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Master List of Publications

I've been compiling my own Master List of publications to submit short stories to... and I'd like to share it with you.

By Stephen Kramer AvitabilePublished 9 months ago 20 min read
Top Story - August 2023
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I’ve been submitting fiction to publications for about two years now and it has been a process that just keeps developing. In the beginning, I wasn’t sure where to start. I found a small list of 10 or so publications online and started with those. Over time I have found more lists in various places that people have compiled. Usually lists of 10-20 publications. I’ll find an odd one here or there… I’ve gotten recommendations from other writers on Vocal… on Medium… and I have now compiled my own list of 85 publications that I have submitted to or plan to submit to. (Thank you to ALL who have provided me with places!)

In addition to finding all these publications, there is A LOT that goes into it. Some only accept literary works, some accept speculative fiction, some have specific wants… nothing with a sad or depressing ending… only hard Sci-Fi… speculative fiction but with humor… adventurous… character driven… and some only accept fiction based on their themes! They all have different windows, some publish twice a year, or four times a year, or monthly. They all accept different word counts. From under 1,000 to under 2,500, to the 2,000 - 6,000 word range, to under 5,000, to… I think you get where I am going with this… there are a lot of possibilities with the numbers. Not to mention those old bugaboos of ‘multiple submissions’ and ‘simultaneous submissions.’

It’s so difficult to keep track of so I eventually decided to create my Master List in a Google Sheet. I am actively working on it… all the fields aren’t even filled in… I may not even get to some of them that I originally planned. But knowing how difficult this is to keep track of, and knowing how difficult it can be to figure out where to start when you want to start submitting fiction to publications, I thought it could be helpful for me to share my Master List.

I keep calling it my Master List with the fun capitalization that I use… not because this is the end-all be-all list and you won’t find a better one. Not because it has every important publication that you should submit to. No. Because… of all the publications I have found, of all the mini lists I have created… this is the culmination of them all… for me.

There have got to be THOUSANDS of publications to submit to out there. Shoot, maybe more. But what comes after that? BATHOUSANDS? So, I am CERTAIN you will find other publications that I don’t mention here. Probably some great ones worth submitting to. This isn’t a list of ‘Best Publications to Submit to for Young Writers Blah Blah Blah.’ No, this is just what I’ve got, and I’m sharing it because I hope it could help.

Originally, when I was making this list for myself, I had a vision. I’d list all the publications. Then, I’d have different columns for all the pertinent fields of information. Word Count. Genre. Type (which I classify as extra details past the genre. For instance, one publication wants Speculative fiction, the genre, but they say they want Uplifting stuff, not Doom and Gloom, the type.) Identifying Info (This was intended to be if they prefer your name and information to appear in your story or not.) File Type. And then I had a Notes section for anything else.

Admittedly, Identifying Info has stayed blank. I just go check to see what they want, if they specify, before submitting. You should always check stuff out too! Sites change, preferences change, it’s good to be on top of stuff. A lot of the publications enjoy things being submitted using The Shunn Manuscript which usually requires you to put in your name and info. Some want to judge blind so they ask you to take that out. Some say nothing… so, I just send it as The Shunn Manuscript with all my info. File Type has stayed blank, most like a doc, docx, or rtf... some like a pdf, but I always check before submitting. Some of them have their own unique formats… copying and pasting into a field on their site, etc. I never created columns for Multiple Submissions (sending them more than one story at a time, most seem to not like this, I only ever do if they SPECIFICALLY say you can do it) or Simultaneous Submissions (meaning submitting one short story to both their publication and another. Most seem to not like this also, and even if you find two publications that are okay with it, it just can make it difficult to keep track of, plus you have to notify publications you submitted to if a different one accepts it… it’s just too much extra to keep track of. I only submit a specific short story to one publication at a time.)

All that said, what I can share with you is my actively growing list which has the publications, the word counts they want, their genre (if specified) any additional types of stories they like (if specified) and any other notes I may have. Some of these I haven’t filled out, so I have only a little information on a publication. But I figure I will share it anyway. At the very least, it’s a list of 85 publications and you can go and check any and every one of them out, see what you think, and submit if you want! Remember, you do want to make sure you understand what they want, what they’re looking for, format, file type, all that stuff, ESPECIALLY if you are new to submitting short stories to publications. If you haven’t done it, it isn’t a walk in the park. They can be fickle and have specific wants. It is not as easy as writing in a word doc and sending it along. A lot of them want you to send a Bio too.

