Print magazines are not quite a thing of the past, even if many, if not most, have been supplanted by electronic formats. So, in this age of the Internet, why publish in print?
It is immensely satisfying to actually hold a volume that contains your work, for one thing. And for another, it is easier to get your work reprinted in an online format if it has first appeared in print. (That being said, some of the following journals employ both.)
All of these literary magazines pay, and none charge submission fees. Some have submission periods, so read their guidelines carefully.
Happy submitting!
(Image: Look and Learn)
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Reckoning. Genre: Creative writing and art about environmental justice. Payment: 8 cents a word for prose, $30 per page for poetry, art negotiable, minimum $25 per piece.
One Story Genre: Literary short stories. "They can be any style and on any subject as long as they are good. We are looking for stories that leave readers feeling satisfied and are strong enough to stand alone." Single stories are sent to email subscribers every month. Length: Up to 8,000 words. Payment: $500 and 25 contributors copies.
West Branch. Genre: Poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and translation. Payment: $50 per submission of poetry, and $.05/word for prose with a maximum payment of $100.
AGNI. Genre: Poetry and prose. Payment: $10 per printed (or printed-out) page for accepted prose, and $20 per page for accepted poetry, up to a maximum of $150.
The Fiddlehead. Genre: Fiction, including excerpts from novels, creative nonfiction, art, and poetry. Payment: $60 CAD per published page. See submission periods.
Small Beer Press: Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet. Genre: Fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and black and white art. “The fiction we publish most of tends toward but is not limited to the speculative.” Payment: $0.03/word for prose ($25 minimum), and $10 for poems. Submissions must be mailed.
Fourteen Poems Genre: Poetry. "We want to represent all that's thrilling about the new wave of LGBT+ poets. If you’re a poet, even if you’ve never been published before, we want to read your work. Every issue we publish 14 of the best queer poems we’ve found, and we want to include you! We publish 4 times a year, but take submissions all year round. To be considered, email up to 5 poems, preferably in a pdf format, with a small paragraph about yourself to hello@14poems.com. Payment: £25 for each poem published.
Star*Line is the official print journal of the SFPA, established in 1978. It is a literary venue for speculative (including science-fiction, fantasy, and horror) poets and poetry enthusiasts, and features interviews, articles, reviews, member news and letters, association business, and poetry—by members and nonmembers. Genre: Poetry, nonfiction, art. Payment: Poetry: 3¢/word rounded to next dollar, minimum $3. Short articles on topics related to science-fiction, fantasy, and horror speculative poetry - 1 cent/word. Cover art pays $10; interior art pays $5. One copy to all contributors.
Crow Toes Quarterly. Genre: Playfully dark fiction, poetry and art for children. "We are looking for "playfully dark", intelligent, humorous, descriptive literature written for children ages 8 - 13. We invite poetry and fiction submissions by email." See themes. Payment: $20 - $50.
Bourbon Penn. Genre: Slipstream, cross-genre, magic realism, absurdist, and the surreal. "We are looking for highly imaginative stories with a healthy dose of the odd. Odd characters, odd experiences, odd realities." Length: 2000 - 7500 words. Payment: 2¢ per word. Print and online.
Filling Station Magazine. Genre: Innovative poetry, fiction, non-fiction (creative non-fiction, reviews, articles, interviews, live event reviews, photo essays, etc) Payment: $50.
Rattle. Genre: Poetry. "We’re looking for poems that move us, that might make us laugh or cry, or teach us something new. We like both free verse and traditional forms—we try to publish a representative mix of what we receive." Payment: $200 for print publication. All submissions are automatically considered for the annual Neil Postman Award for Metaphor, a $2,000 prize judged by the editors.
Bennington Review. Genre: Fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, film writing, and cross-genre work. Payment: $100 for prose of six typeset pages and under, $200 for prose of over six typeset pages, and $20 per poem. Print and online.
Storm Cellar Genre: Fiction, poetry, art/images/graphics, and hybrid work. For hybrid works, send up to 15 pages and pick a home genre. “We want your prose, poems, chimeras, and ideas penned on envelopes in buses and train cars. The magazine aims to publish amazing work by new and established writers and artists, present a range of styles and approaches, and be as un-boring as it can. If you write one thing to be read while waiting for the all-clear to sound, send it here.” Payment: $10. Print and ebook.
Ninth Letter "We are interested in prose and poetry that experiment with form, narrative, and nontraditional subject matter, as well as more traditional literary work." Payment: $25 per printed page, with a maximum payment of $150.
No submission fee during November and December.
Poetry Wales. Genre: Poetry, features and reviews. Payment: Poems £20/page. Reviews £67.50/1500-word review. Articles £200/3000 word, or in that proportion, depending on number of published words. Print and online format. See submission periods.
Hermine. Genre: Short fiction up to 4,000 words. Payment: $50 to $200 CAD per story, plus two contributor copies.
The Poetry Box is published by Off Topic Publishing (CANADA). Submit 1-3 poems of any style and theme by the 25th of each month. Poems received after the 25th will be considered in the next batch. The poem should be no more than 15 lines (including blank lines). One poem will be selected for publication each month and printed postcard-style to be mailed out to Poetry Box subscribers.
Payment $40 CAD.
Quagmire.
Genre: Fiction. "Absurd situations, surreal settings, experimental plots, characters, and ideas. We want whacky, weird, and everything in between."
Payment $50 CAD.
Weird Horror Magazine.
Genre: Horror and weird fiction from 500 to 6,000 words.
Payment: 1.5 cents/word.
Deadlines:
Open to submissions in March and September.
Pulp Literature.
Genre: Any genre or between-genre work of literature, or visual art (black and white for interiors, color for covers) up to 50 pages in length. Short stories, novellas, poetry, comics, illustrations.
