October’s Overloaded Open Submission Calls

Horror Comedy

endless ink

Details

SHORT STORY HORROR COMEDY CONTEST 


Deadline Fri Oct 21
Pay:1st $750. 2-4th $150

Word range: 5000-8000
Simultaneous submissions? No 

Reprints? No

Description

Our first contest involving the Earth’s Final Chapter series in 2020 was so popular we couldn’t wait to have another competition, but this time it will not involve the EFC series and is open to any story you want to submit as long as it fits in the horror comedy genre.

Submission Hints

You must be 18 years old or older to enter Your story must be in the horror comedy genre The story must be between 5,000- 8,000 word count

Insight

I love horror comedy and this looks like a fun contest.

Horror

Creepy Podcast

Details

OPEN NOW
**Looking for 1st person narratives
Producer: Steve Blizin

Creator/Narrator Jon Grilz
Pay: $2 per 100 words for patreon stories (typically stories at are 3000 words or less) $100 flat rate for stories selected for Sunday production.

Word range: 1,000-7,000

Simultaneous submissions: Yes
Reprints No

Description

Jon Grilz is a writer and podcast living in Minnesota. His love of horror and creepypastas led to a simple question, "Where are all the creepypasta podcasts?" Having started his horror podcasting with Small Town Horror, delving into the world of some of the best scary stories felt like a natural transition.

Submission Hints

WHAT WE WANT…

SINGLE NARRATOR STORIES Obviously we have a large cast, but for production sake, single narrator stories work the best (a story where only one person is speaking). We understand that when telling stories, we all tend to quote what someone else said, and that’s fine, but it has a very distinct tone. Multiple speaking roles will always be considered, but single narrator stories tend to get preferential treatment.

WHAT SCARES YOU We hear it plenty, “that wasn’t scary.” Well, then scare us. Tell us something new. Something dark and horrible. Something that we can’t say no to. The things that scare the writers tend to be the things that bleed through into the writing and make for the most compelling stories.

DIVERSITY We celebrate diversity at the Creepy podcast. BIPOC, LGBTQIA, anyone and everyone is welcome here. Just leave your hate at the door. If you have a story that is specifically for a black or female voice actor, please tell us. If your story really grabs us and there is an ethnicity not currently represented on the show, we will find someone to read the story to do it justice.

SCARE US We’ve read a lot of stories, and been a bit desensitized. Feel free to push the boundaries of gore and horror, but remember this is audio. Think about the listener when you are writing it.

Sample Rejection

Creepy bought my story "A Deadful Friday the 13th" Listen to it and get some hints from an interview with Jon himself. His story is amazing...

Speculative Fiction

apparition lit

Details

Managing Editor: Tacoma Tomilson 

Oct Flash Fiction Prompt
OPEN Oct 1 -14
Pay: 5 cents per word

Word range: under 1,000

Simultaneous submissions? No 

Reprints? No

Description

Every month Apparition Lit holds a flash fiction contest and buys a story based on a photo.

<--- This is the photo for this month

Speculative fiction is weird, almost unclassifiable. It’s fantasy, sci-fi, horror, and literary. We want it all. Send us your strange, misshapen stories.

Submission Hints

Send us stories with enough emotional heft to break a heart, with prose that’s as clear and delicious as broth. We love proactive characters and settings that feel lived in and real enough to touch. Stories with style, stories with emotion, stories with character.

Insight

I've sent a story in every month, and so far only rejections. On the plus side, these photos have been great prompts for me. The August prompt was the basis of my latest Writers of the Future Q4 submission.

Science Fiction & Fantasy

zombies need brains

Details

FOUR Anthologies in the works
Editor: Joshua Palmatier
Deadline: Dec 31 (decisions by Feb)

Pay: min 8c a word
Word range: max 7500
Simultaneous submissions? not sure
Reprints? No

Description

DRAGONESQUE: Since Grendel and McCaffrey's Pern, readers have been enthralled with the magic and mystique of dragons. But it's rare that we get to see the world through the dragon's perspective. In DRAGONESQUE, you'll experience an anthology of fantasy and science fiction stories told from, or through, or with, the dragon's point of view. High fantasy, sword & sorcery, urban fantasy, dark fantasy, magical realism, and of course science fiction...DRAGONESQUE will feature a wealth of genres that even a dragon would be tempted to horde. Edited by S.C. Butler & Joshua Palmatier, DRAGONESQUE will contain approximately fourteen stories with an average length of 6,000 words each.

GAME ON!: Games played in fiction often symbolize more than winning and losing. Games represent risk and reward, wealth and class, strategy and blind fortune. In science fiction and fantasy, games can be matters of cosmic importance and of literal life and death—whether the idle pastimes of Star Trek’s 3D chess, the all-consuming TTRPG of the Gamearth trilogy, a frenetic quest as in Ready Player One, the lethal reality TV shows of The Hunger Games, or choosing a new interstellar emperor as in The Player of Games. In GAME ON!, we’re looking for unique science fiction and fantasy takes on games, game playing, and games in culture. A game or games—real or imagined—should be central to the story in some fashion. Please note anything considered a ‘sport’ (i.e.: baseball, soccer, rollerball, etc.) won’t be a fit for this anthology. Games used in stories must also not infringe on real-world trademarked names or third-party copyrights. Edited by Stephen Kotowych & Tony Pi, GAME ON! will contain approximately fourteen stories with an average length of 6,000 words each.

ARTIFICE & CRAFT: Art is everywhere. Our drive and ability to create for the sake of creativity defines us as a species and enriches our cultures, our societies, our lives. The best of these works of art, from novels to paintings to statues to music, are imbued with a special kind of magic. But when that magic is literal—when Wilde's Picture of Dorian Gray ages instead of the actual man, and Mozart's Magic Flute plays its protective song—art takes on a whole new meaning. In ARTIFICE & CRAFT, we invite writers of fantasy, science fiction, horror, and other speculative fiction to spin their own tales of works of art that have been enchanted, hexed, charmed, or cursed. Edited by Edmund R. Schubert & David B. Coe, ARTIFICE & CRAFT will contain approximately fourteen stories with an average length of 6,000 words each.

SOLAR FLARE: Imagine a Solarpunk future where societies value cooperation over consumerism, where technology solves ecological challenges rather than creating them. SOLAR FLARE will envision a future where humanity has embraced the Earth and learned to co-exist with it, not simply on it, where sustainability is a way of life, not merely a catch phrase. Join us as these stellar authors share their visions of a hopeful tomorrow. Edited by Patricia Bray & Joshua Palmatier, SOLAR FLARE will contain approximately fourteen stories with an average length of 6,000 words each.

Submission Hints

Stories must be submitted in electronic format to the Zombies Need Brains Moksha site for the appropriate anthology at http://zombiesneedbrains.moksha.io. Please send multiple manuscripts in separately; you may submit up to three stories to each anthology, so a total of twelve stories if you submit the maximum of three stories per anthology. Manuscripts should be in manuscript format, meaning double-spaced, 12pt font, standard margins on top, bottom and sides, and pages numbered. Please use Times New Roman font. The first page should include the Title of the story, Author’s name, address, and email, word count, and Pseudonym if different from the author’s real name. Italics and bold should be in italics and bold.

My Insights

I belong to a writing group called The Wulf Pack and this is one of the calls we are challenging ourselves with. I'm going to try and write a story for the GAME ON anthology.

Horror

The theatre phantasmagoria

Details

THEME for November- Thankskilling Feasts
Editor: JD Keown
Open for submissions: Oct 1 -31

Pay: 10 Pounds
Word range: max 1000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Each month, a new theme will be announced, and we will be accepting flash fiction submissions based around this theme. From these submissions, four stories will be chosen to be published each Friday of the subsequent month, and at the end of the year, these forty-eight pieces will appear in a similarly titled anthology.