Oy, I know, there is a lot to it. My hopes are that sharing a big list may make the A LOT seem like A LITTLE LESS THAN A LOT. Who knows? Maybe I will have more information to share some day. I’m still new to all of this, I’m still learning. I am just trying to put something together that I’d like to see when just starting out.

In addition, if I have any extra notes about any of these, like if I have submitted yet or not, I’ll include that. And lastly, this is mainly a list for Fiction Submissions. Short Stories. Because that’s what I write and submit. But a lot of these publications accept Non-Fiction, Poetry, Art, you name it. So, if that’s your bag, check ‘em out!

* = I have submitted to this publication at least once (maybe you have questions and are curious about my experience.)

** = I have an extra tidbit of information about this one.

So, here it is. The Master List.

* The DARK. Word Count: 2,000 - 6,000. Genre: Horror/Speculative. Notes: Rolling Submissions. Response Time: Within 48 Hours.

* Apparition Lit. Word Count: Under 5,000 for short fiction (also do Flash Fiction themes which appear to be monthly, under 1,000.) Genre: Speculative. Notes: Quarterly, they do a theme for each one. Examples - ‘Creature’ or ‘Nostalgia.’ Response Time: Usually within 4-6 Weeks.

** Typishly. Word Count: Under 5,000 for short fiction. Under 1,500 for flash fiction. Genre: Any? Notes: Rolling, certain days to submit certain works. Response Time: Within 24 Hours.

* SmokeLong Quarterly. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: ?? Notes: Appear to have rolling submissions… ish. Response Time: Usually within 2 Weeks.

* Write City Magazine. Word Count: Under 1,800. Genre: ?? Notes: Haven’t been able to nail down their submission window.

* One Story. Word Count: 3,000 - 8,000. Genre: They say ‘Any’ but… Type: Seems to me like it’s more Literary. Response Time: Within 3 Months.

* Boulevard. Word Count: Under 8,000. Genre: Literary. Response Time: Within 4 Months.

Carve. Word Count: Under 10,000. Genre: Literary. Type: Honesty, Soul, Emotion.

* Ploughshares. Word Count: Under 7,500 (Or for their contests, Under 6,000.) Genre: Literary. Response Time: Within 2 Months.

* Bayou. Word Count: Under 7,000. Genre: Literary. Response Time: Usually within 2 months.

Beloit Fiction Journal. Word Count: Under 13,000. Genre: Literary.

* Eclectica. Word Count: Under 20,000. Genre: Literary. Notes: Seems to be on a rolling basis.

Blue Mesa Review. Word Count: Under 6,000. Genre: Literary. Type: Compelling Narrative.

* Litro. Word Count: Under 4,000 for short stories. Under 800 for flash fiction. Genre: Literary.

* Bottlecap Press. Word Count: This one, they say between 12 to 28 pages. I inquired, they said that would be using a typical 12 point font. My calculations narrowed that down to about 4,000 - 9,000? Genre: Seem to accept any.

Curlew New York. Word Count: Don’t see it listed. Genre: Nor do I see anything for Genre listed. If I had to guess, they appear more literary in style. They have an email to send submissions to, and questions… I asked questions and didn’t happen to hear back. Maybe you will have better luck. Why do I include this if there are so many question marks? Well, it’s always worth it to know of a publication that… Notes: Accepts submissions on a rolling basis!

* Words & Whispers. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: Any. Type: “Send us the wild and divine, the eccentric and experimental.” Notes: Accepting on a rolling basis… AND you can submit up to 3 short stories at once.

Dishsoap Quarterly. Word Count: Up to 5,000 total. (Huh? Wait for the notes…) Genre: Any. Notes: Up to 3 stories submitted at a time, but the total word count of ALL your stories should be 5,000.

* The Lumiere Review. Word Count: Under 3,000. Genre: Any. Notes: Up to 3 stories at a time.

The Literary Canteen. Word Count: Under 2,000. Genre: Magical Realism. Type: Absurdist Inclinations.

Interstellar Literary Review. Word Count: Under 2,500. Genre: Anything. Type: When they say anything, they really mean it. They reference speculative fiction, haibuns, unique styles, funky formatting, galaxies you’ve created etc. (It’s extra reassuring when they provide several examples to prove their “any genre” claim.) Notes: Up to 2 pieces at a time, and they say that they always provide free feedback on whatever you submit with hopes to help you with your craft!

The Jupiter Review. Word Count: Under 2,200. Genre: Anything.

