
Taking Submissions: Hearth Stories 2025 March Window
March 31
Deadline: March 1st–31st, 2025
Payment: 1¢ per word for accepted stories (with a minimum of $20 regardless of length)
Theme: Speculative fiction that explores connection, family, relationships, comfort, and the natural world.
Submissions will be open as follows:
- March 1st–31st (closing at 10pm PST on the 31st), for a June release
- September 1st–30th (closing at 10pm PST on the 30th), for a December release
What to send
Hearth Stories publishes slice-of-life stories with a focus on nature, forests, connection, family, romance/relationships, and comfort/kindness. We are primarily focusing on stories set in a pre-industrial-revolution time period (or a fantasy world resembling such), preferably not in city settings.
We accept works from 1,000 words up to 10,000. However, the ideal length may be something in the 1,500-3,500 word range. We do not currently accept poetry or non-fiction. We will potentially accept literary fiction (i.e. non-speculative work) if it takes place before ~1825 or so, please let us know in your cover letter if you are submitting a story that is not speculative (this is a new type of submission for us and we want to gauge interest).
Things we are looking for
- Cozy, sweet, cute, kind, hopeful, and romantic stories (especially, but not limited to, queer romance)
- Medievalism, peasant life, arthurian-style settings and stories (without the war and combat), chivalry
- Rural/pastoral life, village fairs/festivals, herb gathering, traditional crafts (sewing, weaving, spinning), and song (include lyrics or sheetmusic if you have them)
- Works that take place in nature, wooded spaces, mountains, and fields, stories that feel like spring (or, really, involve or evoke any seasons in a meaningful way)
- Stories involving food and cooking. However, we are a vegan publication; stories that feature animal products may result in a pass on the story or a request for removal of the animal products
- Stories involving hermits, issolated places, cottages, or wandering in the woods
- Witches, paganism, magic
- Bonus points for stories backed by vegan, anarchist, collectivist, communal, and eco-conscious themes
More generally, we are wanting the small adventures of daily life rather than adventures with swords, conflict, etc. We accept simultaneous submissions (but we do not accept multiple submissions at the same time, unless specifically requested).
It seems unlikely that we will be sent any, but: we would potentially love to publish works in middle english, early modern english, or a made up version of english (for example, like the one used in The Wake by Paul Kingsnorth). Maybe let us know in the cover letter if you send us something in an alternate version of english like this (we will be very excited).
What not to send
Please review the what to send section, as it is a better guiding light for what we are looking for than a list of negatives. However, there are a few specific things we do not want:
- Do not send AI generated content (the contract will include this stipulation)
- Works featuring violence, threat of violence, war, military themes, weapons, killing, or combat
- Technology. If your story has a cell phone, cars, spaceship, etc. it will be an automatic pass from us. We are generally wanting settings to resemble the early industrial revolution or before (think roughly pre 1830 in europe) and anything with a more modern setting is a pass from us (unless the setting can happen completely removed from all mdoern technollogy and still be modern, future, etc)
- Pieces that we have already passed on, unless very significant rewrites have occured
- Christmas stories. I’m not sure why we get so many of these. We aren’t interested
- Dragons and unicorns are very very hard sells for us. Please do not send them
- Works that are more or less retellings/adaptations of very well known fairy tales (cinderella, snow white, etc.)
- Reprints or translations
Pay scale
Authors deserve to be paid for their work, even by a magazine that professes itself to be non-commercial. As such we offer 1¢ per word for accepted stories (with a minimum of $20 regardless of length). We would love to be able to offer more, but we are not bringing in any money to offset the cost and the given amounts are what we, as individuals, can bear financially to support authors while continuing to release the magazine.
How to format your submission
We do not accept hard-copy manuscripts. As such, you will be sending a digital file. Here are our preferences in that regard:
- Please include, at a minimum, your e-mail address and the word count on the manuscript
- Send the file as: rtf, doc, docx, odt, or md
- Use any font and font size you like (we will adjust to our preferences anyway)
Where to send
Write to us at [email protected] with the following:
- The subject will follow this format: “HS Submission: [Story Name] [Word Count]”
- The file, formatted as described above, will be attached to the e-mail (we do not accept links to files)
- The e-mail body will include, at a minimum, the author’s name and a short, 3rd person, author bio
- The e-mail body will not include a synopsis of the story being submitted
Failure to submit in the above format will result in your story being passed on unread. We regret having to institute a format like this, but to combat a massive amount of spam we have been getting we want to know that folks at least took the time to look at these submission guidelines. If you have any trouble or you e-mailed and forgot to follow one of these items: reach out and let us know. We’re happy to work with you. Mostly we just want people to have read the guidelines. We value your time and want to read your work and appreciate you taking the time to submit to Hearth Stories.
What next?
We will e-mail you to confirm that we have received your piece. We will also be in touch by e-mail to let you know if we are passing on your piece, moving your piece to a further reading round, or interested in accepting your piece for publicaion. Unfortunately, we will no longer be maintaining a checkable reading queue. If you do not get an e-mail confirmation that we received your story within two weeks of sending: please reach out and check with us.
We do ask that you notify us if you have placed your submission elsewhere under a contract that would prevent it from being featured in Hearth Stories. In such a case, please include the word “WITHDRAWN” in the subject line.
If your submission is deemed a good fit, an offer e-mail will be sent out. Then suggested edits may be worked through, contract will be signed, and payments will be sent. Nice and simple. Then, at the appointed time, the issue containing your work will be released. Your name (as author of the work), the story, a copyright notice assigned to you (as author of the given work), and an author bio will all be included in the issue.
Via: Hearth Stories.