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Rumple_deWriter
Over 90 days ago
Moderator
United States

Forum

Larry, be vewy, vewy quiet about the Mod fowum. It's a weally, weally big secwet, he says, channeling his inner, Elmer Fudd. ;)

But seriously, it's one of those 'hidden' spots where mods and admins can exchange info or, in my case, beg for mod/admin type help. There's one on most sites.

Larry, I did a copy and paste of your post to the 'Mod Forum'. You might want to also PM your query to, Gav.
Looking for more votes and views on your Stories Space submissions? If so, vote and leave comments on the submissions of other writers.

It's not applied rocket science. Those who vote and comment on submissions and in forums threads tend to get votes and comments on their own work.

Go ahead...give it a try. There are several new stories with one or no votes just waiting for you.

A brand new online quarterly of experimental writing, Dream Pop Journal, is now seeking submissions for their first issue. Their style is akin to that of songwriters such as Liz Fraser and the Cocteau Twins, and the composer Wim Mertens. They like non-narrative writing, and they admire artists who transcend formal expectations to create languages all their own. They are looking for hybrid works, collaborative pieces, visual poems, collages, and all other unusual utterings and literary inventions. Dream Pop Journal will be published four times a year, in January, April, July, and October. They accept submissions year-round. They are especially interested in featuring work by emerging authors, and they welcome submissions from marginalized voices.

For more information and submission guidelines, google, Dream Pop Journal.

Keith, a fellow can dream. ;)

Ms E, Grammar Girl was a great site. I'm glad she has left it up for the rest of us.

The subject of 'passive vs active voice' confuses most writers and worries even more. So thought a brief 'down and dirty' on the subject might somehow be of some benefit to some of us.

What follows is excerpted from the highly recommended 'Grammar Girl' site.

Don't hesitate to add your own comments.



xxx

What is active voice?

In an active sentence, the subject is doing the action. A straightforward example is the sentence "Steve loves Amy." Steve is the subject, and he is doing the action: he loves Amy, the object of the sentence.

What Is Passive Voice?

In passive voice, the target of the action gets promoted to the subject position. Instead of saying, "Steve loves Amy," I would say, "Amy is loved by Steve." The subject of the sentence becomes Amy, but she isn't doing anything. Rather, she is just the recipient of Steve's love. The focus of the sentence has changed from Steve to Amy.


Passive voice isn't wrong, but it's often a poor way to present your thoughts.

Another important point is that passive sentences aren't incorrect; it’s just that they often aren't the best way to phrase your thoughts. Sometimes passive voice is awkward and other times it’s vague. Also, passive voice is usually wordy, so you can tighten your writing if you replace passive sentences with active sentence.
Rinky Dink Press is a microzine publishing single-author collections of micropoetry.

It's based in Phoenix and run by a collective of poets and artist. They have been publishing chapbooks of micropoetry since 2016. So far, they’ve released three sets of books with ten, single-author titles in each series. They accept submissions year round.

Poets may submit five to six micropoems, 25 to 40 words apiece. The poems may be connected in a single narrative, or adhere to a loose theme. Submitting poets should note that micropoems are not haiku.

Rinky Dink Press accepts submissions via email, but not online or by post. They accept simultaneous submissions, but ask that authors let them know right away if their work is published elsewhere.

To learn more or submit to Rinky Dink Press, visit their website at https://rinkydinkpress.com/submission-guidelines/.

xxx

from: Authors Publish, a free online newsletter
Flash Fiction Magazine, https://flashfictionmagazine.com/ is an electronic literary journal that only publishes flash fiction. They publish one story on a daily basis. You can read their daily stories here. They also publish flash anthologies on a regular basis. They publish fiction stories between 300 and 1000 words in length. They are a fairly easy market to get into. They publish about 25% of the work that is submitted to them. If you are just figuring flash fiction out they are not a bad place to start.


Even though they have such a high acceptance rate for the magazine, which you can read online, their anthology series has an acceptance rate that is probably much lower (although I couldn’t find the details). Each anthology contains 50 pieces of flash fiction by 50 different writers. They pay 40 US dollars per flash fiction piece selected for the anthology. So if your work is selected for the magazine you will not be paid, but if they like your work so much it is also selected for the anthology, you will be paid. It is an interesting system, with the magazine acting like a filter for the anthology.


They only publish fiction, no poetry, no non fiction, no memoir, although you can feel free to fictionalize your own short non-fiction.