Quip Lit Review. Word Count: 500 - 5,000. Genre: Literary. Type: Offbeat and off-kilter. They say they like weird worlds and themes that stretch the fabric of traditional literary fiction.

* The Citron Review. Word Count: Under 1,000 for flash fiction. Under 100 for micro. Genre: Any? Notes: Up to 2 flash fiction stories per quarter and up to 5 microfiction stories per quarter.

The Adirondack Review. Word Count: Under 4,000. Genre: ??

** Clever Fox Literary Magazine. Word Count: Under 2,500 for short stories. Under 600 for flash fiction. Genre: Pretty much anything.

Flash Fiction Magazine. Word Count: 300 - 1,000. Genre: Pretty much anything, except some things, children’s stories, etc.

* Five South Literary Magazine. Under 5,000 for a short story. Under 2,000 for humor. Under 1,000 for flash fiction.

* Pigeon Review. Word Count: Under 2,500 for a short story. Under 1,000 for flash fiction. Under 300 for micro. Genre: ?? Notes: 1 short story at a time. 2 flash fiction stories at a time. 4 micro stories at a time. They also run themed contests at times.

* Horned Things Literary Journal. Word Count: 1,000 - 5,000 for short stories. Under 1,000 for flash fiction. Genre: While I can’t find any specifications, I lean towards speculative fiction with this one.

Meditating Cat Zine. Word Count: ?? Genre: ?? Notes: I’m not entirely sure, I’ve read through some of the work there, it seems fun! There is also some dark stuff. A lot of poetry. Definitely a few cat-themed and cat-adjacent stories. But not all. They do prefer that you be a cat-lover, so, probably be that… or be good about lying that you are that.

* Bards and Sages Publishing. Under 5,000 preferred, but they do also list that they can accept in the 5,000 - 20,000 range. Genre: Speculative. Notes: This one is quarterly.

* Goatshed Press. Word Count: Under 1,000 for flash fiction and over 1,000 for short stories… with a maximum of… ??? Genre: Seems like anything.

Sunshine Superhighway. Word Count: 1,000 - 15,000. Genre: Speculative. Type: Uplifting. Not doom and gloom.

* Hungur Chronicles. Word Count: 3,000 - 8,000. Genre: Vampire stories. Type: They say they don’t want your cliche, usual vampire stories. Vampire stories have been done a million times, after all. They want very different vampire stories. Angles that haven’t been taken before. And it doesn’t HAVE TO be a vampire, but if it is a vampire-like character… maybe on another planet… they’re interested!

* Three-Lobed Burning Eye. Word Count: 1,000 - 7,500 for short stories. Under 1,000 for flash fiction. Genre: Speculative.

Bubble Lit Mag. Word Count: 2,000. Genre: Any. Type: The unique, the downright weird, the extreme, and the real. Notes: It appears they do themes for each issue.

* Quibble Lit. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Seems like any. Type: They say they like adventurous stories.

Unfortunately Lit. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Seems like any. Notes: This one is great… they say they want you to bring your work that has been rejected already. They don’t suggest coming to them first. Get rejected first, maybe two times, maybe five times, then bring your unloved, rejected work to them. They seem to want to be a shelter for those rejected works of yours, maybe they will find a home here.

Syncopation Lit. Word Count: Under 5,000 for short stories and under 500 for flash fiction. Genre: Any. Type: This publication wants all pieces to be related to music in some type of way, for all you music lovers, and they seem to have themes oftentimes, like holiday themes, etc.

* Wintermute Lit. Word Count: 1,000 - 3,000 for submissions and under 4,500 for contests. Genre: Speculative.

* Papers Publishing. Word Count: Under 3,000. Genre: Any. Notes: Up to 2 stories at a time.

Intangible Magazine. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Any. Notes: They do themes for each issue.

* The Plentitudes. Word Count: 1,500 - 5,000. Genre: Not sure, seems more literary.

* Sunspot Lit. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Not sure, seems more literary. Notes: They run contests.

On The High Literary Journal. Word Count: Under 500 for flash fiction and for short stories… no more than 8 pages double spaced… which I estimated to mean… under 2,500 words? Genre: Literary.

Catchwater Magazine. Word Count: ??? Genre: Anything. Type: They emphasize their desire of Anything by demonstrating that a Catchwater collects precipitation and runoff of all kinds… just like they want to collect art of all kinds.

Dollar Store Mag. Word Count: Under 500 for flash fiction and up to 3 pieces at a time… and for short stories… 3 stories or 5,000 words, whichever comes first. Genre: Anything. Type: Don’t send them your best, send them your trashy dollar store content. Notes: Themes seem to be occasionally available.

