writers' Guild 11th Annual Literary Awards
15 Categories
The Jim Stone grand prize memorial
awards
#1. Poetry any subject, any form
limit 50 lines
#2. Fiction any subject limit 1,500
words
#3. Nonfiction any subject limit
1,500 words
1st place - $100 two honorable
mentions all winners receive a certificate
Published prose or poetry
#4. Prose or poetry not self
published. Single item or book up to 100 pages
#5. Self-published prose or poetry
single item or book up to 100 pages
Unpublished prose unpublished poetry
(limited of 1,000 words per entry)
(limit of one single-spaced page)
#6. Short story--any genre
#7 nostalgia/reminiscence
#8. Humor--any subject
#9. Essay or opinion piece
#10. Article--nonfiction, any subject
#11. Rhyming--any subject or style
#12 child's verse--any style
#13 comic verse--any subject
#14 free verse--any subject
# 15. Haiku--traditional (5-7-5)
nature) or nontraditional
Awards for categories #4 through #15
1st place--$20 2nd place--$10 3rd
place--$5
* one honorable mention per category.
* all winners receive certificates
Entry fees:
categories #1, #2, #3 -- $2.00 per
entry with three entries allowed in each category.
categories #4--#15 -- $1.00 per entry
with unlimited entries allowed in each category.
no entrant may win more than one
award per category, regardless of number of entries.
RULES
1. All entries must be the original work of the contestant. Do not enter the
same prose or poetry in more than one category.
2. All manuscripts must be typed on 8 1/2 x 11 paper, standard manuscript
form with double-spaced prose and single-spaced poetry. All entries must be
titled except the Haiku.
3. Place the category name and number, number of words for prose, in the
upper left corner of the first page of each entry. Do not put your name on the
entry. Include a cover sheet with the category number and name, your name,
address, phone number, the title and the first line of the entry. This is to
avoid confusion caused by duplicate titles.
4. Keep all originals; no copies will be returned. No entries/winner will be
published.
5. Winners will be announced and awards given at the SWG October 2004 Writers
Knapsack Conference on October 23, 2004. Winners not attending will be notified
during the first week of November.
6. . MAILING: Include a check for entry fees payable to "Springfield Writers'
Gu ild." Mail entries and checks to:
M. J. Becco, Contest Chairman 3025 N. East Av. Springfield, MO 65803 E-MAIL:
MJBecco@webtv.net
7. For a list of the winner, please include a SASE with your entry.
8 . DEADLINES: All entries must be postmarked no later than October 1, 2004.
SWG will not be responsible for misdirected or postage-due mail
Fourteenth Annual Editors' Prize in
Fiction & Essay and the Eighth Annual
Missouri Review
Larry Levis Editors' Prize in Poetry
Details:
http://www.missourireview.com/info/contestguidelines.php
$2,000 Fiction | $2,000 Poetry | $2,000 Essay
Deadline: Entries postmarked by 15 October 2004
The Experience Of Early Parent Loss
Seeking personal essays, stories, poems, drawings,
photography, etc. for an anthology, from anyone who had a parent die before the
approximate age of 18. Mail submission and 2 SASEs to:
Marianna Litovich
7368 Eden Brook Dr.
Apt. 624
Columbia, MD 21046.
Email ML2@umbc.edu with questions only.
Do not email submissions.
Deadline: None
War Writing Project
Details:
www.operationhomecoming.org.
U.S. troops returning from the frontlines of the war against terror will be
encouraged to write about their experiences through a new National Endowment for
the Arts (NEA) program, called "Operation Homecoming."
The program will provide writing workshops led by distinguished authors such as
Mark Bowden, author of Black Hawk Down; Tom Clancy, author of The Hunt
for Red October; Bobbie Ann Mason, author of In Country; and James
McBride, author of The Color of Water.
The program will also include a CD containing interviews and readings by
well-known writers who have dealt with war, an online writing tutorial, and an
anthology of new wartime writing contributed by the military and their families.
Participants will receive regular e-mail communication about the craft of
writing for the program’s duration.
The workshops, led by two-person teams of writers, many of whom are veterans
themselves, will be hosted by at least eight military installations around the
country and overseas. Workshops for the Army will be held at Fort Drum, N.Y.,
and Fort Richardson, Alaska. The "Operation Homecoming" anthology will collect
the stories and reflections of the returning troops in a variety of forms, from
fiction, verse and letters to essays, memoirs and personal journals.
They can be sent electronically to
submissions@operationhomecoming.org or mailed to
"Operation Homecoming," National Endowment for the Arts, Suite 519, 1100
Pennsylvania Avenue N.W., Washington D.C. 20506. For more information, contact
the NEA Office of Communications at 202-682-5570.
Submissions will be accepted through December 31, 2004.
Soleil Lifestory Network and Denis Ledoux plan to publish a
"how to" book on writing memoirs during 2004.