All submissions are through their online submission system. Make sure to read all the guidelines closely before submitting. To see their submission page


(taken from 'Authors Publish' newsletter)
Chicken Soup for the Soul

They are accepting true stories or poems for several themes now. Of these, Miracles and More – when good things happen to good people (stories about inexplicable events, like a premonition to take a different route, which helped you avoid an accident), and Stories of Redemption – what starts out as a negative force turns positive, have deadlines in August. See the guidelines for details, and more upcoming themes.

Deadline: 31 August 2017
Word count: 1,200 for non-fiction
Pay: $200 + 10 free copies of book
Details [url=http://www.chickensoup.com/story-submissions/story-guidelines][b]here[/b][/url].

Edited to add — Here are all the upcoming Chicken Soup for the Soul titles with approaching deadlines:

• Miracles and More / August 31 2017
When Good Things Happen to Good People
All of us have experienced events in our lives that are completely unexplainable: the strange premonition that made you take a different route home only, causing you to miss an accident; the eerie feeling that you should call home… now, saving someone’s life; the mysterious communication from a loved one who has passed on. Angels, divine timing, miraculous coincidences, answered prayers, premonitions that come true. Good things do happen to good people. Please share your unbelievable and amazing stories about the unexplainable events that have occurred to you. Share the awe, the faith, and the wonder with our readers.

• Stories of Redemption / August 31, 2017
Redemption stories can be amazing. What starts out as a negative force can be turned positive and can change the world of ordinary people. There are countless stories of redemption and we want to hear yours. How did you use the negative in your life to move onto a more positive path? What did you do to make up for the wrongs in your past? We are looking for true stories of redemption that will inspire us, restore us, heal us, and make a positive difference to lead a better, more rewarding life because of the example they set.

• My Crazy Family / September 5, 2017
We all have that certain someone in our own family who, while lovable, sweet, and caring, is also nutty or weird. We love that person but, at the same time, that family member makes us crazy! A parent or grandparent, an in-law, a brother or sister, an aunt, uncle or cousin. We all have them and you know who they are!

We are looking for true stories and poems about those family members. We would like your stories to be silly, outrageous, hilarious, and make us laugh, but they should also show the kindness and caring of your family member too. The stories should show the readers that their family members are not really that different from the members of other families.

Here are some suggested topics, but we know you can think of many more, since there is no way we can think of all the ways that families can be nutty:

- Crazy but lovable
- Killing with kindness
- Sweetness to a fault
- Wedding mishaps
- Holiday meltdowns
- Compulsions and obsessions
- Funny foibles
- Funeral flare-ups
- Estate issues
- Vacationing together
- Annoying habits
- Anything else that you think is interesting about your sweet outrageous relatives

You must submit your story or poem using your real name, but if your work is selected to be published in the book, we expect many of you to use pen names and change the names of family members to protect the innocent (or guilty!).

• 2018 Christmas and Holiday Collection / October 31 2017
Our next holiday collection will not be released until 2018 but we are already collecting stories for it. People love reading about the winter holidays – from Thanksgiving all the way through New Year’s Day. We want to hear about your traditions and how they came to be. We want to hear about your holiday memories and the rituals that create the foundation of your life. We love to hear about the funny things too: the ugly holiday sweaters, the gingerbread house that kept falling down, the re-gifting embarrassments and the fruit cake disasters. Please be sure your stories are “Santa safe” so we don’t spoil the magic for any precocious young readers.

• Love Stories / October 31, 2017
We’re looking for stories about how you found love. And how you kept it fresh over the years. New love, old love, please warm our hearts with your stories and poems. We all love stories about how love started and blossomed; stories about dating, romance and love. We are looking for true stories and poems about your soulmate, your true love, on-line dating, blind dates, the one that got away, re-connecting after years, and all the ups and downs of your love life. Stories can be serious or hilarious, or both.

• The Best Advice I Ever Heard / February 28, 2018
Have you ever read a Chicken Soup for the Soul story that had a wonderful piece of advice in it that made a difference in your life? Have you ever watched a movie or read an article that really had an impact on you that you haven’t been able to forget? Do you have a friend or family member who gave you some advice that you didn’t necessarily want to hear but really needed to hear that stuck with you and directed you to make positive changes in your life? We are looking for stories that contain a great piece of advice that you were given or advice that you gave to someone else. Whether the advice is about a little thing that improve your everyday life, or major epiphanies that can change a life completely, we want to hear about them and how they made a difference.

One other 'badge' that could use a reality check is 'Profile Views'. To qualify for that one, your profile must have at least 100,000 views. Me, I'm only 95,000 short.