** Sci-Fi Shorts. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: Sci-Fi. Notes: Rolling submissions, and I love how this publication operates, they will often give you feedback on your stories and allow you to edit them if they haven’t quite met what they want and then resubmit. They publish a new story every day so there’s more opportunities to get published with them.

Hungry Shadow Press. Word Count: 1,500 - 3,000 for short stories and 100 words for their Drabble Tuesdays. Genre: Horror, weird, dark sci-fi, dark fantasy. Type: Short stories are themed.

NYC Midnight. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: Prompts/Competition. This one seems fun, they give you a prompt and you have a limited amount of time to write a story. They pick winners to advance and continue on with new prompts and new rounds.

* Seize The Press. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Speculative. Type: Dark fantasy, horror. Not moralistic. Not wrapped up neatly. Genre defying.

GigaNotoSaurus. Word Count: 5,000 - 25,000. Genre: Sci-Fi and Fantasy.

* Factor Four Magazine. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: Speculative. Type: They like sci-fi, fantasy, and also elements of super hero and supernatural.

Bourbon Penn. Word Count: 2,000 - 7,500. Genre: Speculative. Type: Slipstream, Cross-Genre, Magic Realism, Absurdist, Surreal.

Infinite Worlds. Word Count: 1,500 - 5,000. Genre: Sci-Fi and Horror.

* The Colored Lens. Word Count: Under 10,000 but prefer 500-5,000 for short stories. Also, Novellas under 20,000 which are serialized. Genre: Speculative.

* Sci-Fi Lampoon. Word Count: Under 7,500 for short fiction and under 1,000 for flash fiction. Genre: Speculative Humor. Type: Sci-Fi-Fantasy-Horror based Humor.

Clarkesworld. Word Count: 1,000 - 22,000. Genre: Sci-Fi and Fantasy. Type: No horror but dark sci-fi and fantasy is okay.

Fantasy. Word Count: Under 1,500 for flash fiction and between 1,500 - 7,500 for short fiction but under 5,000 is preferred. Genre: Fantasy. Type: Many kinds of fantasy good, including dark fantasy.

Strange Horizons. Word Count: Under 10,000, but under 5,000 is preferred. Genre: Speculative.

Uncanny Magazine. Word Count: 750 - 10,000. Genre: Sci-Fi and Fantasy.

Nightmare. Word Count: Under 1,500 for flash fiction and 1,500 - 7,500 for short stories. Genre: Horror and Dark Fantasy.

Asimov’s Science Fiction. Word Count: 1,000 - 20,000. Genre: Sci-Fi. Type: Character Oriented. Occasional Fantasy as well.

Beneath Ceaseless Skies. Word Count: 15,000. Genre: Fantasy. Type: In a secondary world. Literary in style. No Urban Fantasy.

Metaphorosis. Word Count: 500 - 10,000 but they prefer 2,000 - 6,000. Genre: Sci-Fi and Fantasy.

Asymmetry. Word Count: Under 3,000. Genre: Speculative.

MoonPark Review. Word Count: Under 750. Genre: Speculative. Type: Prose only but some poetic micros can be good. Some cerebral work can be good. They love dark and twisty tales.

365 Tomorrows. Word Count: Under 600. Genre: Sci-Fi.

James Gunn’s Ad Astra. Word Count: Under 7,500 (Dislike Flash… so, perhaps keep it over 1,000?). Genre: Sci-Fi… some Fantasy. Type: Speculative element should be central to the plot. Should be character driven (main character shouldn’t die (oh no, that’s my favorite!)) They appreciate the hopeful and the bittersweet.

Aftermath. Word Count: Between 1,500 - 5,000. Genre: Destruction of the world and human civilization. Type: We are destroying the world and these stories should be a reflection of what could happen if we don’t change. Notes: Seem to lean towards semi-professional. Also, seem to have a specific theme in mind, eh? I kept it in here because I like the theme they want the stories to be in… feels very relevant.

Utopia Science Fiction. Word Count: 100 - 5,000. Genre: Hard Sci-Fi. Type: Well-explained, researched science, good ending, character-rich, diverse settings.

Black Fox Literary Magazine. Word Count: Under 5,000 for biannual submissions. Also, contests under 5,000 or under 1,000 for flash fiction (2 at a time.) Genre: Any. Type: They do enjoy underrepresented genres such as Young Adult, Romance, Flash, Mystery. Notes: The contests they run are themed.

