Showing posts with label Prose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prose. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Mary: Call for Submissions

Mary is in search of great work to publish! This is a call for poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and art for our Winter 2010 issue.

Mary is the online literary journal sponsored by Saint Mary's College of California's MFA in Creative Writing program. Since 2002, Mary has published contemporary poetry, prose, and new media arts from a diverse group of established artists and writers including Peter Orner, Brian Doyle, Gillian Conoley, Bruce Smith, Elizabeth Robinson, Nora Pierce, Rebecca Curtis, Brian Glaser, Carol Snow, Maria Hummel, as well as talented emerging writers. MARY Magazine has conducted interviews with award-winning writers such as Michael Palmer, Pico Iyer, Andrew Sean Greer, Nick Flynn, Phil Jenks, Cristina Garcia, Susan Steinberg, Michael Pollen, John D'Agata, Jo Ann Beard, Mary Roach, Forrest Gander, and Chris Abani.

There is no fee to submit to Mary. Writers selected for standard publication are awarded $50. Those who are chosen for our Nouveau section, which is dedicated to emerging writers who have not yet been published, are not paid. Please visit www.maryjournal.org for more information and submission guidelines. When you’re ready to submit, send work to mary[at]stmarys-ca.edu. The deadline for our Winter issue is December 1, 2010. Thank you for your time. We look forward to reading your work!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Writers Round-Up

This week it's all about higher education.  

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SAKURA REVIEW is reading poetry, fiction, and nonfiction submissions for its next print issue.

http://sakurareview.blogspot.com/

About Sakura Review:
Situated in the District of Columbia and run by graduate students in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Maryland, Sakura Review publishes poetry and prose; we are particularly interested in – though not limited to – work that in some way satisfies or reflects our own preoccupation with a city embodied in location temporary; the new surrounded by collections and artifacts; what is documented alongside what is ultimately forgotten.

Submission Guidelines:
The submission deadline for our Spring 2010 issue is February 28th. Any submissions received after the deadline will automatically carry over to our next reading period.

· Only previously unpublished work will be considered. Simultaneous submissions are fine, if noted (but please notify us immediately if the work is accepted elsewhere).

· For prose, please submit only one manuscript at a time. The preferred maximum length is 2,500 words. For poetry, please submit no more than five poems, a maximum of 10 pages, at one time. Include all poems within one document.

· Please submit your work as a Word attachment to (replace (at) with @). Your genre – poetry or prose – and your name should appear in the subject field.

Contributors receive two copies of the issue in which their work appears.

Our first issue is now available for purchase at our website. We encourage you to read it before submitting.

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L I M E S T O N E
A Journal of Literature and Art

Department of English
1215 Patterson Office Tower 
University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY 40506

www.uky.edu/AS/English/Limestone/index.htm

Call for Submissions: We are requesting original and unpublished poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction and visual art.

Limestone: A Journal of Literature and Art

Limestone publishes original and imaginative writing from established and emerging writers and artists from across the nation. Over the last quarter century, we have printed short stories, essays, formal poetry, free verse, photography, and other fine art. We are looking for quality work unrestricted by form. 

Submission Information:
Poetry
Submissions should be limited to five poems or fewer, typed and single-spaced. We will not consider electronic submissions, but will require an electronic version of the work upon acceptance for publication. Simultaneous submissions are accepted with notification.
Fiction
Submissions should be limited to no more than twenty typed, double-spaced pages. We will not consider electronic submissions, but will require an electronic version of the work upon acceptance for publication. Simultaneous submissions are accepted with notification.
Art
Submissions should be 5x7 or smaller on CD or sent via email. Please do not send originals. Simultaneous submissions are accepted with notification.

Submissions must reach us by March 12th, 2010.
 

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Booth, Butler University's literary magazine, is putting out a call for submissions. We're looking for fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, literary comics, and quirky lists.

Simultaneous submissions are welcomed as long as we are notified immediately if your work is accepted for publication elsewhere. No multiple submissions, and we do not accept previously published work. Booth reads nine months a year,  from September to May.

Poetry: up to 5 poems
Fiction: up to 7,500 words
Literary Comics: up to 20 pages, JPEG, width: 850-900px, Landscape preferred
Art: JPEG, width: 850-900px, Landscape preferred

Please include with your submission a brief cover letter.  Electronic submissions can be sent to butler.edu> (replace (at) with @)

Hard copy can be submitted to the address below. Please include a SASE for return response. (Manuscripts will not be returned.)

Booth
c/o English Department
Butler University
4600 Sunset Avenue
Indianapolis, Indiana 46208

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Vanderbilt University's new national literary magazine, Nashville Review, is currently accepting submissions of fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and comics. Contributors are offered up to $100. Work in Issue One will be featured alongside interviews with Maira Kalman and Salvador Plascencia.

For submission guidelines, please visit www.vanderbilt.edu/english/nashvillereview/guidelines

Monday, December 08, 2008

Were you born between 1960 and 1982?

Anthology seeks work from writers born from '60 to '82:
In Our Own Words: Call for submissions for A Generation Defining Itself: Volume 8. This book series is a platform from which a generation (born 1960 to 1982) is speaking out about its realities, dispelling the narrow, simplified stereotypes created by the mass media and commercial marketing. Beginning to finalize the selection of texts. Will still consider texts sent by December 31st. All genres sought, from poetry and lyrics to prose and essays. Target is 150-200 writers, approx. 300 pages, and release by end of first quarter 2009. Submission Guidelines.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Call for Submissions « maganda magazine

Maganda Magazine, a once-a-year student publication at Berkeley is now accepting fiction and poetry submissions for their upcoming issue. From their site:
Call for Submissions « maganda magazine
What is today’s generation marked by?
Invention. Innovation. Invigoration.
The energy to fight for a cause
The spark to cause an effect
The power to effect change

The people living in today’s world share much more in common than merely existing at the same time. We share a history: chapters both ugly and triumphant, events that have occurred both within and outside of our control. In the end, our future is still to be determined by our decisions.

As the electric current of ideas rapidly fires through the generator of our collective minds, we gain the power to make a difference, to mark a place in history, not only in continuing the pursuits of previous generations but in creating entirely new possibilities.

What will this generation be defined by?

GENERATE
produce
cause

What does it mean to you? What do you generate? How do you perceive generation in the world today?

Generate your ideas through your own means of artistic expression and submit to {m}22.

...calling for submissions of any media, from prose to poetry to photography to artwork and music.

Deadline: DECEMBER 19, 2008