... do you need to be an editor of a poetry journal?
I'm asking for a friend. He's had a lot of poems published in online journals; he's had one poetry book published; his second poetry book is forthcoming. He's very pleasant, if that helps, and he'd be supported by me, in an admin role. Cue good use of gmail's auto-response setting
Sorry if I've posted in the wrong area; happy to shift if need be
Best wishes,
Fliss
What qualifications...
My advice:
Don't get buried in the submission process...this is the best approach:
https://autumnskypoetrydaily.com/submission-guidelines/
No hassle for either side, editor/poet, and the mag gets read! The contributors don't have to wait months for rejection!
Publicity...I find some pubs on here...
https://www.nawe.co.uk/the-writers-comp ... sions.html
Word soon gets around Facebook/twitter
I've noticed some mags cultivate their regulars to guarantee a standard of submission. Or attach themselves to a forum like the sphere.
Hope that helps some
MacPhil
Don't get buried in the submission process...this is the best approach:
https://autumnskypoetrydaily.com/submission-guidelines/
No hassle for either side, editor/poet, and the mag gets read! The contributors don't have to wait months for rejection!
Publicity...I find some pubs on here...
https://www.nawe.co.uk/the-writers-comp ... sions.html
Word soon gets around Facebook/twitter
I've noticed some mags cultivate their regulars to guarantee a standard of submission. Or attach themselves to a forum like the sphere.
Hope that helps some
MacPhil
That helps plenty, MacPhil!
Quite a streamlined approach from Autumn Sky there, which is good. I think I'd still be inclined to set up an auto-response, just to acknowledge receipt. It would be very courteous
At the moment, we have in mind a quarterly publication, but we were discussing monthly at some stage. The latter option would work better with the AS approach, perhaps. Hmm...
Thanks for the link to NAWE; that's great! I'm fairly proficient with Facebook and Twitter, I suppose. Yes, I've noticed some cultivation of regulars too. I've been thinking it might be better to make sure submissions are anonymous, so they'd come to me and I'd just forward the poems, without poets' names, to the ed. I wouldn't want to attach to the 'sphere in general, but I could post a link there and here and elsewhere, once we know what we're doing. We're also in favour of guest editors, just to keep things fresh, I suppose
Thanks again!
F.
Quite a streamlined approach from Autumn Sky there, which is good. I think I'd still be inclined to set up an auto-response, just to acknowledge receipt. It would be very courteous
At the moment, we have in mind a quarterly publication, but we were discussing monthly at some stage. The latter option would work better with the AS approach, perhaps. Hmm...
Thanks for the link to NAWE; that's great! I'm fairly proficient with Facebook and Twitter, I suppose. Yes, I've noticed some cultivation of regulars too. I've been thinking it might be better to make sure submissions are anonymous, so they'd come to me and I'd just forward the poems, without poets' names, to the ed. I wouldn't want to attach to the 'sphere in general, but I could post a link there and here and elsewhere, once we know what we're doing. We're also in favour of guest editors, just to keep things fresh, I suppose
Thanks again!
F.
Hooray! Thanks, MacPhil
Themes are fun too. I think I submitted to Snakeskin for the first time when it was a short poems issue.
The overall theme of this magazine will be music, but there's scope within that for particular prompts, pocket poems, etc. We'll be open to all styles
<-- mini-keyboard
Themes are fun too. I think I submitted to Snakeskin for the first time when it was a short poems issue.
The overall theme of this magazine will be music, but there's scope within that for particular prompts, pocket poems, etc. We'll be open to all styles
<-- mini-keyboard
Yay!
Perhaps that could be the first issue. I tend to think of a pocket poem as 16 lines or fewer, but it could be smaller still.
Thanks for your responses, MacPhil; much appreciated! Off to make tea now and maybe have a biscuit too
Perhaps that could be the first issue. I tend to think of a pocket poem as 16 lines or fewer, but it could be smaller still.
Thanks for your responses, MacPhil; much appreciated! Off to make tea now and maybe have a biscuit too