Sorry, all the quick links to magazine guidelines as well as some other stuff has vanished from the blog (thanks to Enid Reece for alerting me). I'm hoping this is just a temporary glitch and they'll be back soon, but if not I'll reinstate them within the next few days.
In the meantime, here are some Belted Galloway cattle.
Friday 30 September 2016
Saturday 24 September 2016
That's Life! (Australia) guidelines
The fiction editor at That's Life has kindly sent their latest guidelines for the blog -
that's
life!
Fast Fiction Guidelines
that's
life!
Fiction Guidelines
Publication
There
are two ways we publish fiction:
-
A one-page story in the weekly edition of that's
life!
magazine
-
A range of one, two, three and four page stories in our quarterly
Fast Fiction magazine, released seasonally
(Summer/Spring/Autumn/Winter)
Sending
us a story
We
accept only emailed submissions. Posted hard-copy stories will no
longer be considered. Email your story, for both the weekly magazine
and quarterly magazine, to fastfiction@pacificmags.com.au
Format
If
possible, please send your stories in Microsoft Word format, as an
attachment
to the email. Please do not paste/write your story into the body of
the email.
Send
one attachment per email - please do not attach multiple stories.
Please
do not heavily format the story with tabs or headings, and use single
spacing between sentences and single quote marks.
Include
your name and contact details.
Include
the following in the subject and body of the email:
-
Story Name
-
Theme
-
Word Count
For
example: The Magician, Spooky, 650 words
Writer's
Agreement
We
have a new Writer's Agreement in place and you MUST
complete and sign it for your story to be published with us.
If
we don't have an agreement from you and we'd like to use one of your
stories, we will email it to you, when a story is commissioned, for
it to be completed, signed and returned.
Themes
In
the weekly magazine, we run a wide range of stories and do not
publish them with strict themes, except for the annual events below.
Please note for these themes we will need to receive submissions
around two months before the event.
-
Australia Day (Jan)
-
Back to School
(Jan/Feb)
-
Valentine's Day (Feb)
-
Easter
(April)
-
Anzac Day (April)
-
Christmas In July (July)
-
Mother's/Father's Day (May/Sept)
-
Halloween (Oct)
-
Melbourne Cup Day (Nov)
-
Christmas (Dec)
-
New Year's Eve (Dec/Jan)
For
the quarterly Fast Fiction, we have SIX themes, so your story should
fall into one of the following categories:
-
Romance (All
things love)
-
Heartwarmer (Sweet
stories/happy endings)
-
Thriller (Keeps
you guessing until the end)
-
Revenge (Someone
gets their just desserts)
-
Sixth Sense (Spooky/Scary/Spiritual/Mystic/Fate
and Fortune)
-
Light Bite (Everything
else! A fun, easy read)
Word
Counts
2
pages = 1200-1400 words
3
pages = 1600-1800 words
These
are approximate and the final word count printed will depend on the
design of the page/s. You don't need to overly cut or edit your story
to fit the word counts.
Rights
and Exclusivity
We
will now accept stories that have either:
-
Never been published anywhere previously worldwide.
-
Not been published in an English speaking publication. If it's been
published in English, in the UK or USA for example, unfortunately we
can no longer consider your story, so please do not submit.
Replies
If
you have not heard anything from us in 90 days, it is unlikely your
story will be used at this time. You are welcome to resubmit stories
six months after your first submission.
Please
understand that due to the bulk of emails we receive, we are unable
to reply individually to submissions, nor can we reply to follow up
correspondence asking if stories have been received, read or
accepted.
Acceptance
If
there's a story of yours we'd like to use, you will receive an email
indicating that:
-
We'd like to publish your story in an upcoming issue of that's
life! weekly
magazine OR
we would like to publish your story in the next edition of the Fast
Fiction quarterly
-
We will ask if the story is still available to purchase and let you
know the amount to invoice for if this is the case
Payment
All
invoices will be submitted to the finance department when the issue
is sent to print.
Please
note the payment is for how many pages are published, not the
pages/word count of your unedited original submission.
The
payment rates are as follows but may vary for special publications:
that's
life!
weekly magazine
(one-page story) = $300
Fast
Fiction quarterly
1
page = $200
2
pages = $300
3
pages = $400
Subject
Matter
We
are looking for humorous, clever, positive, contemporary stories with
a strong and easy-to-follow plot. It's a good idea to read several
issues of the magazines to get the flavour of the type of fiction we
publish.
Avoid
straightforward romance - boy meets girl and they live happily ever
after. Also avoid stories narrated by animals or babies, and it can
be confusing if you have too many characters. A maximum of four is
usually best.
If
the story has a twist it should arise from the story, rather than
from a detail kept from the reader. To check your twist, imagine your
story were being made into a film - would the surprise still work?
Please
remember that that's
life! is a
family magazine so graphic murders, sex crimes and domestic violence
are not acceptable.
