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Taking Submissions: Old Moon Quarterly: Fantasy Soul-Like Issue

June 1, 2023

Submission Window: May 1st – June 1st, 2023
Payment: 8 cents per word
Theme: Souls-like” fantasy for this issue: things that remind you of Dark Souls, Elden Ring, Blasphemous and so on.

Old Moon Quarterly is opening to general submissions on May 1, 2023, and the call will last until June 1, 2023. 1000-6000 word limit, 8c a word. We published dark fantasy and weird sword-and-sorcery. We are looking for what we might call “Souls-like” fantasy for this issue: things that remind you of Dark Souls, Elden Ring, Blasphemous and so on. We want dying earths and strange vistas. We want knights fighting against the rotting corpses of their god. We want witches struggling with the decay of memory and the mutability of identity. We want baroque prose, and spare prose, and everything in between, so long as it is melancholy, and tragic, and bloody.

What  We  Want

Old Moon publishes character-focused, weird sword-and-sorcery: stories of a dark and transgressive nature, set in a secondary or historical-paranormal (“our” reality, but with a twist, if you will) world, with a focus on rounded characters undergoing some sort of conflict, resolved (though not always successfully!) by the might of their main or mind.

We love stories that combine that sense of action and adventure with well-rounded characters who make us question our own realities and perceptions. We love to see the gothic, the baroque, the eldritch, and we love to see it hit with an axe.

Weird fiction and sword-and-sorcery can both be slippery terms. That is part of the fun! But, for our purposes we know it may help prospective writers if we list a series of authors and their stories we feel encompass (at least in part) what we love about the borderland of sword/sorcery and weird fiction:

Laird Barron (“Oblivion Mode,” “Ode to Jode the Toad”)

E.R. Eddison (The Worm Ouroboros)

John R. Fultz (“Chivaine”)

Robert E. Howard (“The Shadow Kingdom,” “Worms of the Earth”)

Caitlin R. Kiernan (“The Sea Troll’s Daughter”)

John Langan (“The Savage Angela in: The Beast in the Tunnels”)

Tanith Lee (Birthgrave, “Southern Lights”)

C.L. Moore (“The Black God’s Kiss”)

Silvia Moreno-Garcia (The Return of the Sorcereress)

Michael Shea (Nifft the Lean)

Clark Ashton Smith (“The Charnel God,” “Necromancy in Naat”)

E. Catherine Tobler (“The Living, Vengeant Stars, “And After the Fire, A Still Small Voice”)

Gene Wolfe (“Bloodsport”)

The list could go on and on, of course, but we feel those provide a representative sample of the work we enjoy. We do not ask for pastiches of their work, but simply as examples of the diverse tones and forms weird fiction and sword/sorcery may take when at their best.

Characters: We want defined, rounded characters who encounter and interact with conflict of some kind (preferably weird!) over the course of your story.

Narrative style: We’ve a broad taste in styles, from the poetic to the plain. Our preferred prose is vibrant yet readable. Particularly poetic prose can win us over, but it must always support the story itself.

Point-of-View: We prefer limited POVs: first-person and third-person limited, for example, but will accept any if done well.

Grammar: We tend to prefer works that stick to established rules of written English, though we understand the need to deviate for artistic purposes.

Originality: We want original works that speak with your authorial voice and flair. Though we love Lovecraftian works, for example, we are not necessarily all that enthused by straight pastiche. 

Setting: We prefer medieval and antique-adjacent settings, though we’re not strict on that point. But in general, we prefer something either pre-gunpowder or early-gunpowder. It can either be a version of our own real world, or a constructed secondary world (or a combination thereof).

Extreme Content: We do not mind violence or sexual content, but we prefer it not be the sole or defining feature of a work. Gore for gore’s sake, extended torture scenes, depictions of extreme violence/conduct done to children, drawn-out erotic scenes and so forth are not right for our venue.

Submissions Guidelines

Length: 1000-6000 words. This is a hard limit, unfortunately.

Simultaneous Submissions: We do not accept them. 

Multiple Submissions: We do not accept them. Send only one story at a time, please, and only one story per submission window.

Reprints: We do not accept them at this time, unfortunately.

Language: English.

Rights: We purchase first world electronic rights and first-world print rights This means you cannot publish a story we buy as a first-run or “new” story anywhere else in the world; this means it can only be published elsewhere as a reprint, typically at a much lower rate. 

Payment: We pay 8c (0.08 USD) per word per short story. Payment occurs within 30 days of online publication, via PayPal.

HOW TO SUBMIT

Please send submissions as a .doc or .docx file to Old Moon’s email: [email protected]

Title your email “Submission: [title].”

Provide a short, 1-2 line cover letter with the story’s name and word count. Please do not provide an intro or synopsis of the story (we like to be surprised).

We’d appreciate if your manuscript was in something approaching “Standard Manuscript Format,” as well.

Via: Old Moon Publishing.

Details

Date:
June 1, 2023
Website:
https://www.oldmoonpublishing.com/submissions

Venue

Old Moon Publishing
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Organizer

Old Moon Publishing
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