Elegant Literature. Word Count: 500 - 2,000. Genre: Any, but they tend to like the speculative, the quirky, and the humorous. Notes: It appears that each month, they have a new theme for their contests, they pay good prizes, this is a smart spot to submit if your story fits, recommended by smart people.

Livina Press. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Anything, but feels more literary.

Bottled Dreams Magazine. Word Count: Under 1,500. Genre: Any, but seems that they do themes.

* Berlin Literary Review. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Any, but they do themes.

The Hallowzine. Word Count: 1-3 stories, under 1,200 each. Genre: Halloween themed or creepy/scary. Notes: Seem to open each year around Halloween.

Sequestrum. Word Count: Under 12,000. Genre: Anything.

Microcosms. Word Count: Under 300 (Usually.) Genre: Anything, but they do themes. Notes: They do a new theme each week.

Columbia Journal. Word Count: Under 5,000. Genre: Literary.

Arboreal Magazine. Word Count: Under 4,000. Genre: Anything. Type: They do themes. Notes: Quarterly.

Parentheses Literary Journal. Word Count: Under 2,000. Genre: Anything. Notes: Twice a year, 3-month response.

Tiny Spoon Lit Mag. Word Count: Under 1,000. Genre: Anything. Type: They do themes.

Night Sky Press. Word Count: 500 - 5,000. Genre: Sci-Fi. Type: They do themes. Notes: Each edition is a theme. Each theme is a new fictitious planet, which they will provide the skeleton for and you are to help flesh out the planet with your story.

*******

** Typishly - I mentioned above that they do a 24-hour response time. That is fantastic if you have a great story and really want to hear back right away. Just make sure you check the site for the specific days in which you can submit. But what's also amazing about this 24-hour response time, you will always get a response from Jon, and Jon seems like a great guy. He doesn't believe in giving any negative feedback, as he says, there is enough negative in the world. So, what he does, is he provides you with positive feedback, just his favorite parts of your story. (Once he gave me a suggestion... which he says he doesn't usually do... it was a great suggestion, and I actually implemented it to my story!) I have not been accepted here yet, I have submitted several times, and I do love hearing the positives from Jon, hearing what he enjoyed. And it could be helpful to you!

** Clever Fox Literary Magazine - This is one of the publications that I have actually been published in. They appear to be newer, the issue they put out was fantastic. But I do like to mention the publications that appear newer, especially for newer writers, it seems you may have a SLIGHTLY easier time with those. You might have a better shot with them.

** Sci-Fi Shorts - This is another publication I have been published in. I mentioned a bit about them above, but it is worth repeating and going into extra detail. If you like writing Sci-Fi and can write flash, this publication is absolutely worth checking out. As I mentioned, they publish every day, so you have a better chance of getting published with them. Some publications will like your work but ultimately will turn you down because "they only publish four issues a year, and get thousands of submissions, etc." But here, if they like your story, you have a much better chance of it being accepted. Furthermore, if they like your story but see some improvements, unlike other spots, they will give you notes and allow you to revise and resubmit. If you disagree with the notes, you don't have to. But it is nice that they give you a second chance. Not a lot of publications do this, to my knowing. To give a personal bit of info with this one, my first submission with them, they gave me notes to revise. I did, and it was accepted. Second submission, they gave me notes to revise. I did, but it was declined. Third submission, notes to revise, accepted. Fourth submission, just declined. Fifth submission, notes to revise, then accepted. Sixth submission, declined. Seventh submission, notes to revise. And pending. I say all that just to give you an idea, they really want to help you with your writing if they see something they like in it.

**************

And that's my entire list so far. I am sure I will continue to add publications to it as I find more. It's always good to have more potential places to submit to. Because, as I have come to realize, you get declined A LOT. But you just got to find the places that match up with your stories. Dozens of rejections are not a worry at all when you finally get accepted somewhere. That's what it's all about. But you got to try, try, try. All your stories that you want to submit, submit them. Submit them all over. After they get rejected, try them somewhere else. So, have a big list of places to submit to and just keep submitting.

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About the Creator

Stephen Kramer Avitabile

I'm a creative writer in the way that I write. I hold the pen in this unique and creative way you've never seen. The content which I write... well, it's still to be determined if that's any good.

https://www.stephenavitabilewriting.com/

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Comments (36)

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  • Kendall Defoe 2 months ago

    Rather useful, sir!

  • Maggie Elizabeth 9 months ago

    Thank you so much for sharing this list! Definitely saving this for later.