We
normally write in chronological order, so please keep events in
sequence and avoid 'jumping' around time slots, as this can be
confusing.
Common
twists to avoid:
- The heroine/narrator is revealed to be a cat, dog, car, possum, tree or ghost!
- A partner's mysterious arrangements turn out to be for a surprise party
- The perpetrator's murder plan backfires and s/he eats the poison
- A woman meets up with a handsome "stranger" for a steamy rendezvous and it turns out to be her husband
- Someone nervous about a first day at school turns out to be the teacher; or about a wedding, the vicar; or an interview, the interviewer.
- A woman spots her boyfriend/man of her dreams with a beautiful blonde lady - who turns out to be his sister
- Anything involving twins
- A murder/death actually turns out to be part of a play rehearsal
It's
not that we would never use a story with these plot lines, but bear
in mind we do get a lot of them. So your story would need a fresh
angle to stand out.
If
you don't
hear from us...
If
your story isn't accepted it can be for any number of reasons.
Sometimes we have already published, or have in stock, a similar
story. Or we may feel it will not appeal to our readers. But this
does not mean we will not like another of your stories, so don't lose
heart. Keep writing and sending them in!
Thursday 22 September 2016
Meeting with womagwriter Andrea Wotherspoon
Andrea Wortherspoon lives right at the top of Scotland, where it's not that usual to have womagwriters who just happen to be passing. That wasn't enough to save her from a visit by the travelling writer.
We've known each other virtually for a while and exchanged critiques online, but never met and never chatted much - we made up for that!
To many of our comments on writing the other responded with 'me too'. It's good to know I'm not alone in either having more ideas than I can write, or having to start writing and hope I can drag something together.
Also reassuring was the knowledge I'm not being particularly neurotic (as womagwriters go) to react to a batch of rejections by wondering if I'll ever sell anything ever again.
Something else we have in common is liking a nice walk. Andrea suggested going out to Holburn Head and she's right, it's lovely there. I can easily understand why Andrea uses her local area in some of her stories.
That's the Orkneys you can see in the distance and the ruin you may have spotted in the picture of the two of us is Thurso castle.
We've known each other virtually for a while and exchanged critiques online, but never met and never chatted much - we made up for that!
To many of our comments on writing the other responded with 'me too'. It's good to know I'm not alone in either having more ideas than I can write, or having to start writing and hope I can drag something together.
Also reassuring was the knowledge I'm not being particularly neurotic (as womagwriters go) to react to a batch of rejections by wondering if I'll ever sell anything ever again.
Something else we have in common is liking a nice walk. Andrea suggested going out to Holburn Head and she's right, it's lovely there. I can easily understand why Andrea uses her local area in some of her stories.
That's the Orkneys you can see in the distance and the ruin you may have spotted in the picture of the two of us is Thurso castle.
Sunday 18 September 2016
Guest post by womagwriter Sharon Boothroyd
Sharon from Kishboo magazine is today's blog guest.
As a womag writer, I've been eagerly following Douglas McPherson's excellent ongoing series about how writer Helen Yendall won The People's Friend serial writing competition.
However, I was really taken aback to discover that PF Fiction Editor Shirley Blair has her own stories featured in the magazine, published under a different name.
This fact was revealed when Helen attended a PF workshop.
Douglas doesn't make a big thing of it – in fact, he skips over it quite breezily - but when I brought this up with members of my online womag writing group, there were quite a few reactions.
Several people wondered who actually edits Shirley's work before it's published?
Does she award herself a fee for her stories?
With so many talented womag writers around, I feel puzzled why a Fiction Editor finds it necessary to include their own work in their own magazines.
As another member of my group pointed out, they are in 'guaranteed publication' position. Is this practice fair to womag writers?
Fiction Ed Karen Byrom of My Weekly used to be a My Weekly short story writer. Is she still one?
And do Fiction Eds submit their work to other magazines?
We womag writers realise we are competing with other writers, but I didn't realise we were competing with work from Fiction Editors too.
What do you think about this?
Monday 12 September 2016
Can you help?
Jason has asked a question -
This isn't a market I write for so I don't have a clue. Can anyone else help?
- Hi, Everyone.
I submitted a feature article to "The People's Friend" back in the first week of June.
I still haven't heard from them and was wondering if anyone had any idea how long they generally take.
This isn't a market I write for so I don't have a clue. Can anyone else help?
Wednesday 7 September 2016
Free editing ebook.
My friend Anne Rainbow has written a book on editing - EDITING the RedPen Way - and it's currently free to download!
I was amongst Anne's first 'RedPenners' (which is why the book is dedicated to me and another writing friend, Enid Reece) and still use this system to help me edit my short stories before submission.
I was amongst Anne's first 'RedPenners' (which is why the book is dedicated to me and another writing friend, Enid Reece) and still use this system to help me edit my short stories before submission.
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