Submission Hints

Thankskilling Feasts: Stories about cannibalism, food, or gluttony.

My Insights

I submitted to their Innocence Lost theme and got back a nice, encouraging rejection. Don't we all REALLY appreciate those editors that take the time to do this for us?

Here it is..

Thank you so much for taking the time to submit to our flash fiction series, The Theatre Phantasmagoria; your patience in awaiting this response is much appreciated too. We regret to inform you that your story titled "The Wormhole to Farout" was not selected for this particular window. However, we did thoroughly enjoy reading your piece; your story was compelling and well-written, and the decision to reject any of this month's submissions has been very challenging due to the extremely high degree of quality across the board. With that said, we would be eager to read more from you in the future, and do hope that you will consider submitting to Night Terror Novels for our upcoming themes in this series, or our future open calls. We'd like to extend our sincere thanks for your interest and support in this project. We also wish you the very best of luck in finding a home for this piece, and in all your future writing endeavours wherever they take you.

horror

NOwhere fast

Details

Clash Books
A Coming of Age Anthology
Open for submissions: till Oct 28

Pay:6 c a word
Word range: 3000-5000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Do you love the nostalgic feel of the Amblin movies of the 80s and 90s? Tales that may well have impacted on your own childhood. The Goonies, Stand by Me, ET, Jurassic Park etc.?

Nowhere Fast pays homage to the well-loved theme, Coming of Age, and then adds a horror element. Did you ever just wish you could have made The Goonies a little gorier? That ET was actually evil or that Hook was based on the Hookman urban legend rather than just a bumbling pirate? What if The Explorers was as violent as Aliens or The Craft had a Blair Witch vibe?

Now is your chance to make your twist on these classics a reality.

PLEASE NOTE – these movies and characters are IP and cannot be used without permission. Your story should be a tribute, not a sequel. Any work featuring actual characters from these movies will be rejected.

Nowhere Fast is a COA anthology which is a mixture of invite and submissions. We can tell you that everyone involved is very excited about this and we have a fantastic foreword and cover lined up.

Submission Hints

We are looking for strong, fresh voices & POV's in any genre. Fiction, nonfiction, & poetry. Especially looking for unique voices of female identifying, LGBTQ & POC from all over the world. CLASH Books is about global perspectives, contrasts, & juxtapositions.

My Insights

new market!

Science Fiction & Fantasy

cossmass infinites

Details

Paul Campbell - Editor
Open for submissions: Oct 8 - 15

Pay: 8c a word
Word range: 1000-7500
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Where does the name Cossmass Infinities come from? Once, many, many years ago, I was running a Role Playing Game at some University in Edinburgh one Sunday afternoon. It was a reality hopping adventure initially inspired by WAXWORK II: LOST IN TIME. One of the players asked me what the name of the setting was. I’d never actually thought of what to call it before. What was the plural of Cosmos? ‘Cosmoses’ or ‘comoi’? Both would have been great, even correct. I didn’t know either at the time. Under pressure to give a confident answer to my players, I mashed Cosmos and ‘mass’ (large in number), and said “The Cossmass”. Infinites is simply a plural form of Infinity. Okay, this one was a bit obvious. So, Cossmass Infinities is “a multiple infinite number of many Cosmoses”. More than a few possibilities, then.

Submission Hints

You can read Cossmass Infinities free on-line. It looks like they generally buy stories 3500 words and over.

My Insights

I've sent a few stories in here, but no luck.

Fantasy & Science Fiction

uncanny

Details

Submissions Editor: Brahidaliz Martinez

Open October 1st
Pay: 10 cents per word
Word range: 750-10,000 

Simultaneous submissions? Yes 

Reprints? No

Description

Uncanny magazine specializes in stories that make you feel. Classifying itself as an on-line/eBook/podcast SF/F magazine, their cover art is breathtaking. It has won multiple Hugo Awards, a Parsec Award, and a British Fantasy Award. The two Editors-in-Chief; Lynne M. Thomas, and Michael Damian Thomas, have also won several Hugo Awards. It is a SFWA-qualified market. 
From the website: 
“Uncanny Magazine is an online Science Fiction and Fantasy magazine featuring passionate SF/F fiction and poetry, gorgeous prose, provocative nonfiction, and a deep investment in the diverse SF/F culture. Each issue contains intricate, experimental stories and poems with verve and imagination that elicit strong emotions and challenge beliefs, from writers of every conceivable background. Uncanny believes there’s still plenty of room in the genre for tales that make you feel.”

Submission Hints

Lynne M. Thomas (co-publisher & editor-in-chief) said in a reddit interview: “For me it's not necessarily about a kind of story, it's about how the kind of story is executed.
I'm interested in stories that are inclusive of the gamut of the human experience, and I want to see a bit more whimsy.” 


Sample Rejection

“Thank you for submitting “The Patron Saint of Livestock” to Uncanny Magazine for consideration. Unfortunately, we’re going to pass on this one. It just didn’t work for us. We look forward to reading further submissions from you.”

Speculative

metastellar

Details

Editor Geordie Morse
Open for submissions: Oct 1 - 31

Pay:8 c a word
Word range: 1200 max
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

We’re looking for your best enthralling, imaginative, or bone-chilling original fiction stories, as long as they’re 1,200 words or fewer.

Submission Hints

none I could find.

My Insights

new market!

Fantasy & Dark Fantasy

fantasy magazine

Details

Editor-in-Chief: Arley Sorg
Oct 1 -7
Pay: 8 cents per word 

range: 1,500-7,500 

Simultaneous submissions?No
Reprints? No

Description

Fantasy Magazine is a digital magazine focusing exclusively on the fantasy genre. In its pages, you will find all types of fantasy—dark fantasy, contemporary urban tales, surrealism, magical realism, science fantasy, high fantasy, folktales…and anything and everything in between.

Submission Hints

Fantasy is entertainment for the intelligent genre reader—we publish stories of the fantastic that make us think, and tell us what it is to be human.

Sample Rejection

I have a story in here and it's been under consideration for a loooong time. (Hopefully that's positive? PS> Arley is serious about authors not simultaneously submitting.

This icon in the speculative work talks about his new anthology STEALING GOD, and shares that selling to even smaller markets can help launch careers.

 

Sci-fi

galaxy's edge

Details

Editor: Lezli Robyn
Open for submissions: Every Tuesday until portal filled

Pay: 7 cent per word
Word range: max 10000
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? No

Description

Galaxy’s Edge is a bi-monthly science fiction and fantasy magazine that has been published for over a decade, with new issues going live every January, March, May, July, September and November. Galaxy’s Edge magazine has been edited by Lezli Robyn for several years, taking over from former editor Mike Resnick following his passing. Published by Shahid Mahmud under the Phoenix Pick science fiction and fantasy imprint of Arc Manor Publishers.

Submission Hints

We are a science fiction and fantasy magazine, so we would love to receive fiction from those categories as well as any sub-categories, such as space opera, steampunk, urban fantasy, africanfuturism, magical realism and so on. We do not publish straight horror stories, even if they do have a supernatural element, but if you have a dark fantasy story, or a dystopian science fiction piece, send it our way—we’d love to take a look.

Keep us from yawning: While we have all read some great vampire, werewolf or zombie stories, and we get that writers want to write towards popular trends, we are unlikely to buy a story that appears a carbon copy of something we could have read in so many other publications. Be original. Either put your own very distinct twist on a trope, catching our interest, or submit something completely unexpected.