And while I'm in mid-bloviation, has anyone else been putting up with unreliable email notification of comments on their stories? The problem might just be me but please let me know if you're in the same boat. In a few days, I'll PM Gav with the problem.



Submitted for your consideration, a list of poetry competitions, some including short story, which might be of some interest to some of you.
note: AuthorsPublish is a free, weekly publication. Recommended. RdW


xxx

Authors Publish Magazine 30 Writing Competitions and Submission Calls for Poets


30 Writing Competitions and Submission Calls for Poets

Written by S. Kalekar | June 19, 2017


This list is divided into two: submission calls and competitions for poets, including fellowships and one essay contest; prizes range from $250 to AU$10,000. They are listed according to deadline. The calls are for various topics, styles, as well as geographical and age demographics of poets.



Special submission calls include those confronting shaming, LGBTQ themes, poetry by underrepresented writers, various poetry forms and poems on modern relationships, and found poetry on a specific theme. Some journals also have editors’ prizes. Some publish work by new and upcoming writers along with prize-winning poets, and regularly nominate work for various prizes.

Submission calls

The Puritan

They are looking for poems of any length, including sequences and long poems, and are open to other genres. There is also a call for The Town Crier Editor-in-Residence positions, to take creative control of the blog for one month – see guidelines.

Deadline: Rolling; reading till 25 June for the Summer issue
Word count: Up to 4 poems; one fiction or essay up to 10,000 words, under 500 words for flash fiction; 2,000 words and up for interviews; 1,500-6,000 words for reviews
Pay: $15/poem or page, capped at $60; $50 for fiction; $100 each for essay, review or interview; $200 for The Town Crier Editor-in-Residence; $20 for work in the Supplement Series
Details here.

Long Poem Magazine

They publish long poems, one essay per issue, and book reviews. They have published a diverse range of poets, including some prestigious names, and also translations and collaborative works. They welcome both traditional and modern voices.

Deadline: Reading in June for Issue 18
Word count: Submit up to 2 poems, at least 75 lines; contact for essay proposals and book reviews
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.

Boxcar Poetry Review

They accept poetry by both new and established poets, reviews of first books of poetry and first book poet interviews/conversations. They nominate poetry for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. One poem with the most votes in each issue gets a $25 Peer Award.

Deadline: 30 June 2017
Word count: 3-5 poems
Pay: One $25 award per issue
Details here.

Beltway Poetry Quarterly: Sterling A. Brown Tribute Issue

This award-winning magazine showcases work of poets in Washington, DC and the surrounding mid-Atlantic region – Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and Delaware. They are seeking poems about Sterling A. Brown (the first Poet Laureate of Washington), for Brown, or poems that address the subjects closest to him: music (especially jazz, blues, work songs and spirituals), racial identity and folklore. They do not accept work outside of their annual submission call.

Deadline: 30 June 2017
Word count: Up to 5 poems
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.

Twelve Point Collective: Modern Relationships theme issue

They want poetry, fiction and non-fiction on the Modern Relationships theme, widely interpreted. There is an option to publish anonymously. Each work will be paired with the work of a newfound artist. They invite writers to be a part of their collective.

Deadline: 30 June 2017
Word count: Up to 5 poems, up to 3,000 words for short stories and 2,500 words for essays
Pay: One copy of the book
Details here.

Fifth Wednesday Journal Special Issue

This is the journal’s first special issue call. They want writing by immigrants or children of immigrants of Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries, written by by US and Canadian residents. Works are eligible for an annual Editor’s Prize in fiction, and poetry of $150. They seek poems of any length or style, but are less likely to publish a poem longer than 4 pages.

Deadline: 1 July 2017
Word count: Five poems of up to 4 pages, fiction and creative non-fiction of 1,000-12,000 words
Pay: Two contributor copies, one-year subscription with the issue following; annual Editor’s Prize of $150
Details here.

Sonic Boom

They publish experimental poetry, Japanese short-forms and flash fiction. The special feature call is for parallel haiku. They also have a link to an editor interview.

Deadline: 1 July 2017
Word count: Various for different sections; see guidelines
Pay: Non-paying
Details here.

Blithe Spirit

This is a quarterly journal of the British Haiku Society. They want poems in all haikai genes, and writing about haiku. There is also a Museum of Haiku Literature Award (£50) for the best haiku from the previous issue. Each issue has a section on the season just ended.

Deadline: 1 July 2017
Word count: Unspecified
Pay: One £50 award per issue
Details here.

