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  1. Jul 30, 2020 · Here’s a list of ten free literary magazines that publish great literature and, for the most part, accept submissions year-round. So now you won’t have any excuses for getting your work out there!

  2. Sep 21, 2020 · This could be a short story, essay, one or more poems, a book review, an interview, or something entirely different. We ask that you review the submission guidelines as they directly apply to each category.

  3. Dec 9, 2020 · Dark romance collection. Hush, hush / Becca Fitzpatrick. This ed. first published: 2010 -- Evercrossed : a Kissed by an angel novel / Elizabeth Chandler. This ed. first published: 2011 -- The replacement / Brenna Yovanoff. This ed. first published: 2010 -- Raising demons : a Hex Hall novel / Rachel Hawkins. This ed. first published: 2011.

    • The Tell-Tale Heart'' by Edgar Allan Poe. I’ve said before and I’ll say again: any list of mine that can open with Poe will open with Poe. “The Tell-Tale Heart” is a classic for a reason.
    • The Semplica-Girl Diaries'' by George Saunders. This is a story I like to point to when people say literary fiction doesn’t “do” horror. Sure they do; they just rarely call it that.
    • The Colour out of Space'' by H. P. Lovecraft. True confession: I’m not a huge Lovecraft fan. I appreciate him, and some of his stories I really like, but I’m just not quite on the same train other fans seem to be on.
    • Ortolan'' by Dane Huckelbridge. “Ortolan” is one of my favorite stories in recent years. I read it because it appeared on the Bram Stoker Award preliminary ballot a couple years back, and, frankly, I think it should’ve won.
    • Nate Marshall on Barack Obama’s A Promised Land (Chicago Tribune) A book review rarely leads to a segment on The 11th Hour with Brian Williams, but that’s what happened to Nate Marshall last month.
    • Merve Emre on Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (The Point) I’m a huge fan of writing about books that weren’t just published in the last 10 seconds.
    • Parul Sehgal on Raven Leilani’s Luster (The New York Times Book Review) Once again, Sehgal remains the best lede writer in the business. I challenge you to read the opening of any Sehgal review and stop there.
    • Constance Grady on Anne Brontë’s The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (Vox) Restoring the legacies of ill-forgotten books is one of our duties as critics. Grady’s take on “the least famous sister in a family of celebrated geniuses” makes a good case for Wildfell Hall’s place alongside Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre in the Romantic canon.
  4. Welcome to the darkness of - 'Thirteen Revived', a new, revised, and updated 2020 edition of Jonny Newell's most successful book - 'Thirteen', 13 dark short stories and poems for the adult lover of dark tales with horror themes.

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  6. Jun 12, 2020 · The listings below are literary magazines and journal I found which do not charge submission fees and accept unsolicited submission of book reviews. A few are paying, some are print publications, some require a query before you send a review to make sure it’s not a book for which they’ve already published a review.

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