F – Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2024
The prize is only open to short fiction, but it can be in any fiction genre and you may write about any subject you wish.
Most events are installed on their deadline date, unless there is a long submission window or unless it's a rolling submission.
P=Poetry, N=Nonfiction, F=Fiction
The prize is only open to short fiction, but it can be in any fiction genre and you may write about any subject you wish.
The only rule is that the piece(s) must be created by 2 or more people working together.
“Changing My Mind,” might refer to trying to change the minds of others, something you changed your mind about, or a subject you wish you could look at differently.
Submit a story that responds to or somehow reflects the theme “Endings.”
We are compelled by the strange and beautiful, drawn to the uncanny, fascinated by the fantastical, and relish risky realism that rattles our senses.
We carry no expectations for the content or tone of submissions.
We’ve all heard the phrase, “that’s one for the ages,” which suggests a strange, extraordinary, fantastical, or confounding event, situation, or tale that astounds and leaves us amazed.
Our goal is to approach everything we publish with an eye for intellect, wonder, and story and a conviction that our beliefs have consequences for ourselves, our communities, and the world.
The Fabulist Flash, a new flash-fiction project from The Fabulist Words & Art, welcomes submissions from November 6-12 for fantastical and speculative writings of up to 1,000 words.
Issue 5: Secret Santa. Theme: a gift you received or shared this year
We share work here representative of shared human values, however differently those values might be expressed in our various religions and cultures.
Ev0king the Question: What is your favorite artistic depiction (painting, mosaic, statue, et cetera) of a Deity or group of Deities? What is your favorite piece of music about a holy day or a Deity/Deities?
A quarterly mainstream e-zine whose mission is to bring a little more good poetry into the world
What symbols do we use to reference, reflect or find ourselves (and each other)?
If you wrote something that seems in some way like a correspondence, we'd like to see it.
Editor's tip: as the weather cools, warm up with a good book, don your favorite sweater, get comfortable, and relax.
Send us your list. Make the entries short, specific, to the point.
We explore intrepid culture: our stories feature danger elements, struggle, emotion, and OVERCOMING.
Our mission is to seek out, nurture, publish and promote the very best new writers and new writing.
We seek personal, political, precise, raw, lyrical, critical, and experimental work; the stuff only you can write.