Ashville Poetry Review

This is an annual literary journal that publishes 180-220 pages of poems, interviews, translations, essays, historical perspectives and book reviews. Hard copy submissions only.

Deadline: 15 July 2017
Word count: 3-6 poems; unspecified for others
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.

Heron Tree Special Issue

They want found poems crafted from either The Climates of the Continents by W. G. Kendrew or The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang. They are open to any and all approaches to found poetry construction and erased, altered, or remixed text; poets must use Kendrew’s Climates of the Continents or Lang’s Blue Fairy Book as source material (links to both work on their website). Accepted poems will be published online and collected in e-pamphlets available for free downloading.

Deadline: 15 July 2017
Word count: 1-3 poems
Pay: No payment
Details here.

Impossible Arcetype

They want work by LGBTQ poets of all genders. All forms are welcome. For their second issue, they want work that is striking, beautiful and musical.

Deadline: 16 July 2017
Word count: 1-4 poems; prefer submissions of up to 10 pages
Pay: No payment
Details here.

Jazz Cigarette #5: Forms

They are looking for works in various types of form poetry. They want the poets to bend rules and re-think possibilities. Blends of art and text are welcome. They want Villanelle, Pantoum, Ghazal (seven stanzas to two pages), Rondeau, Visual Poetry (sculpture poetry, erasures, etc.), Abecedarian, Triolet, Haibun, Concrete Poetry, Code Poetry, GIF Poetry, Cento, weird Sestina, any type of Hybrid form, Asemic Writing, Tanka Sequence (no singles), Renga, and englyn.

Deadline: 1 August 2017
Word count: 3-5 poems
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.

Aftermath: Explorations of Loss & Grief

Works for this anthology should examine what it means to face the consequences after tragedy strikes. They encourage under-represented voices to submit.

Deadline: 15 August 2017
Word count: 500-3,000 words for prose; unspecified for poetry
Pay: $35/work for poetry, $0.06/word for fiction and non-fiction
Details here.

The Adroit Journal

This is a quarterly online journal. They accept poetry and prose from the same writer simultaneously during their reading period. They also publish reviews and interviews. Their poets are regularly nominated for Pushcart, Best of the Net, and various other prizes. They also run an annual poetry prize for students, for which entry fee waiver is available.

Deadline: 15 August 2017
Word count: Up to 8 poems, no line limits; up to 3 prose pieces of 3,000 words
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.

Shame: An Anthology

The writing should challenge shaming, which is both a cultural practice and a form of abuse, and the effects of which are often long-term and far-reaching. The editor wants pieces which confront this issue critically and break the silence around it. While personal narratives are welcome, the work should consider an audience beyond the writer.

Deadline: 31 August 2017
Word count: Up to 5 poems, up to 10 pages; 1-2 essays, up to 20 pages
Pay: Unspecified
Details here.
Submitted for your consideration: two free writing contests, one for short subjects the other novels.



xxx

Prose.

Stuck with writer’s block and looking for a way to jumpstart your escape? Prose offers weekly challenges meant to spark your creativity; many are just for fun, but look for the weekly numbered challenges posted by Prose (rather than community members or sponsors) for a chance to win money.

Prizes are typically between $100 – $200 and word counts are low — some as low as under 150, some as high as 500, but all say “quality beats quantity.” So even if all you get from the prompt is a chance to flex your brain, it’s not a bad deal.

xxx

Boyd Literary Award for Excellence in Military Fiction

If you’re a war buff, this competition is for you. It awards $5,000 to the best piece of fiction set during a period when the U.S. was at war (war may either be the main plot of the piece or simply provide the setting). Submissions may be adult or YA novels.

Deadline: Annually on December 1.

xxx

taken from: The Write Life
Sweat it not, Hayley. As you pointed out, your post might help others. With traffic being a tad slow, subject matter is way more important than any posting date.

Your post reminded me of "Writing Down the Bones" by, Natalie Goldberg, the world's only Jewish, Zen Master, writing coach...probably. In it, she gives some original suggestions for unblocking and freeing the 'inner' writer.

:glasses8
Anything that might boost traffic, story reads/comments and submissions would, imo, be a goodness.

Just finished, "The Girl From Venice" by Martin Cruz Smith. Highly recommended. In comparison to the brooding mysteries set in Russia, such as "Gorky Park" that he's most famous for, this is more an adventure tale with mystery/suspense elements set in Venice during the last weeks of World War II. There's even a 'love story' just below the surface. Check it out.

