KayEn78
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 124
How interesting and exciting! Good luck with that, I hope this one gets accepted like your other article did. That one was a great and fascinating read. 
-Kristi
-Kristi
How interesting and exciting! Good luck with that, I hope this one gets accepted like your other article did. That one was a great and fascinating read.
-Kristi
How much time do they give you from when you send your article, to when it is officially accpeted? This is after rewrites, if any. Do they pay you if your article is submitted? Just wondering, because there are some places that pay and others that do not.
-Kristi
Shangas - I wish you luck in getting your short fiction published. I love how the magazines from the Golden Era had so much fiction published in them. A lot of writers made a good living that way.
Thanks!
Yes, a lot of famous writers started out that way - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Charles Dickens among them.
Problem is, I can't find many of the same such magazines/journals here in Australia. I have found one, but I'll need to tailor my writing a bit to fit it into their parameters.
Oh, and I sent off my piece to the Reader's Digest this week after a few alterations and edits.
*Crosses fingers for money*
In the meantime, I'm on the sixth page of writing my new murder-mystery short-story/novella.
When I was growing up "Yankee" magazine, "The Magazine of New England," published some of the best short fiction in the business, in all styles -- atmospheric, suspense, humor -- and I really looked forward to every issue. And then they got a new "hip" editor who turned it into a glossy "lifestyle" publication for people who want to pretend they were born here, and the fiction was the first thing they dropped. Apparently the kind of people who read magazine fiction aren't the kind of people hip, upscale advertisers want to reach.
I started a western fiction magazine (FAR WEST) back in 1978, and over the course of five years (and five golden spur awards for short fiction) managed to loose a little over $500k before calling it quits and killing off the title. Surprisingly people still buy, subscribe to, and read magazines (there are probably 300 titles on sale at my local Books-A-Million store); the difficulty for a publisher comes when trying to balance the cost of production (staff and paying writers, overheads, etc.) and the cost of printing (both ink and paper are petrochemical products) and sales. Most magazines achieve about 30-35% newsstand sales (for every 100 copies put out on the stands about 30-35 copies are sold); printing costs can be as high as 40% of the cover price, and distributors generally take a 30% commission, leaving the publisher with about 30% of the retail cover price-- out of which he has to pay the writers, pay his staff, and -- hopefully -- pay himself. So, if you distribute 100k copies to newsstands, you might sell 35,000. If the cover price is $5 that's total sales of $175,000, of which the publisher receives about $50,000 from which he has to pay all of his costs. A small publisher would probably get by with a staff of eight, with an average paycheck of about $1,000 per week (a low figure for the publishing industry). This works out to a spend of $32,000 per month for staff, which leaves the publisher with $18,000 per month for things like rent, heat, electricity, employee health benefits, and -- oh yes -- buying in the stories that he publishes. A 5% bump in the price of oil, and a publisher can be out of business in 90 days...