CharlotteAshley
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Does Beneath Ceaseless Skies tell everyone to "feel free to submit more work in the future", or am I special? Looking for today's silver lining...
...or am I special?
...but nowhere for fun. Am I crazy? Looking in all the wrong places?
I had similar experiences last year when I was looking for markets to submit Dwarves in the boardroom. I found a few pod casts that seemed to welcome "quirky" based on their guidelines but I not to much else.
Why is dark not fun?
Igor
I'm reviving this thread because I'm not sure where else to talk about the daily grind of short story submissions! Is anyone else actively submitting right now?
I have nine (9) stories currently out on submission, and another one being revised to go back out. I got my first-ever rewrite request last night, which is exciting. I know there's still no guarantee they'll buy the story when I revise it, but it's nice to know they're interested enough to see a revised draft. I've managed to rack up a staggering 18 rejections already this year (IT'S ONLY MARCH). C'est la vie, I guess!
I'm running into a market-targeting problem, though. I'm having trouble finding semi or pro markets that want lighter/secondary world stories. Wierd, right? I feel like most of the semi & pro markets out there are either out of my reach (Clarkesworld, Lightspeed, Asimov's, Tor.com) or want "dark" stories. I see more and more markets for dark, magical-realist, contemporary stories, but nowhere for fun. Am I crazy? Looking in all the wrong places?
1) Assuming that the big magazines are "out of my reach." No they aren't. They have only a few thousand readers. And though the odds are very long that they'll take a story of yours, you won't actually know if they would until you try it. Even if you submit and get rejected, the great thing is, you can send them another story! The people who win the Hugos, etc. for short fiction aren't always known names, or are known names -- for short fiction which occurred because when they were unknowns they kept submitting to magazines, including the big ones. (Although some award winners come from small magazines and anthologies.) So if they publish stuff like yours, submit it to them. It couldn't hurt.
2) Magic realist stories aren't necessarily dark and often have very comic stuff in them. Magic realism is also a very nebulous definition that can mean different things to the different editors listing it. So if your story is even vaguely in the neighborhood, might as well try.
3) Any general fantasy magazine will take secondary world fantasy stories of nearly any kind. If they don't have a ban on comic stories (and most of them won't, as darkly comic is a beloved thing,) they'll look at it. If you slap the label of satire on a story, it becomes instantly more dark than just a regular comic story.
4) Dark doesn't actually mean no happy endings. It doesn't even mean that they don't want sword and sorcery adventure with lots of quips and close call escapes. It means they would like some bloody battle action in it or, in the case of contemporary fantasy, a guy detective who drinks a lot. Do what Shakespeare did in his comedies -- make one character a moody Eyeore (brooding warrior.) You know, the character in the western who, when someone says "He didn't have it coming," replies, "We all have it coming." That actually counts as dark to a lot of folk. In the case of your current stories, consider where you've actually gotten some dark material. You may not then see the story as dark fantasy, but again, "dark" is a relative term. If you can, get a look at what they are doing, you may see where yours fits. Stay away from the horror mags obviously and the term grimdark (though grimdark is actually really easy to get included in.) (Incidentally, this is why when fans and/or writers starting whining about how the industry doesn't want dark stuff and it doesn't sell, I start giggling hysterically and face palm into my desk.)
5) Basically, don't second guess the editors about how they mean the terms they say, because they could mean anything and sometimes they don't even know till they see it. Just assume your story fits whatever categories they say they'll take. The worst they are going to do is reject you and not remember you after. Yes, yes, they all say study our magazine and don't send us stuff that doesn't fit, but what doesn't fit is very movable, and realistically, if they are publishing, it's worth a shot. So if it's not a theme issue or anthology, send. Also, have you been using sites like Ralan.com? I'm not saying don't tailor at all (see avoiding horror magazines -- although, again....not that hard to qualify; not every horror story has an unhappy ending,) but the reality is that you may be making your net much narrower than it needs to be.
(And speaking of submissions, still openings for Nila's anthology. Steampunk, can be light on steampunky things. World War I era. Come on, we have Downton Abbey fans, surely. Gas masks on dwarves. It writes itself, people.)
Except for Tor.com - I am not ready to brave that 6-month turnaround time
I'm reviving this thread because I'm not sure where else to talk about the daily grind of short story submissions! Is anyone else actively submitting right now?
That's true, and to be honest, I do submit to them all the time - but I don't feel these are realistic submissions. I'm doing a spagetti test, checking to see what sticks... and so far, nothing has stuck. (Except for Tor.com - I am not ready to brave that 6-month turnaround time on something I am not 100% confident in!)
Yes, I know magical realism well.But my stuff tends not to fall in the neighbourhood at all.
Very true! When I posed the secondary world question to Twitter, the editors of Apex & Lightspeed both gushed about how much they'd love to see good secondary world fantasy in their slush piles. I understand there are an awful lot of "My D&D campaign" stories out there - we manage to see them at Lakeside Circus, even though we only take work up to 2500 words - and so what counts as "good" secondary world is probably hard to come by.
As I say... spaghetti test: mine obviously doesn't qualify yet. But I think you're overstating how many "general fantasy" magazines there are in general - especially among the semi-pros. I flatter myself that I have a pretty good sense of what these editors like by now. God knows I read almost all of these zines every month. They like - and they request - dark, moody, language-driven, non-committally genre stories.
Yah, really. They're nuts - dark all the way. Of course, dark doesn't mean gory and full of rape and incest - they might be confusing a reluctance to print inappropriate content with a reluctance to print "dark".![]()
But yah, obviously reading is what to do. I can say with certainty that I have not seen a lot of what I want to write in any of the semi & pro zines. I loved Electric Velocipede to pieces, but it is closed now... and I love Unlikely Story. After that, I find the majority of what is out there too contemporary, too postmodern, and too bloody angsty for my tastes. And I am more literary-minded than most readers. I find myself wondering where Jenny Fantasy Reader goes for short fiction. You know, the kind of person who DOES want to read their D&D campaign in short form. There MUST be a HUGE market for that!
I feel like this is good basic advice and not great advanced advice. The most common rejection I get is "this story is not right for us", and they mean it.
I hit a milestone this week by logging my 200th rejection on Duotrope. Mr. King would be proud![]()
Is that you in the brag box on (Submission) Grinder, hunt?
Ha, that didn't take you long at all. It is indeed me, and it's also my first acceptance. Doesn't scratch my Clarkesworld/Asimov's itch, but it was nice to be able to report a win.
