Sunday, 10 May 2015

The Weekly News

Thanks to Paul A Freeman for sending me the latest guidelines for The Weekly News.

The Weekly News has a largely older readership which is evenly split between the sexes, so we are looking for general interest tales — crime, humour (especially), spooky stories (although we’ve had plenty of these recently), or “coffee break” dramas which wouldn’t be out of place in any popular TV soap. 
 
At the moment, I’m also interested in stories with a bit more “edge” that are slightly darker.
 
Although an old-fashioned love story may occasionally be appropriate, I’m not looking for “slushy” romantic fiction, or anything “twee”. And although it’s a popular style, I don’t generally take “chick-lit”.
Similarly, I don’t want anything too racy or gory. As The Weekly News is a family paper, I wouldn’t use anything with any sexual content.
 
Many stories we publish have an interesting twist to surprise the reader, as these seem to be popular. But if your twist is “it was all a dream” or “he/she/it was a ghost”, or the main character is actually a pet, it won’t get through!
·        Aim for something light-hearted, perhaps centred around family life or a recognisable situation.
·        If your main character is strong enough, you can have them carry the whole story.
·        A positive outcome is favoured, but this can be reached by a good bit of double-crossing, or the comeuppance of the “baddie”.
·        Be playful – have some fun with your characters at their expense ie in embarrassing social situations.
·        I also like sensitive stories which may involve a death, an illness a fear etc. If the situation doesn’t come across as too dark and depressing and has an uplifting end, then it may make it through.
 
Stories can vary in length from about 1,000 to 1,200 words at most, though we reserve the right to edit them as appropriate.
 
Also, I rarely accept stories written in the first person or present tense.
 
Please note that, at present, I use two fiction items at each week and, even if an item is accepted, it could be some time before it is published.
I always have plenty of stories to read through, so it could be a couple of months at least before I can respond to submissions. 
Due to time constraints, as of April 2014, I’m now only able to able reply to stories which are accepted.
If you haven’t heard from me within three months of submission, it means you have been unsuccessful on this occasion and you’re free to submit the story elsewhere.
 
Here are some DOs:
·        Use strong, identifiable characters – but remember they don’t always have to be likeable.
·        Use natural-sounding speech. I tend to avoid dialect, as we like to be a bit “geographically vague” to add to the universality of the stories.
·        Check your historical facts fit your time-frame and characters.
·        Be thought-provoking if you want – be topical.
·        Read and check your punctuation and paragraphing. The easier your work is on the eye, the easier it is to make an informed decision.
·        Work within reality – this is fiction, but it does have to be believable.
·        Do include your email address, postal address and phone number on your story.
·        Full stories, please. I can’t get enough detail or “feel” for a piece from a pitch or synopsis.
 
And some specific DON’Ts:
·        No murdered spouses, dreams, ghosts or pet twists.
·        No first person or present-tense stories.
·        No relationship-centred stories.
·        No hard copy.
 
 
E-mail is now our only method of delivery. 
 

14 comments:

Dolores Doolittle said...

Thank you for these very appealing guidelines, Patsy - love `the comeuppance of the "baddie" `...

Shall set to immediately.

suzy doodling said...

Thanks, Patsy will have a go.

Jan Baynham said...

Thanks for the info., Patsy.

Emma Canning said...

Thanks Patsy, very useful info.

Rosemary Gemmell said...

Thanks for the update, Pasty - it's a while since I've sent one there.

Unknown said...

It was interesting to see that you had received these as I emailed The Weekly News a month ago asking for up to date guidelines. I noticed when they sent them they also sent them to a fair few other people so was clearly well needed - good to see them letting Womag know as well though.

Alan C. Williams said...

The previous guidelines on here 2011 and I think on their own site have the word count as 750-2000 words. Now the blurb is virtually the same but it's 1000 to 1200 words.
I shall now revise my submission plans. Again thanks. One question. They apparently take ghost stories. Anything more sci-fi/supernatural?

Patsy said...

Yes, they do take ghost stories, Alan. I don't recal reading anything sci-fi or supernatural, but I don't get every issue.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for posting these guidelines. Out of curiosity, do you know how much they pay per story? Also, do they accept out of country submissions?

Thanks!

Patsy said...

Hi Anonymous.

I don't know of any reason why people from overseas shouldn't submit work to this magazine.

I do know how much they pay. I prefer not to give figures unless the magazine have made them public. In some cases it varies from author to author, or according to story length and in others, magazines impose a confidentiality clause meaning authors can't talk about their arrangement with the company.

HelenMWalters said...

Patsy, or anyone else, should I be worried that I've submitted to TWN and not got an auto-response, or are they not being sent at the moment?

Patsy said...

I've not been getting replies recently, Helen. It is a little bit worrying - as we don't get rejections either we'll never know if our submissions arrived.

HelenMWalters said...

Sounds like they've stopped doing that then. In which case, I won't worry. Thanks, Patsy.

Unknown said...

Does anyone know what "No relationship-centred stories." means?