  • Mark Gagnon9 months ago

    I'm impressed with the amount of research you've done. A few of the places on your list I've looked at. NYC Midnight I've competed in on several occasions. Their not cheap but they do give decent feedback. Great article.

  • Grz Colm9 months ago

    What a cool piece to pop in ‘Writers’. 👏 Well done on a Top Story Stephen!

  • Hey Stephen, I think you dropped this: 👑! God you put so much of time and effort into compiling this! Instead of gatekeeping, you so kind heartedly shared this with us! Thank you so much and congratulations on your Top Story!

  • Jörgen Winther9 months ago

    Thanks for sharing the list - and the exciting story about it! It reminds me of a story we read in school - very long ago. It was a Danish school, and the writer was Danish, but I have forgotten who he was. He wrote about shoes. How he (or his figure) had developed an obsession with shoes. Maybe he would wake up one day and see that the shoes had disappeared - and therefore he bought another pair and another. He had shoes everywhere! And most recently, he had started considering what would happen if the shoes would suddenly become smaller! So he bought bigger shoes - and what if they would become bigger? So he bought smaller shoes. The buildup of the story was not unlike yours. About the topic, well, I will not claim that it is like yours (Or is it? And will I?) - Whatever; your story reminded me of the shoe-story. And so you captured my attention and kept it all the way. Through a non-existing but imagined reference to something you may never have heard of. Nice!

  • Cendrine Marrouat9 months ago

    Wonderful list, Stephen! Maybe you would like to add Auroras & Blossoms to the list? We accept short stories as well. Here is more info about us: https://vocal.media/01/current-opportunities-for-writers-authors-and-artists

  • Dana Crandell9 months ago

    Man, what a great resource! Thank you so much, Stepen. A thoughtful and valuable contribution to this community!

  • Sian N. Clutton9 months ago

    Incredible dedication has gone into this! Thank you for you hard work!

  • Melissa Ingoldsby9 months ago

    Great list!! Thank you for sharing this

  • Dana Stewart9 months ago

    You are so thoughtful to share your resource, thank you so much! I haven't heard of many of these so this is quite handy to have!

  • Great compilation. Thanks for providing all this info, Stephen!

  • Lamar Wiggins9 months ago

    Thanks, Stephen! I used to have a list similar to this, but lord knows where it went. This will be easy to find again and again. I appreciate the hard work and the share.

  • Lana V Lynx9 months ago

    This is such a great resource, thank you for putting it all together.

  • Wow this is an awesome list and your article has so much information! Truly appreciate it, gonna try submitting to some of the places you listed! Congratulations on Top story!

  • Gina C.9 months ago

    Oh my goodness, thank you SO MUCH for this amazing list, information, and all the work you put into this!! I will definitely be referring back to this. I wish there was a way I could bookmark this 😍 Congrats on Top Story!!

  • Jazzy 9 months ago

    A great list of resources; thank you for doing that work! I self-published with gatekeeper press for my children's book, and it was super helpful, just thought I would throw that out there for you to possibly look at!

  • Catherine Dorian9 months ago

    Stephen, thank you so much for including this invaluable list! Sometimes, even just seeing how many possibilities there are for publication motivates me to write more. Rockstar! Question, for you or for any other Vocal creators: do you know if most literary magazines consider a story previously published on Vocal as, well, “previously published”? I have some stories on here that I’d love to submit to magazines. I don’t consider them to have been “previously published,” because I think of Vocal as more of a social media platform for writers; plus, Vocal doesn’t come out in print. Thoughts?

  • Mattie :)9 months ago

    Thanks for the list, Stephen. Awesome!

  • Gerald Holmes9 months ago

    Thank you so much for doing this,Stephen. I have copied your list and will be going over it today. Congrats on the Top Story

  • Paul Stewart9 months ago

    Thank you for this Stephen! I appreciate the time and effort it took to put this list together first for yourself and then to share it on here too! This will definitely be of help to myself and many other people. I also liked the "bathousands" inclusion...that made me chuckle! Well done on Top Story for this - it is so very deserving of the accolade!

  • Caroline Jane9 months ago

    Wow. This is a fantastic share. Thank you. I will share to FB Great Incantations Group and Vocal Social Society. Thanks to Suze Kay for sharing this on Discord.

  • Excellent resource for writers who submit to multiple publishers and deserves it's place as a Top Story

  • Dean F. Hardy9 months ago

    This is great Stephen. Exactly what is needed for these new categories and the community. Great job man. Thanks alot.

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