My Insights

I would love to land a story here. A very reputable market.

Literary

Last girls club

Details

Submissions Open: Oct 1st
Theme: Homeless Nation
Editor in chief: Eda Obey
Pay: $20
word range: 2500 or less
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

From the website: Welcome intrepid writer, I created this space for problematic fiction. It’s fearless, feminine, sometimes fairy-tale based, and usually ends with blood. My heroines are flawed, angry, not interested in being loved, and not afraid to get ugly. Fierce. You don’t have to identify as female to submit to us, but you best come proper. You’re in the halls of the goddess. Remember that.

Submission Hints

The theme is “Homeless Nation”. Whether through war, immigration, financial mishap, medical bills, or lack of mental health care; homelessness is a worldwide epidemic with few answers. Explore the horror of the unhoused. They are humans cast adrift by circumstance. Remember, you are never more than three bad decisions away from shitting in a bucket.

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.

Flash Fiction

The antihumanist

Details

Flash Fiction that Disturbs & Delights
not currently open? check back here. I've got a call out to the editors.

Pay:5c a word
Word range: 1000 or less
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? no

ANON submissions.

Description

We seek to publish the most challenging and thought-provoking flash fiction and essays. We believe only by confronting the bare bones of reality can we understand our place in the world.

Submission Hints

Antihumanism? Humanism is a stance that centres on the values and agency of humans. Therefore, antihumanism should negate this – a rejection of humans as the measuring stick for the rest of being..

Antihumanism is not necessarily the same as crude misanthropy – the hatred of humans. Yet, some who fall under its banner would consider human existence, on the balance of things, a bad thing and advocate for voluntary extinction..

Others find the deconstruction of human essentialism liberating, finding opportunities as traditional values and natures collapse. This includes posthumanists and transhumanists, imagining new futures liberated from frailty and mortality..

Yet, we argue the most significant impact of antihumanism is the critique of enlightenment prejudices. The creeping suspicion our values and goals are naught but petty bias, that universality, progress, and rationality are phantoms. .

Many explore the themes of antihumanism, from fiction authors like Lovecraft and Ligotti to philosophers like Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Foucault. These writers defy simple labels: existentialism, postmodernism, absurdism, pessimism, cosmicism, and nihilism. Their failures – including bigotry and myopia – are symbolic of human fallibility.

Regardless of whether you accept the arguments of the above positions or disagree, we argue that antihumanist writings identify the greatest challenge of late modernity – the collapse of value – and spur the reader to respond.

My Insights

new market

Science Fiction

escape pod

Details

Escape Artist Podcasts
Open for submissions:Sept 15-May 31

Pay:8c a word
Word range: 1500-7500 sweet spot 2000-4000
Simultaneous submissions? NO
Reprints? yes

ANON submissions.

Description

Escape Pod is a science fiction market. We are fairly flexible on what counts as science (superheroes! steampunk! space opera! time travel!) and are interested in exploring the range of the genre. We want stories that center science, technology, future projections, and/or alternate history, and how any or all of these things impact individuals and society.

Escape Pod leans in the direction of escapism, hopepunk and optimism rather than grimdark and gloom. We love to see funny stories, which can include dark humor that doesn’t punch down, and satire that isn’t painfully bleak. Remember that the failure mode of irony is sincerity, so if you’re mocking something, be sure you’re hitting the right target.

Submission Hints

We’re not interested in stories that contain sexual assault, rape, child abuse, animal cruelty, gore, or horror. We also do not want to see stories that treat the hardships of marginalized people or groups as thought experiments. While we may have published stories with that type of content in the past, they are not currently a good fit for Escape Pod. Our primary audience is adult listeners and readers. Strong language and sexual situations are fine, but we are not an erotica market.

My Insights

no luck yet

Speculative

MIGHTY

Details

Superheroes with Disabilities
Open for submissions: till Nov 14th

Pay:8c Canadian
Word range: 500-3500
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

All too often in popular media, disability is used as shorthand to say a character is helpless or weak. A victim. And if that character is a superpowered person, their disability becomes something for them to overcome or cure in order for them to become a hero. We want to challenge those tropes and celebrate characters who are disabled and still save the day, whose abilities and disabilities are equally important aspects of their lives and identities.

Submission Hints

Disabled characters being empowered and living full lives while still being disabled
Stories that play around with tired clichés and tropes about disability
Humor
Stories about and by people at the intersection of disability and other identities that have been traditionally excluded from publishing. This includes but is not limited to people of color, LGBTQ+ folks, religious minorities, women, older adults.

-genre stories. Science fiction is good, but we welcome any genre of speculative fiction. Can you tell a superhero story in a fantasy or weird west setting?

My Insights

new market!

I am attempting to write my first novel. But I need help! So I've gone down the rabbit hole of buying book after book to help me learn how. Some are great. Some aren't.

Save your $ and read my reviews before you buy.

https://www.fawns.ca/links/

Science Fiction Horror

DARK Void

Details

OPEN ongoing
Editor: Benjamin DeHaan
Pay: 1 cent per word 

word range: 3000-4000 

Simultaneous submissions?No
Reprints? No

Description

Dark Void Magazine is a biannual science fiction horror magazine featuring four original short stories that take place off planet Earth.

Submission Hints

If your story is on Earth it will be rejected...

My Experience

No luck here yet...

Any Genre

our ocean'd Earth

Details

Stormbird Press
Open for submissions: till Oct 30th

Pay:200 Euros per story
Word range: 1000-3000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

In partnership with OceanCare, Stormbird Press’ opens a call for Our Ocean’d Earth contributions. This call is for nonfiction or fiction writing that conveys one clear and unified message: that our oceans are worth fighting for. To help restore a culture of inspiration and reverence towards Earth’s oceans we are looking for masterfully woven stories from a range of perspectives—from marine life researchers to conservationists, free divers to writers with a deep connection to the sea, and more—who can reveal secrets of the oceans and their inhabitants, or have in some way formed a unique bond with an ocean or its marine life.

Submission Hints

The ideal submission will be a short essay or story of 1000 to 3000 words that will reflect Stormbird Press’ core principle: defending nature and empowering communities. The anthology will be distributed by OceanCare and featured in Stormbird Press’ 2023 catalogue.

My Insights

new market!

Science Fiction

utopia

Details

Editor-in-Chief: Tristan Everts 

Fiction Editor: Angie
OPEN Now
Pay: 4 cents per word

Word range:100- 5000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes 

Reprints? No

Description

Welcome to Utopia Science Fiction (USF) Magazine. Founded July, 2019, we are a growing science fiction magazine dedicated to publishing quality science fiction short stories, science articles, and poetry. We put out a new issue on the 30th of every other month, and we release a free story and poem every three weeks.

Submission Hints

What are we looking for? We want enthralling stories set in futures we might want to live in. Counter to the recent dystopian craze, we publish stories that shine with a more optimistic future, one we want to believe in, one we would fight for.

We're looking for

Captivating world-building
Character-rich, diverse settings
Well-written engaging plots that steer away from common tropes
Tension and conflict that leap out of the page and grab us
A good ending
Hard science fiction, stories based in explained science

Insight

New market for me. You submit via a form on their website. I fought with the form for a while, and then when I sent in a crazy short cover letter... it went through. (All I wrote was "Please accept this story") Who knew that attempt #8 would be successful?!)

Horror / Dark Fiction

dark recesses press

Details

Publisher: Bailey Hunter
Open for submissions:Winter issue Aug 15-Nov 15

Pay: 5 cents per word
Word range: max 500-5000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Dark Recesses Press began in 2005 with an idea and desire to create a home where there was none.

