The excellent womagwriterblog has some updated guidelines for Woman's Weekly. Please note that they only take emailed submissions from regular contributors. I received the ordinary guidelines which state that submissions should be sent to: Fiction Department, Woman's Weekly, IPC Media, Blue Fin Building, 110 Southwark Street, London SE1 0SU.
Rosemary
Reading, writing, books and writers. 'If we wait for the moment when everything, absolutely everything is ready, we shall never begin.' Ivan Turgenev
Showing posts with label Story Markets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Story Markets. Show all posts
Sunday, 4 July 2010
Woman's Weekly - Link to Updates
Tuesday, 11 May 2010
My Weekly Updated Guidelines (for Aug/Sep)
The following guidelines are hot off the computer from Liz Smith this morning. She is very apologetic about the time she is taking to get back to people, but she is now the only member of the fiction buying team. And she will definitely respond to everyone as soon as she can. She was interested in one my stories I emailed just over a year ago, but I only sent it to another magazine last week! So it may be more than six months before hearing about a sale. These are the updated guidelines (I've abridged it slightly for space).
As we now edit on screen, please take a moment to check your manuscript and ensure that:
- Emotionally engaging
- Light and shade
- Strong continuous plot
- Intrigue - Interwoven plot lines
- Complex relationships
- Recognisable people in recognisable situations
- Escapist - Adventure - Balance of surprise vs expectations
Twist In The Tale (between 1400 and 1600 words)
- Particularly looking for light-hearted themes, or very moving - “clues” must not be misleading
- Positive, pleasant outcome - characters well rounded, need not all be likeable - revenge must not be vindictive
- A nice surprise instead of a “con”
- Ensure crime themes have emotional engagement and some sympathetic characters.
Coffee Break (700 Words Only)
- looking for light-hearted or very romantic themes
- believable characters
- unusual theme/situations
- try not to be too predictable
- doesn’t have to have a standard happy ending
- engaging dialogue
- must still be hopeful - inspiring - light and shade work well - try to ring the changes with themes
- convincing emotions
You can send your work by email to myweekly@dcthomson.co.uk or lsmith@dcthomson.co.uk or by post to: The Commissioning Fiction Editor, My Weekly, D.C.Thomson & Co. Ltd., 80 Kingsway East, Dundee DD4 8SL. Most important! If one of your stories has been accepted already, please mark the email for the attention of Liz Smith.
Good luck,
Rosemary
- Only one manuscript per month. Email, postal addresses, phone numbers etc should be marked on the manuscript
- Please pay attention to the story lengths as they are important
- For your manuscript to be considered, it’s imperative you mark prominently on your envelope or email into which category your story falls and how many words it is. If you don’t do this, I’m afraid your work can’t be considered.
- Our author box has changed. Can you please now give me 30 words about your inspiration? Please include this on your manuscript or Word document.
- Remember NOT to include any formatting such as tabs or page breakers in your Word document.
- Not looking for any more sci-fi themes in any of the categories, at the moment.
As we now edit on screen, please take a moment to check your manuscript and ensure that:
- Double quotes (“…”) are used for dialogue throughout
- You have avoided excessive use of ellipses (…) and exclamation marks
- There are only SINGLE spaces between words and sentences (please eliminate all unnecessary spaces)
- If you are emailing your story, make sure it is as a Word attachment and not in the body of the email
- You are enclosing only a SINGLE MANUSCRIPT, not several at once, and that your story is in a standard plain type of 12pt.
- All manuscripts must be typewritten, with accurate wordage supplied.
- Still low on Family stories with children at the moment – 1200 words.
- Emotionally engaging
- Light and shade
- Strong continuous plot
- Intrigue - Interwoven plot lines
- Complex relationships
- Recognisable people in recognisable situations
- Escapist - Adventure - Balance of surprise vs expectations
Twist In The Tale (between 1400 and 1600 words)
- Particularly looking for light-hearted themes, or very moving - “clues” must not be misleading
- Positive, pleasant outcome - characters well rounded, need not all be likeable - revenge must not be vindictive
- A nice surprise instead of a “con”
- Ensure crime themes have emotional engagement and some sympathetic characters.
Coffee Break (700 Words Only)
- Particularly looking for light-hearted or very moving themes
- No surprise endings right now as I have enough
- Include a frisson of excitement, hint of passion
- Character studies
- Unusual, offbeat subject
- Humorous - conversation – can be all dialogue - a moment in time - pulse racing, without being sexually explicit
- looking for light-hearted or very romantic themes
- believable characters
- unusual theme/situations
- try not to be too predictable
- doesn’t have to have a standard happy ending
- engaging dialogue
- must still be hopeful - inspiring - light and shade work well - try to ring the changes with themes
- convincing emotions
You can send your work by email to myweekly@dcthomson.co.uk or lsmith@dcthomson.co.uk or by post to: The Commissioning Fiction Editor, My Weekly, D.C.Thomson & Co. Ltd., 80 Kingsway East, Dundee DD4 8SL. Most important! If one of your stories has been accepted already, please mark the email for the attention of Liz Smith.
Good luck,
Rosemary
Friday, 7 May 2010
Stories for Candis Magazine
The new issue of Writers' News (June 2010) contains a piece about Candis. The family magazine is now accepting unpublished short stories of between 2,300 and 2,500 words. They particularly want stories with clever storylines that keep the reader guessing, twist in the tail, and tightly written whodunnits.
However, there is still room for stories about modern love, families and friendship. No children's, sci-fi, or stories from an animal or ghost viewpoint.
It is a competitive market which uses only 12 stories a year. Payment is £300. Email as an attachment, or in the body of the email to: fiction@candis.co.uk Full submission details are on the Candis website and can be printed off.
Good luck,
Rosemary
However, there is still room for stories about modern love, families and friendship. No children's, sci-fi, or stories from an animal or ghost viewpoint.
It is a competitive market which uses only 12 stories a year. Payment is £300. Email as an attachment, or in the body of the email to: fiction@candis.co.uk Full submission details are on the Candis website and can be printed off.
Good luck,
Rosemary
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
Glimmertrain
Glimmertrain is a short story market in the US which offers a variety of competitions throughout the year. They also have certain months when they accept Standard Submissions, which are free to enter. The other competitions have an entry fee, but the reward is much higher prize money.
Submissions are made online and, once contributors register, you can keep a check on whether or not your story has been read. It seems to be a very worthwhile publication, although I have yet to order a copy to do proper market research of the type of stories they have published!
Full submission details are on their excellent website.
Why not give it a try.
Rosemary
Submissions are made online and, once contributors register, you can keep a check on whether or not your story has been read. It seems to be a very worthwhile publication, although I have yet to order a copy to do proper market research of the type of stories they have published!
Full submission details are on their excellent website.
Why not give it a try.
Rosemary
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