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Certain_Entropy
06-18-2009, 11:02 PM
So, I've been writing mainly for fun and self expression and never really considered publishing my work until recently. I had an amazing oppurtunity to study in England last semester and work one on one with a well known author on a couple of short stories and my writing technique. I've gotten fantastic and postive feedback, so I've decided to test the publishing waters and see what it holds.

So, I'm completely clueless when it comes to this entire publishing thing. Any help would be awesome.

I guess the first thing is, can I submit pieces that I've entered in contests. I have two short stories, both of which have won my University's annual creative writing contest (2 years in a row whoot!). Looking over the stipulations of the contest, nothing was written about recirculating the pieces.

Also, what is involved in a cover letter? Should I mention the pieces won prizes?

Finally, any suggestions on South Asian/diaspora markets or any markets really would be awesome. Right now I'm looking at Kartika Review, which seems to fit my pieces.

Sorry for the long post. Thanks :)

The Lady
06-19-2009, 12:46 AM
You must acquaint yourself with Duotrope (http://www.duotrope.com/). It's pretty easy to use. It lists pretty much every market there is, and you can search by genre, pay, theme, etc. Be warned though, time is condensed there and a projected five minute search turns into an epic two hours exploratory mission. Who knew there were so many markets in the world? :)

As regards competition winners, if they were not actually published you can submit them. Even if they were published, you can submit them as reprints. Duotrope allows you to search for reprint markets.

I would not indicate that the story you are submitting has won a competition, (but maybe others would) but you can allude to the fact that you have won whichever competition under the writing credits section,

Letter can be something like this,

Dear Editor, (actual editor's name)

Please consider my story, "Story Title" (approx. 2000 words) for "Magazine Title."

I have won blah blah writing contest 2008, 2009.

Thank you for your consideration,

Sincerely,

name.



Some markets will think very little of a university writing competition BTW. You may decide to leave it out and let the story stand for itself. Or not. The point is debatable and ultimately, it's up to you.

Cheers. And good luck. :D

heatheringemar
06-19-2009, 10:58 AM
Duotrope rocks.

And cover letters should be short, sweet, and professional. The Lady's got it right.

Don't tell the editor much about the story unless they ask you to.

Be particular about reading magazine guidelines, and even more particular about formatting your submission to fit. Editors won't even look at you if you've blatantly disregarded their guidelines -- they just don't have the time.

Good luck! :)

Izz
06-19-2009, 11:08 AM
What The Lady and heatheringemar said.

cindystubbs
06-29-2009, 10:20 AM
Be brief.
I always thank them for their time.

CACTUSWENDY
06-29-2009, 06:00 PM
I think you will find all the detail information you need right here in the AW treads. At the bottom of the screen you will see a 'forum Jump'. Press that arrow and you can look for whatever area you might want.

Best wishes and much success.

cathyfreeze
06-29-2009, 06:04 PM
I agree to read and strictly follow all submission guidelines. Make sure your contact info is on the manuscript as well as in the body of the cover letter--sometimes those get separated, sometimes they don't.

So it's important, unless the sub guidelines say differently, that your cover letter goes something like (to largely crib from The Lady)

Dear Submission editor's name,

Please consider my previously unpublished story, "Story Title" (approx. 2000 words) for "Magazine Title."

I have won blah blah writing contest 2008, 2009.

Thank you for your consideration,

Sincerely,

name
email addy
snailmail addy

The "previously unpublished" is legal-speak and many editors look for that.

Another thing--look to see if they want you to put "Submission" in the subject line or some such. Ideomancer (for whom i used to slush) accepted several spec genres, and they wanted very much for authors to put *which* genre in the subject line--the distribution editor then sent all horror to me, all scifi to EBear, etc.

cat

Shweta
07-13-2009, 03:41 PM
You might consider desilit (http://www.desilit.org/).

Certain_Entropy
07-13-2009, 07:58 PM
thanks all for your help. wish me luck!

astonwest
07-14-2009, 06:50 AM
If the works weren't published, I would include the fact that the particular story won a competition (and list the specific competition)...but only if it was a competition that would be instantly recognized by someone in the industry.

For any of your future works, I would include the fact that you had won those competitions (again, if they're recognized)...

Good luck!

astonwest
07-14-2009, 06:54 AM
The "previously unpublished" is legal-speak and many editors look for that.
Interesting, I'd never heard that before. Granted, I've usually submitted to outlets that don't accept reprints.

eqb
07-14-2009, 03:51 PM
The "previously unpublished" is legal-speak and many editors look for that.

They do? Maybe it's genre-related. I submit to SF and erotica publications, and with them, it's considered a given that the story is unpublished otherwise stated. (In which case the editor wants to know where and when the story previously appeared.)

Robert E. Keller
07-15-2009, 04:55 AM
Cathy has the right idea. It might help put the editor at ease to know it's an unpublished story. I haven't done it myself, but I'll probably mention it in future submissions. I can't see how it would hurt.

Izz
07-15-2009, 05:08 AM
They do? Maybe it's genre-related. I submit to SF and erotica publications, and with them, it's considered a given that the story is unpublished otherwise stated. (In which case the editor wants to know where and when the story previously appeared.)Yeah, that's what i thought too, but i guess including that phrase couldn't hurt.

eqb
07-15-2009, 05:47 AM
Yeah, that's what i thought too, but i guess including that phrase couldn't hurt.

It seems pointless to me, so I won't be adding it to mine. Unless, of course, an editor specifies in their guidelines that they want it.

Izz
07-15-2009, 05:50 AM
It seems pointless to me, so I won't be adding it to mine. Unless, of course, an editor specifies in their guidelines that they want it.Yeah. I don't think i'll be changing my routine, either.

Of course, as you say, guidelines be the most important thing in this consideration :)

eqb
07-15-2009, 06:06 AM
Of course, as you say, guidelines be the most important thing in this consideration :)

Hey, if an editor asks for knock-knock jokes in my cover letter, I am so there.

Izz
07-15-2009, 06:07 AM
Hey, if an editor asks for knock-knock jokes in my cover letter, I am so there.If i ever start up a mag, that's *definitely* going in the guidelines.