It was originally an award winning fiction magazine of dark fiction, art, and non-fiction.  After 13 issues we took some time off to regroup, shift our focus, and come back to publish books exclusively – this was in 2014.

In 2017, we grew again.  After the acquisition of Belfire Press, DR had taken on a wider dark fiction arena which has opened up avenues towards YA, and Poetry among others.  In addition to focusing our attention on novels, collections and anthologies born in the dark corners of your mind, Dark Recesses Press has now resurrected the beloved magazine.

We are currently undergoing a growth spurt so please mind our gangly bits.

Submission Hints

They are looking for horror/dark fiction pieces between 500-5000 words firm. Common sense when submitting please. They do not accept stories that involve the sexual abuse/exploitation of minors direct or implied. They are not looking for pure shock value. All components of your story should have merit. Gore for gore’s sake is not what they are looking for.

My Insights

Quick turnaround on rejections:

We wish you all the best in finding a suitable home for this piece, and welcome further submissions from you in the future. Regards, Dark Recesses Press"

Speculative Fiction

translunar TravelLers lounge

Details

Editors: Aimee Ogden & Bennet North
Open Sept 21-Oct 15

Pay: 3 cents per word

Word range: up to 5,000 

Simultaneous submissions? No

Reprints? No

Description

Who doesn’t want to submit to a venue that’s looking for fun? Just the name alone of this magazine is absolutely brilliant. Translunar Travelers Lounge is published twice a year and asks for stories that explore the fun side of fantasy and science fiction. 


From the website: 
“Put down your bags, take a seat, and relax with our fine selection of short fiction. Broadly defined, the type of fiction we are looking for is “fun”. Yes, that descriptor is highly subjective, and ultimately it comes down to the personal preferences of the editors. However, here are a few road signs to get you started on the path into our hearts."

Submission Hints

A fun story, at its core, is one that works on the premise that things aren’t all bad; that ultimately, good wins out.
This doesn’t necessarily mean that your story has to be silly or lighthearted (though it certainly can be). Joy can be made all the more powerful when juxtaposed against tragedy. In the end, though, there should be hope, and we want stories that are truly fun for as many different kinds of people as possible.


Swashbuckling adventure, deadly intrigue, and gleeful romance are some of the most obvious examples of what we’re looking for, but we won’t say no to more subtle or complicated topics, as long as they fit under the wider “fun” umbrella.”

Sample Rejection

I've submitted here a few times and only received rejections.
Thank you for sharing "Invasive Species" with us. Unfortunately, it's not what we're looking for right now. We appreciate your interest in our magazine.

Mystery & Speculative

black beacon

Details

Mystery Stories
Open for submissions: till Oct 31st

Editor: Cameron Trost
Pay:20 Euros
Word range:3000-9,000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? Yes 5 Euros

Description

Send us your best mystery. We want excellent writing, evocative settings, intriguing characters, and most importantly, a clever puzzle complete with clues, red herrings, foreshadowing, and twists. Your protagonist can be a police detective, private investigator, journalist, or a new take on Miss Marple, just so long as he or she is at the heart of the narrative and ends up cracking the case. DO NOT submit supernatural tales; this a "mystery anthology".

Submission Hints

Black Beacon Books is an independent publisher founded by author and anthologist, Cameron Trost. It began in Australia in 2013 and is now based in Brittany. We publish gripping and intriguing fiction that falls into the genres of mystery, suspense, post-apocalyptic, psychological horror, and folk horror. We like our tales quirky, atmospheric, and thought-provoking.

Why the name? There are many tropes and symbols used in fiction of a dark and mysterious nature. Amongst them, we have keys, mirrors, telescopes, treasure chests, secret passages, graveyards, skulls, churches, castles, caves, telescopes, clocks, the moon, oil lamps and candles, and, of course, beacons and lighthouses. The beacon or lighthouse conjures a setting of darkness, for in daylight they are rendered almost useless. In this darkness, they have a role to play, a crucial role, and that is to either warn away or beckon nearer. That is also the role of Black Beacon Books, to thrust the reader into mystery and darkness whilst providing a distant and guiding light, one that can be seen atop cliffs rising up from a troubled sea or on the peaks of wild mountains. We want stories that both warn you of impending danger and draw you into the worlds they create.

My Insights

A new market for me! Thanks Tough Crime for the link.

Literary

journal of compressed creative arts

Details

Matter Press
Submissions: Sept 1 - Dec 15

Pay: $50
Word range: 600 max
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts is a non-profit publisher of compressed creative arts, such as micro fiction, flash fiction, prose poetry, compressed poetry & visual arts, and whatever other forms compression might take.

The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts is looking for, as you might guess, "compressed creative arts." We accept fiction and creative nonfiction, as long if they are compressed in some way. Work is published weekly, without labels, and the labels here only exist to help us determine its best readers.

Our response time is generally 1-5 days. Also, our acceptance rate is currently about 2% of submissions

Submission Hints

For all submitters, we aren't as concerned with labels—hint fiction, prose poetry, micro fiction, flash fiction, and so on—as we are with what compression means to you. In other words, what form "compression" takes in each artist's work will be up to each individual. However, we don't publish erotica or work with strong, graphic sexual content.

In short, we want to fall in love with your work. That might happen in the way we've fallen in love with work we've previously published, or it might happen in a way we have yet to experience. Maybe reading that other work will help in knowing whether you should send your work to us, but in truth, such a thing might not be discoverable.

My Insights

I sent in a story and got my rejection pronto. I do like a quick response. (Though of course I'd rather an acceptance.)

A SCI-FI noir with a pro ensemble cast

Honour has lost everything. She has no choice. New job? Pleasure Provider.

https://readmeanightmare.buzzsprout.com

Dracula Fiction

renfield

Details

DBS Press
Closes Jan 15, 2023 -
Pay: 5c a word

Word range: 1500-5,000
Simultaneous submissions? yes 

Reprints? No

Description

Since its initial publication in 1897, Bram Stoker’s Dracula has inspired countless authors to pick up the pen and re-imagine his characters in prequels, sequels, alternate settings, and more. DBS Press is dedicated to continuing this tradition. Our flagship journal, Dracula Beyond Stoker, will present the best new fiction based on Stoker’s characters, locations and themes, and sometimes Stoker, himself. Join us as we celebrate the legacy of a legend. Issue #1 is scheduled for publication November 2022.

Submission Hints

Give us your best Renfield story. Everybody’s favorite flyman is such a rich character, yet we know so little about him. Who do you think he is?
We like stories that feel like they could be canon, but we also enjoy fun alternate takes, so unleash your creative powers of darkness. We look forward to seeing what you come up with.

Insight

New market.

Literary Adventure Fantasy

beneath ceaseless skies

Details

Ongoing Editor: Scott H. Andrews
Pay: 8 cents per word
Word range: under 15,000 words
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Beneath Ceaseless Skies has been bringing fantasy adventure stories from pre-tech worlds to readers since October, 2008. This is another SFWA-qualifying magazine with absolutely breathtaking cover art and award-winning short stories.