Reg is among us? And I thought the standards hit bottom when they let me slither in. Truth be told, my slithering days have long since departed. Still, I wish you a merry welcome, Reg, I really do, honest. ;)

Rumpled old Bill
Came across this on, Apple Viz, a site for blind users of iPhone and other Apple products. This is a joke, probably. ;)



###

Apple announced today that it will soon be releasing the next version of its mobile operating system, iOS 10.4, nicknamed Good Buddy. iOS 10 4 Good Buddy contains numerous features meant to assist individuals employed as over the road transport drivers. For example, the maps feature in 10 4 Good Buddy now lists the name and menus for all the truck stops in the United States. All the chicken coops and cash registers along major highways are also indicated. iOS 10 4 includes a new application called Find the Bear which will pinpoint the location of both bears and bears in the air for the convenience of local truckers. This new mobile operating system also allows drivers to talk directly to Siri, without having to say the name of the mobile assistant. Instead, the Mobile Assistant now recognizes that individuals are talking to it when they conclude with the phrase Over. Siri will also repeat the last bit of spoken information if individuals speak the phrase 10 9! Finally, Siri has been intigrated with the find my friends feature and will allow drivers to locate other drivers simply by saying the drivers name, followed
by the phrase, What's your twenty Good Buddy! Look for ios 10 4 Good Buddy to roll out soon.

This is not an actual press release and, to the best of my knowledge, Apple is not planning on naming its next operating system Good Buddy. This is just something that came in to my head do to not enough sleep and to much caffeine!
Have fun reading this and, Feel free to suggest your own 10 4 Good Buddy features in the comments!
Have a great day.
Jim
Scot, all I can do to welcome you is repeat the consensus of opinion when I first came dragging in the door: Well, there go the standards.

;)
R.I.P., Alan.

The world is a better place thanks to your being among us. Both you and "Dirty Martini" will be missed.

sad
Thought some of my fellow struggling Stories Space scribblers might enjoy this take by crime writer, George Pelecanos, on writing.

“Either you want to tell a story or you don’t. Do you want to draw attention to yourself and your own writing and your beautiful style or do you want to be invisible and let the story and the characters take over for the reader. That’s what it comes down to for me."

George Pelecanos’s
An oft-published writer buddy (primarily fantasy) recently posted this on FaceBook. Feel free to cuss, discuss, and/or add your own advice.



xxx

Final final manuscript revision before printing and submitting to my agent (now) always involves the same procedure:

delete 95% of adverbs and strengthen the verbs instead.
delete 95% of: was, all, some, that, quite, rather, then, etc;
delete 90% of dialogue tags in 2-person conversations and replace with action beats.

This process usually drops (no lie) 7-8k from my final word count and should make my personal grammar Nazi *cough, cough* much happier.
Carl,take it from me, being unhealthy is a drag. Been there, done that, burned the t-shirt. When you get back to the keyboard, you might want to consider a SS 'Musing' piece on total strangers leaving smart-ass 'get well' greetings. Till then, take care and hurry back.
IMO, Vern and Roland have nailed the issue. In fiction, neologisms, like 'big' words, esoteric foreign words, extreme slang and 'insider' professional jargon should be used carefully since they run the risk of confusing and/or annoying readers and throwing them out of the story

As usual, I agree with, Larry, and share his concern for the future of SS. As I mentioned before, nothing will happen until the site owner, Nicola, decides to either make some improvements or shut it down. I 'talked' to her about this two or three years ago and nothing seems to have changed except some forums and features have been dropped. Truth is, SS has become a 'no fun' place where the ever decreasing number of new submissions get fewer and fewer views, votes, and comments. (sigh)

Three 'red siders' coming over to the land of the 'blue'. Welcome one and/or all. Just about everyone here claims to have had all their shots and unlike over on the 'red' side, most of these folks are housebroken...more or less. ;)

Many thanks, Maggie. your once again taking on the challenge of keeping me squared away is much appreciated. I hereby promise to write, "It's 'words', not 'characters', stupid, 1000 times...sooner or later. ;)

For the life of me, I can't find information on word length. This first came to my attention when a post appeared last year concerning new length requirements for poetry and micro fiction. I asked for directions to the complete minimum word length list but it was no doubt lost in the holiday crush.

My continued ignorance on this issue popped up when I was reminded that 'Humor' entries had a 3,000 word minimum. (BTW, that strikes me as being way too high.)

I've looked for, but failed to find, info on this subject. Therefore and so on, I'd really appreciate a link to the info and suggest that word limits be discussed, altered if needed, and then posted a bit more promonetly.