Posts Tagged ‘Calls for Submissions’

Wonder Book Prize Submissions Due Tomorrow

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

Wonder is accepting manuscripts March 15 – May 15 for its first annual Wonder Book Prize, judged by Macgregor Card. They’re accepting full-length manuscripts of any genre. The author of the selected manuscript will receive a $300 prize and publication.

Please send a cover letter, your manuscript, and a $10 submission fee ($15 if you would like a final copy of the selected book). Please do not include your name in the manuscript. Each submission will be read blindly by the judge.

Click here to submit.


Atlanta: New South Waives Reading Fees in August

Thursday, August 16th, 2012

Georgia State University’s literary journal New South is waiving reading fees in August. The journal requests submitters follow the usual submission guidelines. Submitters may submit 1 story, 1 essay, or 3 poems without paying the fee. Submissions should be made via the online submission system Tell It Slant.

Past contributors include Nicky Beer, Mark DotyLandon Godfrey, T.R. Hummer, Allison Joseph, Laura McCullough, and Shelley Puhak.

–Jenny Sadre-Orafai


Free to Submit: Upcoming Poetry Deadlines

Monday, July 16th, 2012

Dustin Dennis, Sink Review, Issue 9Since poetry’s value is not monetarily matched, most self-identified poets are rarely paid for published work. Between working (for money), reading, and writing, there’s little time to submit, and frequently, submissions carry fees. To bring a bit of relief, below are a few journals and presses who will read and consider a poet’s work for free.

 

Don’t get stuck in a fruitless edit on the way to save and send; these deadlines are soon:


The Golden Key

Poetry & Fiction
Theme: “sharp things”
Deadline July 31st, 2012

For this issue, we are looking for things that are sharp.

Send us your knives and scalpels, your cutting remarks. We’re looking for pins and needles, shards and jagged edges, sudden turns and abrupt drops. We like cardsharps and sharpshooters, cloak and dagger, poisoned darts. Think of sharp notes, sharp pains, sharp wits. Show up at twelve o’clock sharp. Beware the spindle to prick your finger. Do not peer into broken mirrors. Send us stories that pierce us something awful. Something wonderful.

 

Bank-Heavy Press - Quarterly Anthology
Poetry, Short Fiction, Art
Theme: “Kisses with Fishes”
Deadline July 31st, 2012 

We don’t have a set aesthetic, but recommend buying one of our back issues to see how we tend to roll.

Bank-Heavy Press has one major goal: to bring great poetry and fiction and art to print while building a community of creative people of all talents, ages, forms, and backgrounds. Poetry, fiction and art shouldn’t need to conform to any one type for recognition. We tear up at the sight and sounds of fresh, raw, energy in any shape or form.

So, here we are pulling road-kill from pavement and digging in trashcans to bring you what the corporations want to hide, the best stuff from the lowest and highest places to fill your minds with the art of everyone that is licking splinters and hugging rabid animals.

Print must not die!

 

Popshot Magazine
Poetry, Short Fiction, Illustration
Theme: “Birth”
Deadline July 31st, 2012 

Interpret the theme imaginatively and with a touch of the surreal…we’re suckers for that. We especially look for original, succinct, and thought provoking work – the kind that will allow our readers to view the theme in a way that they may not have otherwise considered. Although we expect a number of poems/short stories based on the literal meaning of birth, please think more metaphorically!

 

Sink Review
Poetry
Deadline: July 31st, 2012
(Post image: “Chart” by Dustin Dennis, Issue 9)

Sink Review is a journal focused on contemporary poetry. We publish a new electronic number twice a year.

 

No, Dear
Poetry – NYC Poets Only
Theme: FASCIMILIE
Deadline: August 1st, 2012 

No, Dear is a slim volume of new local poems loosely centered on a single-word theme. Hand-made in Brooklyn, NY.

 

Rattle
Poetry
Deadline: August 1st, 2012

We like poems of any length. We’re looking for poems that move us, pieces that might make us laugh or cry, or teach us something new. Though most of the poems that we publish are free verse, that doesn’t mean we don’t like traditional forms. If you’re confident in your sonnet or villanelle, send it. We read a lot of poems, and only those that are unique, insightful, and musical stand out. Since our issues include about 80-100 pages of poetry, one of the main things we’re looking for is diversity; we have enough room to be eclectic, and we plan on using it. So while most magazines suggest reading their back issues to get a sense of what they like to publish, we’d suggest reading to get a sense of what we’re having trouble finding–if you notice a style or subject matter that we don’t seem to be publishing, send us that!