Submission Hints

“We love traditional adventure fantasy, but we also love how the influence of literary writing on fantasy short fiction has expanded the genre, encouraging writers to use literary devices such as tight points-of-view and discontinuous narratives; to feature conflicts that are internal as well as external. We want stories that combine the best of both these styles—set in vivid fantasy or historical paranormal worlds but written with all the flair and impact of modern literary-influenced fantasy.” 
To help understand what kind of world they’re looking for; here is how they describe secondary-world settings: 
“We want stories set in what Tolkien called a “secondary world”: some other world that is different from our own primary world in some way. It could be different in terms of zoology (non-human creatures), ecology (climate), or physical laws (the presence of magic). 
It could be set on Earth but an Earth different from our modern-day primary world in terms of time (the pre-modern historical past of our real-world Earth) or history (alternate history from our Earth’s history). It could have a “pre-tech” level of technology, or steampunk technology, or magic as technology, or anything else that’s not advanced or modern technology. However, the setting should contain some element that is in some way fantastical, and the qualities of the setting should have some bearing on the rest of the story. 
We are NOT interested in urban fantasy or other types of stories set in our modern, contemporary “real world,” even if they contain fantasy elements, or in stories that move between the real world and a fantasy world.”

Sample Rejection

I just recently got a rejection from Scott H. Andrews. He is one of those rare editors who will give you comments and advice if your story is close to what he is looking for. Here is my note from my December submission:
Thanks very much for sending this story to _Beneath Ceaseless Skies. Unfortunately, it's not quite right for me. I found the description vivid, but some of the details felt to me a bit more hooky and less clear than I needed in order for me to suspend my disbelief, like "laser phone", and the characterization of Paulina felt to me more focused on familiar aesthetics that I found objectifying than I needed in order for that situation to engage me. We appreciate your interest in our magazine. Please feel free to submit other work in the future.

Mystery & Crime

tough magazine

Details

CRIME FICTION JOURNAL
Open for submissions: ONGOING

Editor: Tim Hennessy
Pay:$50
Word range:1500-7500
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? Yes $25

Description

Tough is a crime fiction journal publishing short stories and self-contained novel excerpts of between 1500 words and 7500 words, and occasional book reviews and essays of 1500 words or fewer. We are particularly interested in stories with rural settings. We are a crime journal.

Submission Hints

They adamantly only take submission through Submittable and it better be in the RTF format.

Tough publishes three times per month on Mondays, for which we pay a flat rate per story, book review or essay (as of contract date January 23rd, 2021, that rate is $50) --we don't take poems--in exhange for first world serial rights to publish the submission on the website and one-time anthology rights. Query toughcrime@gmail.com for details or to pitch reviews, essays and reprints. Fiction need not be queried.

My Insights

I sent a story to them through Submittable - This One Time At Band Camp - I am trying to write more crime/mystery and hope to develop enough skill to try a novel.

When I withdrew this story to work on it a bit more the fiction editor sent me a note... "You can resubmit the story anytime you feel it is ready. "
I am always thrilled when an editor actually takes the time to send a personal note.

The Tough website also has a great list of crime publishers if you are interested in this genre.

Crime & Mystery

the dark city

Details

Editor: Steve Oliver

Pay: $25 per story

Word range: 1,000-7,500

Simultaneous submissions? No
No 
Reprints? No

Description

The Dark City Mystery Magazine is the product of a community of crime and mystery writers and fans who spend an inappropriate amount of time exploring the dark side of human nature as expressed by its criminal behavior. The magazine is produced by Dark City Books, a publisher of crime and mystery anthologies and collections.

Submission Hints

The Dark City is dedicated to the love of story, and in particular, the rough and tumble of the world of crime and violence. We are fans of story that has roots in reality but we do consider humorous situations and characters to be part of reality. We hope to acquire stories that leave readers thinking about the characters and their dilemma.

Insights

I've never sent a story here, and I am starting to explore the mystery crime market a bit... I'm working on a murder mystery called "This One Time At Band Camp" I had my mother read it. (yes, I use my Mom as an editor) and am going to implement her changes and submit here...

Genre Mash-up

tumbled Tales

Details

Wandering Wave Press
Closes Dec 1 - publication June 2023
Pay: $25

Word range: 1000-10,000
Simultaneous submissions? yes 

Reprints? No

Description

They call themselves the "Publisher or Unconventional Genre Fiction"

Submission Hints

We’re looking for genre authors who cross boundaries. Authors whose stories twist the tropes to showcase in a cross-genre anthology of stories that entertain, but read fresh and new.
Send us the story that you can’t classify: a story that can’t be pigeon-holed into a single subgenre, or that pushes against your genre’s boundaries. We want to showcase authors who write uncommon fiction. For example:

Witches in space,
Romances that flip gender roles,
Alternate histories set in the near-future,
Medical thrillers set in the distant past,
Fairy tales that start after the ‘happily ever after,’
Something cool and exciting that we haven’t imagined!

Insight

New market.

SPECULATIVE & LITERARY

flash fiction online

Details

Editor: Emma Munro
Open from the 1st to 21st of every month
Pay: $80 8c word minimum
Word range: 500-1000
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? Yes 2c a word

Description

We are looking for complete 500- to 1000-word stories with crisp prose, well-developed characters, compelling plots, and satisfying resolutions. We want stories that engage our minds and emotions.

Submission Hints

Anonymous submissions.

Flash Fiction Online has published stories from both new and established authors across the globe. We love narratives with crisp prose, well-developed characters with emotional arcs, fascinating plots, and satisfying resolutions. We want works that engage our minds and emotions and that leave us with a sense of awe or give us something to muse on. We’re always on the hunt for something new, surprising, clever, or beautiful.

Insights

I've had 4 rejections from this market. So I forge on...

The Happiness Tool

A Daily Inspirational Quote. 10 Point To-Do List. Gratitude Practice . A place to focus on the BIG GOAL.
$10

It Starts Today

When I started using these journals, I found WAY more time to write. Plus I focus everyday on "becoming a successful author." $10

Any Genre

substack

Details

This an interesting venue
Open Oct 1st- 31st

Pay: $100 plus 50% subscription revenue

Word range: 6-10,000 words

Simultaneous submissions? No
No 
Reprints? Yes

Description

Mission = Revive the art of the short story, support artists, and produce something wonderful.

Maybe you... like I... am asking the question, what is Substack?


Looks like they are saying it is an email newsletter platform? But you can publish on the web with it?

this is what the web says... my brain hurts trying to figure this out...
The bread and butter of Substack is publishing. With Substack, you can quickly and easily publish posts to the web or as emails in a matter of clicks. The posts can be paywalled or published for free. You can also try out discussion threads — a feature that allows you start Twitter-style conversations among your subscribers.

I'm not sure I really understand this yet... but perhaps this call is a good way to dip our toes in?

Submission Hints

What does the timeline look like? Submit stories by the end of the month, winner to be announced on the 15th. There is ONE story that wins and receives the full payout. Where do I send submissions? shortstorystack@gmail.com What are the rules for submitting?

1. No Fees

2. Send in Microsoft Word or Google Doc form

3. Any genre

4. 6- 10,000 words. Yes, just 6 words, like Hemingway's famous 6-word story "For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn."

5. Reprints are ok so long as you still have the rights to distribute.

6. Acknowledge Distribution Rights on this Substack - You can still sell your story elsewhere but we need to be able to save and publish it here. The goal is to create a library for subscribers.

7. Only the winner will be published and rights will only transfer for the winning story.

What do I get for subscribing?

One beautiful story every month. The complete library. The joy of supporting artists and doing something interesting.

Anything Else?

Yes! Analytics will be published monthly in terms of subscribers, the number of submissions, and anything else that might be relevant.

There is also the option to sign up for FREE emails. You won’t get the story, but you will get information and can follow the project.

Insights

Why did I choose to feature this call?
I do get tired of rejections. Perhaps you -too- are getting tired of getting rejection after rejection and are looking for alternative ways to make some money at this.

I have heard that some short story writers have found ways to monetize their work directly. aka Radish, Kindle Vella. So, I am researching Substack.

I submitted to their contest but am now getting spammed by them. Argh.

Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror

Dream of shadows

Details

Editor Felipe Lichtenheld
Submissions: ongoing

Pay: Approximately $25 US
Word range: 1,500max
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Dream of Shadows comes from the city of Jack the Ripper (London, England) and wants to offer readers: honest and daring stories - stories of struggle, stories without happy endings, where the two not-so-sexy leads don't fall in love simply because they have to.” 
One short story is featured on the website every month. 
The website says: 
“We're not too fond of science-fiction. While we will sometimes consider stories of something coming down to Earth from another planet if the focus is horror or fantasy, we're not really looking for space adventures. 
We particularly like honest and daring stories with strong characters pursuing goals, although we recognize that if a story is good, it's good. 
We're realists, so we don't need a happy ending. Send us those stories that other publishers rejected because they were too dark. 
Having said that, we don't want stories with gratuitous and/or over-the-top sex, violence or swearing. And it should go without saying, but we won't allow discrimination either. 
On a similar note, we're also not very fond of preachy stories, where one character explains to another how terrible humans are. We get it, people suck.”

Submission Hints

The editor provides extra tips of what he is looking for: 
Stuff we like :
• a good old tale of a character who wants something and tries to get it, meeting obstacles along the way 
• prose that grabs us and moves us and makes us feel for and with the character 
• supernatural elements. While we personally like a good serial killer or coming-of-age story, Dream of Shadows is all about that supernatural stuff 
• Stuff we're not too fond of 
• stories where the character doesn't want anything or woe-is-me stories where the character spends most of the time complaining, without doing anything to change it 
• second-person narration. It just sounds too much like meditation tapes or choose-your-own-adventure games to us. Sorry 
• pieces that are too experimental, like stream-of-consciousness stories or stories told from really odd points of view (like a flower or a walking stick) or stories that are basically just descriptions 
• romance. We don't mind if love or a relationship is used to drive inner conflict, as long as it's not the focus of the story.” 


My Insights

I finally got a sale here! "Ogri Trips the Light Fantastic" will be out this November. I interviewed Felipe and got some great insights... (Pic of Ogri up above). Felipe purchased a different picture of my Osset created by Devin Towrie. A talented 13 year old artist.

Science Fiction

INTERZONE DIGITAL

Details

Editor: Andy
Ongoing

Pay: 1.5 Euro cents per word

Word range: max 7000

Simultaneous submissions? No
No 
Reprints? No

Description

Interzone has long been one of the most exclusive and highly regarded sci fi magazines in the industry. They are starting up a new "digital" offering.
TTA Press is named after the magazine it founded in 1994, The Third Alternative, which is now known as Black Static. We also publish Britain's longest running science fiction magazine Interzone, plus Crimewave, TTA Novellas and the occasional standalone book.

Submission Hints

Email your submission to submissions@interzone.digital - they definitely don't consider simultaneous submissions or reprints.

Insights

I have 7 rejections from TTA Press - usually sent very quickly Many thanks for sending 'The Knocked-Up Nun and her Peculiar Hen', but I'm afraid it's not quite right for Interzone. Sorry to disappoint this time but please keep trying.
They don't pay much but are a VERY respected market.

Mystery & Crime

Ellery Queen mystery magazine

Details

Editor: Janet Hutchings
Open for submissions: ongoing

Pay: 5-8 cents per word
Word range: 250-12,000
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? occasionally

Description

Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (EQMM) has been around since 1941 and has been cited as “the finest periodical of its kind” by The Readers Encyclopedia of American Literature. They pay professional rates and have short stories from famous authors in many editions.
Writers like William Faulkner, Agatha Christie, Ian Rankin, Val McDermid, Ruth Rendell and Peter Robinson have been featured.
It is a part of the Dell Magazine family along with Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. 
Their website proclaims they are the “winner of more than 100 major awards, including 22 Edgars from the Mystery Writers of America, EQMM is the most celebrated mystery and crime-fiction publication in the world.”

Submission Hints

“We publish every kind of mystery short story: the psychological suspense tale, the deductive puzzle, the private eye case—the gamut of crime and detection from the realistic (including the policeman's lot and stories of police procedure) to the more imaginative (including "locked rooms" and "impossible crimes"). We need hard-boiled stories as well as "cozies," but we are not interested in explicit sex or violence.
We do not want true detective or crime stories. With the exception of a regular book review column and a mystery crossword, EQMM publishes only fiction. We are especially happy to review first stories by authors who have never before published fiction professionally.

My Insights

I’ve been reading Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine since the age of 9 years old and enjoy the short twisty tales. I was fortunate to have one of my first sales here. You can learn more about it in my full-length short story anthology (plus publisher insights) The Story Behind The Stories. “Three Calendars” was selected to be featured in the Department of First Stories. Janet talks about why she purchased this story, and gives general hints for writers in Episode 9 of Read Me A Nightmare.

Science Fiction

AD Astra

Details

James Gunn inspired
Editor: Jean Asselin
Open for submissions: currently open

Pay: $50
Word range: max 7500
Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? No

Description

James Gunn defines science fiction as “the literature of change” and states that it “incorporates a belief that the most important aspect of existence is a search for humanity’s origins, its purpose, and its ultimate fate.” A tall order but a worthy goal. Our editorial vision for James Gunn’s Ad Astra calls for raising our eyes above the horizon and not limiting the scope of speculative fiction. It is in this spirit that we welcome great stories that range from the near-reality to the far reaches of the what-if.

Suggestions about what we’re looking for can unnecessarily constrain writers. That said, we can offer this advice: Be sure your story actually tells a story. And be sure it requires your speculative element in order to hold together.

Beyond that, the sky (the stars, the edge of the next universe over) is the limit.

Submission Hints

James Gunn’s Ad Astra is a publication that aims to show visions of the future for all readers. We are not interested in stories that perpetuate existing systems of discrimination, i.e. stories that demean women and other marginalized groups.

My Insights

I've only sent them one story. And it was rejected.

Science Fiction Flash

Nature Futures

Details

PERIODICAL
Deadline: Ongoing

Pay:$130 per story
Word range: 850-950 max
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

Futures is a venue for very short stories or ‘vignettes’ of between 850 and 950 words. The subject is typically near-future, hard SF, although this can be interpreted liberally. In short, what Futures is looking for is originality. To this end it is advisable to read as many previous Futures as you can, as stories that repeat themes already dealt with extensively are less likely to be considered than those that do something new and different. Futures does not consider reprints of stories previously published elsewhere.

Submission Hints

OK. Take a seat. This won’t take long. Don’t worry about the alien, he always does that when he sees strangers, it doesn’t stain. I’m afraid I can’t offer you any refreshments — the service droid blew a fuse last week and the spare part is stuck on a shuttle somewhere between here and Titan. But, as I say, this won’t take long. If you’re sure you wish to send a story to the orbiting station that is the Futures submissions hub, it’s probably easiest if I upload the instructions via the mind link. Ah. Unusual. OK. Well, in that case I will have to spell out the protocols the old-fashioned way. The very first rule is, I’m afraid, prepare to be disappointed. This is not a bad thing, but as for any science-fiction outlet, Futures can publish only a limited selection of the stories we receive, so rejection is part of the process (and it is honestly no more fun to issue a rejection than it is to receive one). The second rule is that contributions to Futures are welcome from absolutely anyone, irrespective of whether they are writing their first story, or are professional or published authors. There are, of course, some basic requirements, so here are some frequently asked questions:

My Insights

Only rejections for me. Ai Jiang has had success here. More info at this link -http://www.concatenation.org/futures/authorsinstructs.html

Speculative Flash Fiction

the arcanist

Details

OPEN now
Editor: Patrick Morris
Open for submissions: ongoing

Pay:10 cents per word
Word range: max 1000
Simultaneous submissions? Yes
Reprints? No

Description

The Arcanist is an interesting venue for short fiction. They pay well and publish content on a bi-weekly basis (every Friday). 
From the website: 
“We strongly believe that fantasy and sci-fi are two of the most important genres in the literary world, helping us escape to distant lands, reflect on our shared humanity, and gaze into the future. We want to provide readers snippets of the genres they love and we want to give writers of these genres a paid place to publish their work. (That’s right, we pay you.)” 