Details:
http://www.turningmemories.com/minutes.html
It is designed to complement Turning Memories Into Memoirs, a Handbook for
Writing Lifestories. The book will be divided into topics, and we are
looking for well-written lifestories to illustrate each topic. Submissions
should be double-spaced and no more than five pages of 12-pt. type with one-inch
margins. Longer submissions will not be considered. You are free to submit as
many stories in as many topics as you wish.
Deadline for submissions is February 1, 2004. Email submissions are preferred;
if you send by USPS, we will ask you to supply a disk with the story on it, if
we accept it for publication. Please send email submissions to
minutes@turningmemories.com. You can attach your story
to the email or include it in the body of the message. (If you include it in the
body, please bracket italicized words with _underscores_ or send in HTML
format.) Using USPS, please send to
Soleil Lifestory Network
95 Gould Road
Lisbon Falls ME 04252.
Call for submissions: The Lost Pages 2004 Halloween Special
Details and complete guidelines:
http://lostpages.net/lostpagesarchives.html#lostandfound
Lost Pages is seeking short-short fiction and
Halloween/horror-themed contributions to the column "The Lost and Found" for
its October 2004 update.
GUIDELINES: FICTION
●Length: 200-2500 words (two hundred to twenty-five hundred words)
●Previously unpublished works only
●Open to anyone
●Pay/rights: CAN$20 for first World English Rights and nonexclusive anthology
option (+ possible royalties)
●Content: must be horror and/or supernatural ● funny, extreme, wry, subtle,
over-the-top, creepy, absurd, perverse, cross-genre, traditional, pastiche,
quiet, obscene, metafictional, taboo, suspenseful, mythic, sexy, violent,
surreal, atmospheric, scary ● anything goes.
●Format: send as an attachment in WordPerfect, .RTF, or MS Word to lostpages@lostpages.net
and include the words "Lost Pages Halloween Special" in the subject line, plus
your submission title.
●DO NOT paste your submission in the body of the email. Such submissions will
not be read.
●In the body of the email, you MUST include a cover letter, with a short bio. Do
not summarize the story in any way in the cover letter, beyond stating its title
and word count. Emails with an attachment only and no identifying message in the
body of the email will be deleted automatically.
●No simultaneous or multiple subs. Response time is usually at most two weeks
from receipt (often much faster), and you can submit something else then if your
submission is rejected.
●Do not send graphics or images of any kind.
●Deadline: 16 September 2004, 6 a.m.
●For general guidelines:
Deadline: 16 September 2004, 6 a.m.
Call For Submissions
for poetry anthology centered on astrology, the
heavens, or the zodiac
Edited by professional astrologer/poet
Samuel F. Reynolds and poet/spoken word artist Roger Bonair-Agard. We have
publishers interested in the project already. Please send best work and
inquiries to
astroantho@yahoo.com
FAMILY
…who, what, when,
where, how, why is it, is it not? Send 5 or fewer 8.5 x 11 pages with SASE for
possible publication in 2005. Selectees receive a free copy of the anthology.
Submit through December to
The People’s Press
4810 Norwood Ave
Baltimore, MD
21207-6839.
BALLYHOO STORIES
A new literary magazine, is accepting submissions
of short fiction and creative nonfiction on the theme of “Portraits & Snapshots”
for our first issue. Deadline: November 30. For complete guidelines, visit
www.ballyhoostories.com
Chicken Soup for the Mother and Son
Soul
From the moment she hears, “It’s a boy!” a
special love blossoms in the heart of a mom and a bond, unlike any other, has
begun. Chicken Soup for the Mother and Son Soul will celebrate the
blessings and bruises, tears and triumphs, happiness and hopes of that
relationship.
Topics will include but not be limited to:
I Can’t Believe He Said That! Tender
Moments Special Occasions
Play Ball! Overcoming
Obstacles Outings and Adventures
Substitute Mom Oh,
Mom! Serving Our Nation
We’re looking for inspirational, true stories,
1000 words or less that will touch the souls of the readers and make them laugh,
cry, sigh or just say, “Wow!” Stories should be positive, hopeful, universal,
and non-controversial. The “point” or “message” should be evident without
preaching. No essays, eulogies, commentaries, tributes, sermons, philosophical
or biographical pieces will be accepted.
You may submit as many stories as you would
like. For each story selected to be published in the book, a 50-word biography
will be included about the author and a permission fee of $200 will be paid.
E-mail submissions are strongly preferred.
Send stories with your name, address, phone and e-mail address on the
manuscript to Barbara LoMonaco at
blomonaco@chickensoupforthesoul.com. If unable to e-mail, please send
a hard copy (and on disk if possible) c/o Chicken Soup for the Mother and Son
Soul to Barbara LoMonaco, 326 Junipero Plaza, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. Material
will not be returned. Information and sample stories are available here on
LeAnn’s web site. Due to the volume of stories we receive, we are unable to
respond to each contribution. Finalists, only, will be notified prior to
publication and permission to print will be requested.
The submission deadline is
November 1, 2004.
Writing Contest
Details:
www.boomerwomenspeak.com.
Enter the writing contest
before September 30th. and win CASH to purchase
more books.
See August Edition of Writers Wanted


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