Tag: reprints

Where to submit reprints (just updated!)

If you have poetry or other writing which has been previously published, but the readership was low or perhaps it was only in print and not online, you may want to submit it to literary magazines and journals that accept work as a reprint. There are two lists […]

NO FEE submission call + editor interview – Lady/Liberty/Lit, DEADLINE: Year-round

Lady/Liberty/Lit is a new online literary magazine, featuring art, poetry, and short prose created by women-identifying and gender-non-conforming writers/artists. They are open year-round and looking for “writing centered around freedom of voice and body, from her beacon-hand.” They publish one piece at a time on a regular basis, […]

NO FEE Submission call + interview – Doubleback Review, DEADLINE: Always open (rolling)

Doubleback Review is a new online journal under Sundress Publications and Doubleback Books. They are specifically looking for work previously published in other journals that have since gone defunct. “Doubleback Review wants to hit the pause button on art that may slip from the public's eye (and therefore lose […]

PAYING/NO FEE Submission call + interview – Drunk Monkeys, DEADLINE: Aug. 31, 2019

Drunk Monkeys is an online lit mag with a unique style, dedicated to "use our privileges to protect, defend, and uplift others. To create a safer literary community." They have a clear mission to “be inclusive, to denounce bigotry of all kinds, and to stand up to those […]

NO FEE/REPRINTS Submission call + editor interview – Crooked Teeth, DEADLINE: Feb. 15, 2018

Crooked Teeth is a new lit mag out of San Francisco, CA. Their second issue “Fall of the City” will be released as an eBook on their website at the end of January. The third issue will be both digital and print. You can follow them on Facebook and Twitter […]

NO FEE/REPRINTS Submission call + editor interview – Crooked Teeth (NEW!), DEADLINE: August 5, 2017

Crooked Teeth is a new lit mag out of San Francisco, CA about to release their first issue and holding events in the Bay Area. You can follow them on Facebook and Twitter for updates. I wondered how and why this lit mag came to be, so I asked […]

Trish Hopkinson