Submission Hints

The very best SFF stories combine imaginative world-building elements with hardened, time-honored storytelling techniques, which is obviously a lot easier said than done
(especially in under 1K words!). 
We get a lot of stories that have a great premise or an imaginative world where we find ourselves in awe that someone actually thought them up. Then you get through the piece and there’s no character growth, no choices being made, no movement, and those are vital for a story of any genre to succeed. 
A good story will have active characters, a fully constructed plot, etc.
A good SFF story will have all of the elements that make a lit fiction story tick plus fantastic elements that dazzle us. It’s a delicate balance!”

My Insights

I’ve submitted 6 stories here and received my rejections in good time (less than a month). Here is the typical letter I’ve received: 
“Thanks for giving us the chance to read The Foreign Student. After careful consideration, we are unfortunately going to pass at this time. If you have other works that you think might be a good fit for The Arcanist, we encourage you to submit them through our Google form. We look forward to reading more of your work in the future and hope that this piece finds a home as well.”

Horror, Wonder & The Weird

Three-lobed Burning eye

Details

Editor: Andrew S. Fuller

ongoing
Pay: $100 for short fiction, $30 for flash

Word range: 1,001-7,500

Simultaneous submissions? No

Reprints? No

Description

Three-Lobed Burning Eye is a speculative fiction magazine offered free on-line. They publish twice a year, with a print anthology every other year. Each issue features six short stories.

Submission Hints

“Original speculative fiction: horror, fantasy, science fiction. We’re looking for short stories from across the big classifications and those shadowy places between: magical realism, fantastique, slipstream, interstitial, and the weird tale. We will consider suspense or western, though we prefer it contain some speculative element. We like voices that are full of feeling, from literary to pulpy, with styles unique and flowing, but not too experimental. All labels aside, we want tales that expand genre, that value imagination in character, narrative, and plot. We want to see something new and different.”

Insight

I've sent three stories here, and all rejected. I just threw a new one out there. "What Slays in Vegas." It features vampires inspired by the movie "Bit" -ps if you haven't seen this movie it is amazing. Not your average fang banger drama.

Here is my previous letter: “Thank you for sending your story to Three-lobed Burning Eye magazine. Unfortunately, we have decided not to accept it for publication. We regret that we cannot offer more feedback and wish you the best in finding a home for this piece.”

Horror & Dark Fantasy

the dark magazine

Details

Editor: Sean Wallace
ongoing>br>
Pay: 6 cents per word

Word range: 2,000-6,000

Simultaneous submissions?
No 
Reprints? No

Description

The Dark Magazine sends out rejections fast and furiously. It’s one of the reasons I like submitting to them. Instant results. They publish horror and dark fantasy. Sean Wallace is the founder, publisher, and editor of The Dark, and has also edited for Clarkesworld and Fantasy Magazine.

Submission Hints

Don’t be afraid to experiment or to deviate from the ordinary; be different—try us with fiction that may fall out of “regular” categories. However, it is also important to understand that despite the name, The Dark is not a market for graphic, violent horror.

Sample Rejection

30 Rejections from this market for me. I feel like I'm in a slap fight, but never get a chance to slap back, they whack me so quick.

Fantasy & Science Fiction

Clarkesworld

Details

Rolling Submission Window OPEN
Publisher/Editor: Neil Clarke
Pay: 10 cents per word
Word range: 1,000 - 22,000

 Simultaneous submissions? No
Reprints? No 


Description

Clarkesworld is an award-winning science fiction and fantasy magazine. A SFWA-qualifying market, it was first published in 2006 and is one of the top places speculative fiction writers want to see their work. It comes out monthly, and contains interviews, stories, and articles. They accept stories from all over the world and say translations are welcome. They also have a podcast which features a story from the current issue.

Submission Hints

The submission guidelines state: 
“Science fiction need not be “hard” SF, but rigor is appreciated. Fantasy can be folkloric, contemporary, surreal, etc. 
That said, there are some things that we’ve grown tired of and can be difficult or impossible to sell to us: (this is not a challenge) 
• stories that include zombies or zombie-wannabes 
• stories about sexy vampires, wanton werewolves, wicked witches, or demonic children 
• stories about rapists, murderers, child abusers, or cannibals 
• stories where the climax is dependent on the spilling of intestines 
• stories in which a milquetoast civilian government is depicted as the sole obstacle to either catching some depraved criminal or to an uncomplicated military victory 
• stories where the Republicans, or Democrats, or Libertarians, or . . . (insert any established political party or religion here) take over the world and either save or ruin it 
• stories in which the words “thou” or “thine” appear 
• stories with talking cats or swords 
• stories where FTL travel or time travel is as easy as is it on television shows or movies 
• stories about young kids playing in some field and discovering ANYTHING. (a body, an alien craft, Excalibur, ANYTHING). 
• stories about the stuff you just read in Scientific American or saw on the news 
• stories about your RPG character’s adventures 
• “funny” stories that depend on, or even include, puns 
• stories where the protagonist is either widely despised or widely admired simply because he or she is just so smart and/or strange 
• stories originally intended for someone’s upcoming theme anthology or issue (everyone is sending those out, wait a while) 
• your trunk stories 
• stories that try to include all of the above” 


Insights

22 Rejections. But at least you get them quickly!

Dark Fantastical Fiction

Apex Magazine

Details

Editor: Jason Sizemore
ongoing
Pay: 8 cents per word
Word range: up to 7,500
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.”

Sample Rejection

Thank you for submitting "Invasive Species" to Apex Magazine. We appreciate the chance to read it. Unfortunately, the story does not meet our needs at this time. We're going to pass. I wish you the best of luck finding a home for "Invasive Species" and I hope to read something new from you soon.

Science Fiction

analog science fiction & fact

Details

Editor: Trevor Quachi 
 Pay: 8-10 cents per word 
 Word range: up to 20,000 
 Simultaneous submissions? No 
 Reprints? No

Description

This is another founding magazine and big player in the science fiction world owned by Dell Magazines. Analog Science Fiction and Fact Magazine was originally published as Astounding Stories of Science Fiction when it launched in 1930. Analog was where Anne McCaffrey’s dragons first took flight! There were three issues from 1967 and 1968 which have the first three novellas in McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern series. 
Frank Herbert’s sprawling epic Dune also originally appeared in Analog. After being serialized in the magazine, Dune was rejected 23 times before it was eventually picked up by Chilton Books. Dune has been called the best-selling science fiction novel of all time.

Submission Hints

Editor Trevor Quachri says: 
“Analog/Astounding is often considered the magazine where science fiction grew up. When Editor John W. Campbell took over in 1938, he brought to Astounding an unprecedented insistence on placing equal emphasis on both words of "science fiction." No longer satisfied with gadgetry and action per se, Campbell demanded that his writers try to think out how science and technology might really develop in the future – and, most importantly, how those changes would affect the lives of human beings. The new sophistication soon made Astounding the undisputed leader in the field, and Campbell began to think the old title was too "sensational" to reflect what the magazine was actually doing. He chose "Analog" in part because he thought of each story as an "analog simulation" of a possible future, and in part because of the close analogy he saw between the imagined science in the stories he was publishing and the real science being done in laboratories around the world. 
Real science and technology have always been important in Analog, not only as the foundation of its fiction, but as the subject of articles about real research with big implications for the future. One story published during World War II described an atomic bomb so accurately – before Hiroshima – that FBI agents visited John Campbell to find out where the leak was. (There was no leak – just attentive, forward-thinking writers!)” 