Payment: $0.05 – $0.08 per word for short stories (to 7000 words), $0.03 – $0.06 per word between 7000 and 10000 words, and $0.02 – $0.04 per word for works over 10000 words. Poetry and interior illustrations pay between $25 – $50. Sequential art (graphic novels and cartoons) and illustrations are at a rate of $25 to $75 per page.
Rivanna Review.
Genre: Stories, essays, book reviews, art, and poems.
Payment: $100 per story or essay, $50 per book review, $50 per poem, $100 for 4 photographs or drawings.
Cōnfingō Magazine publishes new short fiction, poetry and art from around the world in a print-only magazine. Stories may be in any style or genre but should not exceed 5,000 words in length. Poems (maximum of three) should be no longer than 50 lines. Artwork must be available in high-res suitable for printing to A5.
Payment: £20.
Fieldnotes is a biannual print journal publishing new writing and artworks with a focus on practices that work between disciplines and against type.
Genre: “We are seeking non-conforming submissions: ideas in transition, poetry in translation, collaborations and conversations, works between genres, between fiction and theory, between text and image, new poetic modes and things-in-progress.”
Payment: £100-£200.
See submission periods.
Brink.
Genre: Hybrid, cross-genre fiction, nonfiction poetry.
Payment: $25 Poem; $50 Work (less than 1500 words); $50 Art (1-3 Images); $100 Art (4+ Images); $100 Work (more than 1501 words).
See submission periods.
AFAR Magazine publishes a range of reported features, personal essays, opinion pieces, photo essays, illustrated features, short fiction, poetry, and shorter middle-of-book pieces. "Instead of more traditional aspirational lifestyle travel stories, we tell the stories of a place and the people who live there."
Payment: Starts at $1/word.
Full Bleed is an annual print journal exploring the intersection of the visual and literary arts.
Genre: Criticism, belle lettres, visual art, illustration, fiction, poetry, and graphic essays. "We are always happy to feature collaborations between writers and artists; ekphrastic creations; and groundbreaking critical essays."
Payment: Modest honorarium.
See submission periods.
The Four Faced Liar is a new print journal that accepts fiction and creative non-fiction (up to 4000 words); flash fiction (up to 1000 words); poetry (up to 3 pages); visual art (1 piece).
Payment: €200 for a short story or CNF piece, €100 for a poem or piece of flash, and €100 for visual art, as well as a copy of the magazine for each contributor.
See submission periods.
fron//tera is a bilingual print magazine.
Genre: Nonfiction (up to 5,000 words), fiction, poetry, art. Submissions can be in Spanish or English. They also publish short dual-language English and Spanish pieces side by side.
See theme.
Payment: $25 - $50.
See submission periods.
Toronto Journal.
Genre: Short stories from anywhere in the world. "We will also consider non-fiction pieces about local history (Toronto, GTA, and surrounding)." No word limit.
Payment: $50 CAD per piece. All published writers will also receive two printed copies of the issue in which they appear.
See submission periods.
Thema.
Genre: Fiction, poetry, and art on themes
Payment: $10-$25 for short fiction and artwork, $10 for poetry.
See submission periods. Accepts reprints.
GreenPrints.
Genre: Personal essays about gardening. “Calling all experienced gardening writers—we seek gardening stories that are true and personal, expressive and thoughtful, and humorous and witty. We focus on the human, not the how-to, side of gardening, so your story should be entertaining, moving, unexpected, touching, and funny—a heartfelt story you would tell a friend or family member.”
Payment: $100 - $150.
Baltimore Review.
Genre: Poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, videos (including poetry), and cross-genre work.
Payment: $50.
Mslexia is a quarterly geared to women. The magazine includes prompts, competitions and workshops for writers. "There are 17 opportunities to submit for women writers of all specialisms – poetry, fiction and nonfiction, with five slots kept solely for subscribers to the magazine. There’s something to tickle any writer’s creative fancy."
Payment: £25.
Prairie Fire is a Canadian literary magazine.
Genre: Fiction, poetry, CNF on themes.
Payment: Prose: $0.10 per word; Poetry: $40 per poem for print issues.
Seaside Gothic.
Genre: Seaside gothic fiction, poetry, nonfiction, or a collection of photographs or illustrations.
Payment: £0.01 per word.
See submission periods.
Brick.
Genre: Nonfiction.
Payment: $55–685, depending on the length of accepted work, plus two copies of the issue the work appears in and a one-year subscription to the magazine.
See submission periods.
Hermine.
Genre: Short fiction. Stories must be under 4000 words.
Payment: 8 cents a word (CAD).
See submission periods.
The Stinging Fly is an Irish magazine that accepts submissions from around the world.
Genre: Fiction, nonfiction, poetry.
Payment: Fiction and nonfiction: €30 per magazine page; Poetry: €50 per poem; Featured Poet: €250.
See submission periods.
Gray's Sporting Journal accepts fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Their main focus is hunting and fishing, but they also publish yarns, features, and travel pieces. They publish one poem per issue.
Payment: They pay from $600 to $1,250 for features, based on quality, not length; yarns average $600; poems, $100. They pay $50 to $300 for photographs. For Expeditions pieces, they pay $850 to $1,000 plus $75 per picture published. All payment is made upon publication.
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine welcomes submissions from both new and established writers. "We publish every kind of mystery short story: the psychological suspense tale, the deductive puzzle, the private eye case—the gamut of crime and detection from the realistic (including the policeman's lot and stories of police procedure) to the more imaginative (including "locked rooms" and "impossible crimes"). We need hard-boiled stories as well as "cozies," but we are not interested in explicit sex or violence."
Payment: From 5 to 8¢ a word, sometimes higher for established authors.
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