 

Cordite Poetry Review
Poetry (text, sound, image, and video)
Theme: INTERLOCUTOR
Guest Poetry Editor: Libby Hart
Deadline: August 14th, 2012 

Poetry is in nonstop dialogue with the world. Each symbol, line, frame, beat or stanza enters into a conversation. They question. Poetry is interrogation. It is instruction.

In fact, it can be most anything you want it to be. Absurd. Open-minded. A fragment of a speaker’s speech that becomes drama or humour. A Glaucon to your Socrates. A Casio to your Moog to your Farfifsa. Who is the speaker? Who is listening? Are you willing to have a conversation? If you play Defender, can you be our hyperspace?

 

Find more listings and keep track of submitted work at Duotrope, “an award-winning, free writers’ resource listing over 3500 current Fiction and Poetry publications.”

 

– Stephanie Ann Whited


Atlanta: The Texas Review Press Breakthrough Poetry Prize for Georgia Poets

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

There’s a no fee poetry book prize for Georgia residents who have not yet published a full-length collection of poems. The Texas Review Press Breakthrough Poetry Prize is “designed to find and champion emerging poets in every state of the American South.” Manuscripts should be 50-80 pages. The press requires a cover letter with the manuscript and two title pages–one with contact information, including e-mail address, mailing address, and phone number–and the other with the title only. An acknowledgments page for previous publications should also be included.

The Breakthrough Poetry Prize winner will have his/her manuscript published, nationally distributed via the Texas A&M University Press Consortium, and awarded twenty-five free copies upon publication.

All submissions must be sent as e-mail attachments to trp.ga.poetry.prize@gmail.com in one of the following formats: MS Word 1997-2003 (.doc), MS Word 2007/2010 (.docx); Rich Text Format (.rtf); or Portable Digital Format (.pdf). A short bio (75-100 words) should also be included as a separate attachment in one of the above formats. Questions may be sent to: trp.ga.poetry.prize@gmail.com.

Deadline for submissions is October 1, 2012. Paul Ruffin will judge.

–Jenny Sadre-Orafai


Upcoming Poetry Submission Deadlines

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Fugue JournalInspired by the recent WTF Submit-a-Thon, below are some upcoming poetry submission deadlines. Please be courteous answering these calls and be familiar with the publications.

Fugue Literary Journal
Writing Contest
Deadline: May 1, 2012
Submit: Three to five poems

Crab Orchard Review
Literary Prizes
Deadline: May 2, 2012
Submit: Up to three poems of up to 100 lines each

Booth Journal
Deadline: May 31st, 2012
Submit: Up to 5 poems

Tin House Magazine
“Portland/Brooklyn; Brooklyn/Portland” Themed Issue
Deadline: May 31st, 2012
Submit: Up to 5 poems

Boston Review
Fifteenth Annual Poetry Contest
Deadline: June 1, 2012
Judge: Matthea Harvey
Submit: Up to 5 unpublished poems

Blood Orange Review
Deadline: June 1st, 2012
Submit: 3-5 Poems

–Stephanie Ann Whited


Atlanta: Calls for Submissions

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

The deadline for the 2012 New South Writing Contest is March 5 (received or postmarked). Entries are accepted via mail or via the online submission manager Tell It Slant. The contest is open to both poetry and prose submissions. Poetry entries should contain no more than 3 poems. Prose (either a short story or non-fiction piece) is limited to 9,000 words. There is a $15 reading fee that includes a copy of the Summer 2012 issue. First place winners in each category will be awarded $1,000 and second place winners will receive $250. Winning entries will also appear in the Summer 2012 issue of New South. Tom Hunley will judge this year’s poetry entries and Joshua Harmon will serve as the judge for prose.

Please visit New South’s website for more information.

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Five Points,  a journal of literature and art published by Georgia State University, is accepting submissions through April 1. Submissions are accepted via the journal’s online submission manager.

Please visit the Five Points website for more information.

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The international poetry journal Atlanta Review is currently accepting submissions for their Fall issue. Submit up to five poems via mail by June 1.

Please visit Atlanta Review’s website for more information.

Jenny Sadre-Orafai