Sample Rejection

“Thank you very much for letting me see "The Corp." I'm sorry it didn't strike me as quite suitable to our present needs.”

Fantasy & Science Fiction

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

Details

Editor: Sheree Renee Thomas 

ONGOING
Pay: 8-12 cents per word 

Word range: flash to 25,000 

Simultaneous submissions? No 

Reprints? No 

Description

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction is a Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) qualifying market based out of the United States. Founded in 1949, they produce six print issues a year. They are the original publishers of science fiction classics like Stephen King’s “Dark Tower” and Daniel Keyes’s “Flowers for Algernon”. 
I’ve sent them 14 stories and received a rejection for all of them. However, five of the rejection letters included detailed reasons why C.C. Finlay did not accept them. “The Last Ride,” “Camp Napanoo,” “The Versa Vice,” “The Writing Retreat,” and “The Patron Saint of Livestock,” all came back with thoughtful notes that helped me rewrite each tale and sell them to other markets. 
The new (and 10th) editor for 2021, Sheree Renee Thomas, is an award-winning Pushcart-nominated author. Her work is inspired by myth, folklore, and natural science. I've yet to get a rejection with comments, but I keep trying!

Submission Hints

Fantasy & Science Fiction has no formula for fiction, but we like to be surprised by stories, either by the character insights, ideas, plots, or prose. The speculative element may be slight, but it should be present. We prefer character-oriented stories, whether it's fantasy, science fiction, horror, humor, or another genre

Sample Rejection

A rejection I received: Thank you for giving me a chance to read "The Unwanted Woman of WASP-76b." I enjoyed your prose and voice, but unfortunately, this story didn't work as well for me as I'd hoped, and I'm going to pass on it for The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. But I wish you best of luck finding the right home for it, and I hope you'll keep us in mind in the future for your other new stories. In the meantime, we all hope that you are staying safe and healthy.

DREAD INDUCING FICTION

THE DREAD MACHINE

Details

Editor: Tina (aka Alin)
Pay: 5 cents a word
Word range: 5500 max original
7000 max reprints
Simultaneous submissions? yes
Reprints? Yes

Description

The Dread Machine is a magazine, publishing house, and community where writers and fans of dread-inspiring fiction can read and connect. We make cool creative projects accessible to those who will love them the way they deserve to be loved. In service of that mission, we are always accepting submissions.

Submission Hints

The Dread Machine publishes futuristic dark fiction, speculative fiction, cyberpunk, slipstream, and science fiction. We do not accept religious fiction, fetish horror, or erotica. All submissions must be in English.

UPDATE

I have a story called "What Slays in Vegas" in consideration for this call. As of today it has been under review for 9 days. Moksha says the response time average is 8. However I am 101 in the queue... betcha I get a rejection in the next couple days. I've had two rejections from this market: Unfortunately, we have decided not to accept "The Secrets of the Gargoyle" for publication, but thank you so much for submitting to The Dread Machine. If you'd like to meet other writers and work on writing together, please consider joining our community. We've also pulled together a Resources page where you can find similar markets that might be interested in picking up "The Secrets of the Gargoyle." Please don't hesitate to share your work with us again in the future!

Horror Podcast

thirteen

Details

Podcast
Deadline: Ongoing

Pay:$50 per wide release story
Word range: around 5000 and up
Simultaneous submissions? Not sure
Reprints? No

Description

Thirteen is a podcast that goes beyond just having someone narrate a story. Using a "slow burn" philosophy, this is more of a radio drama. If you like feature length, atmospheric, spooky stories, this podcast releases a new broadcast on the 13th of each month. Explore an eerie universe of supernatural and occult tales.

Submission Hints

The following are tips to make your piece more likely to be selected for production.
The horror genre is vast and there are many great ways to produce a scare. Not all stories will be a good fit for our platform but that doesn’t mean they’re bad stories. If your first attempt isn’t selected, please keep submitting. Submissions of 5,000 words or more are most likely to be selected for wide release. Shorter submissions may be selected for special double feature episodes or episodes exclusive to Patreon supporters and other financial supporters of Imaginary Comma. Any submission that is selected for production, regardless of platform, will be paid. Submission in a prose format may result in more alterations as we reformat the piece into an audio script. In that spirit, submissions formatted as a script will require less time to develop and may have a better chance of selection. Stories with a first person central narrator and supporting characters work best for our format. Submissions with several speaking roles may be more difficult to produce and may require alteration to fit a limited cast. This may alter the story and tone. While large casts of characters are not necessarily disqualifying, our production includes between one and four cast members Stories which include derogatory language or slurs against any group of persons will not be selected regardless of context. Stories that include depictions of rape or sexual assault will not be selected. While these topics may be acceptable as plot elements we will not perform or narrate depictions of them. We believe great characters make great stories. Excellent character development is key to our brand Well-crafted stories, full of atmosphere and compelling settings, that take their time getting to the scares are key to our brand.

My Insights

Friendly and responsive. It was actually this podcast that motivated me to start me own horror/spec podcast. (see ad at bottom of list)

Horror, Bleak Sci-Fi, Dark Fantasy

seize the press

Details

Editor: Jonny Pickering
ongoing

Pay: 3 Pence per word

Word range: 2,000 max

Simultaneous submissions?Yes
No 
Reprints? No

Description

Seize The Press is the literary melding of Ursula Le Guin, Thomas Ligotti and Rosa Luxemburg. A brand new online magazine for dark speculative fiction and anticapitalist sci-fi, fantasy and horror pop culture analysis. Neon, dragons and gore. We pay pro rates to writers and aim to build a solid community where writers are paid well for their work and readers get some top tier fiction and media criticism. And if we get to dunk on Disney in the process then that’s just the cherry in the pie.

Submission Hints

Seize The Press Magazine is looking to publish dark, transgressive speculative fiction. Bleak sci-fi, dark fantasy and horror only. We’re looking for stories that aren’t didactic or moralistic. We want stories where everything isn’t wrapped up neatly at the end. We want to promote a diverse range of voices from authors who write messy characters, so give us your problematic queers and your angry women—we want your difficult and morally questionable characters in unpleasant situations who don’t slide neatly into a narrow definition of positive representation and don’t fit the model minority mould.

My Insights

The stories are free to read on this website. And they are strange. I read "Eating Bees From The Ass of God" and "Some Seeds Only Bloom After Burning." They were both a tad disturbing and well-written. So, this market is a curiosity for me. Who doesn't like to let their inner weird rage?

I think they have recently decreased their pay--- from 6 pence to 3 pence.

I got a standard rejection from Jonny Pickering. "Thank you for submitting "Dolores and the Dark Dilemma" to Seize The Press Magazine. I appreciated the chance to read it. Unfortunately, the story is not what we're currently looking for. I'm going to pass this time, but I wish you the best of luck finding a home for the story."
But I am trying again with a story I wrote about a weird Greek festival Skirophoria. It is an actual thing where women eat cookies baked in the shapes of male genitalia.

Do you like to hear your creepy stories?

Mini radio dramas featuring strange stories followed by interviews from industry professionals! Check it out…

https://readmeanightmare.buzzsprout.com