FICTION MARKETS
THE SILVER WEB
A MAGAZINE OF THE SURREAL
BUZZCITY PRESS
P.O. BOX 3819O
Tallahassee, FL 32315
From the writer's guidelines:
"Short stories of 8000 words or less (don't send anything longer w/o a query- first, or it will be returned unread). The Web is looking for well-written work that is unusual and original; stories that are too bizarre for mainstream publications but that do not fit the standard mold of genre. The preference is for stories that develop out of character rather than fiction based on ideas. No traditional story lines; no vampires, werewolves. zombies. Witches, fairies, elves, dragons, etc. No high fantasy Sword & Sorcery or quest/adventure stories. And please. please, PLEASE no revenge stories. Open to submissions from January 1 through September 30."
I have always found them to be a good market submissionwise. They respond and I have even gotten personal comments/recommendations from them. They do not accept electronic submissions.
THE PEDESTAL MAGAZINE
4915 Charlton Lane
Charlotte, NC 28210
USA
From the writer's guidelines:
"We are currently seeking poetry (experimental/traditional), fiction (literary, experimental, science fiction, fantasy), and nonfiction (academic work, as well as essays dealing with a broad range of topics)."
Another good market that accepts a broad variety of genres.
THE MID-SOUTH REVIEW
midsouthreview@yahoo.com
From the writer's guidelines:
"We like great humor, serious and literary stories of any type or style (nothing gimmicky). We like short-shorts as well as fully-rendered work;always reject gore, violence, hate, erotica, and science fiction. If you’re still not sure, familiarize yourself with previous issues before submitting."
They are not a paying market, but the last time I checked they were still active.
ECLECTICA MAGAZINE
submissions@eclectica.org
From the Writer's Guidelines:
"Eclectica is a quarterly World Wide Web journal devoted to showcasing the best writing on the web, regardless of genre. "Literary" and "genre" work appear side-by-side in each issue, along with pieces that blur the distinctions between such categories. Pushcart Prize, National Poetry Series, and Pulitzer Prize winners, as well as Nebula Award nominees, have shared issues with previously unpublished authors."
Good electronic market, active and easy to submit to as their formatting requirements aren't unnecessarily difficult.
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