N – Seeking Submissions on: “Cars Against Humanity”
Seeking works that illuminate the many ways in which cars, and the infrastructure built to support them, constrict (human) life.
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
Seeking works that illuminate the many ways in which cars, and the infrastructure built to support them, constrict (human) life.
What does the term ‘blessed community’ mean to you?
The work we publish offers surprises and ways of re-seeing, re-thinking, and re-feeling: a veritable banquet of literary fare.
We're looking for work that helps celebrate the themes of growth, change, and reflection.
For the autumn issue, the theme is 'keys'; we want your work on cogs and spindles, locking and unlocking – and what lies inside.
We are looking for new, unpublished, first-person, non-fiction material that is for or about women.
Tell us about your hauntings, your voicemails and saved memos, your ephemera, your fortune cookies and your tarot cards. Give us your secrets and your safe zones.
Send us your best nonfiction, poetry, or work that blends these forms. We are looking for innovative writing that engages in new ideas.
Summer just rolled up in a cool Retro vibe and is inviting us to take it easy and live a little! Share the Summer of your memories and dreams: lazing in a hammock, swimming, napping, fireflies, hot dogs, sandcastles and the endless warm sunny days.
Send your short stories, poetry, and personal essays themed around ‘The Self’ – whatever that sparks for you.
Submit work related to the area of social justice.
We review adult literary fiction, but are open to a variety of genres and styles.
Edgy is good; so is heart. Clarity is good; so is mystery. We want kinetic poetry with lifeblood and plenty of momentum.
The Drue Heinz Literature Prize recognizes and supports writers of short fiction and makes their work available to readers around the world.
The Poetry London Prize is a major, internationally renowned award for a single outstanding poem.
Our aim is to encourage as wide a range of writing as possible and the competition is open for any subject and any style.
THEMA Literary Journal examines how different writers respond to a single quirky theme.
The BLR Prizes award outstanding writing related to themes of health, healing, illness, the mind, and the body.
We read fiction and nonfiction and are happy to see collections inclusive of both.
Life is fraught with mishaps and misadventures, so we are creating a full-color issue dedicated to work about errors in judgment, getting lost, stumbles and falls, things not going according to plan, strokes of bad luck, setbacks and disasters, accidents, breakdowns, bad breaks and blunders.