Hi all!
Verandah is a literary and visual art journal published in Melbourne, Australia.
2013 will mark its 28th year in print and editors are currently seeking submissions of short literature including flash fiction and poetry. There is a lot of talent here and we'd love to see contributions from the LitReactor community become part of the journal's long history. Deadlines are May 1 for art and June 1 for words.
For guidelines, check out www.deakin.edu.au/verandah
Happy writing!
Kyah Horrocks, editing team
Why is there a submission fee?
Don't worry, Brandon hates all new literary journals (See litreactor.com/columns/author-beware-new-lit-mags). One must have touched him on his "special place" when he was a child.
Nice alt account, "Alexis."
Ten dollars? No thanks dude.
I don't see the fee as the biggest red flag. I see the blatant typo on your home page as the biggest evidence that this is not a journal I'm excited to submit to.
A ten dollar submission fee and a contributor copy as payment. That is laziness. Charging writers to keep your publication going instead of actually hustling some journals.
Despite the fee and the typo, the biggest flag to me is this:
Don't worry, Brandon hates all new literary journals (See litreactor.com/columns/author-beware-new-lit-mags). One must have touched him on his "special place" when he was a child.
- Is this how you let your editors speak to potential writers for your journal? For the record, I'm with Brandon on this. I doubt 'Alexis' is a real person, and if she is, why isn't she noted on the site?
Seeing as I've only submitted a few things in my very short writing career (but have never had to pay anything to submit), I'm not all that versed in how common the practice of charging submission fees is. I looked through this journal's entire website, and on one of the pages, they claim that most of the premiere literary magazines and sites charge submission fees (or something to that effect) so I'd love to hear from any of you more experienced submitters out there just how common this actually is.
Despite the fee and the typo, the biggest flag to me is this:
"Don't worry, Brandon hates all new literary journals (See litreactor.com/columns/author-beware-new-lit-mags). One must have touched him on his "special place" when he was a child."
- Is this how you let your editors speak to potential writers for your journal? For the record, I'm with Brandon on this. I doubt 'Alexis' is a real person, and if she is, why isn't she noted on the site?
I think you read that wrong, you missed the comma in their response. They were addressing Alexis, not saying that Alexis was one of their editors. I had to read it twice myself, no worries...
^ Hmmm... I thought it was missing a comma after 'editors'. Oh well, regardless, I ain't payin'.
@Strange
It's out there, but definitely not the norm.
PANK charged for a while, but I don't think they are anymore. Word Riot, Cream City, Glimmer Train. None of them charge for submissions.
I don't see what makes them premiere. I've never heard of them. There isn't a preview or a contributors list anywhere.
$10 is really high. I've only paid once ($2), and this was to bump my story to the top of the slush pile and it was an optional fee. Spark also charges if you do not submit within a certain period, which I can also understand and accept.
So, basically you're telling me this Verandah thing is most likely a scam?
I don't think it's a scam. A terrible business model...probably.
But they're students, guys. Give them a lil break. It's nice that they get to do that on their campus.
Students at plenty of other universities do the same type of journal, with no fees. These guys have funding from the school and they have sponsors. Do print on demand or something.
Everyone who has posted in this thread, as well as those who will come to post, should all submit and pay the submission fee. That would be an easy way of determining whether or not it's a bunk deal. If it's a scam we would only be, so far, collectively short by one hundred dollars. big deal.
right guys?
edit
got excited. i dont know how to delete posts, or capitalize on this clumsy website.
I'm more into making money, son, not giving it away.
I think if you had a list of contributors or a blurb or two, people would be more into the journal. I don't doubt your legitimacy, having been running for 28 years, but you need something more than, we're in print, we're awesome, to entice writers from overseas. How big is your circulation? Things like that.
Maybe offer a semi-recent issue for free as a PDF.
Most writers aren't going to shell out the $25 for an issue to see if they have something along your lines and then $10 to submit.
I type with an abrasive tone, but I'm really not trying to come across as an asshole.
Kyah, thank you for the response.
Just to clear something up, I know you didn't make the "Alexis" account. No worries there.
I believe the core issue with this journal is essentially you'd like us to pay to be in a publication none of us have ever heard of. Regardless of a 28 year publication history, that's a hard pill to swallow, especially when we're constantly being given various leads on publications that don't charge--or even better--pay. As I said, I don't believe this to be a scam...but paying to submit something is going to turn a lot of people off.
These guys are legit, I've seen them around, even thought of submitting. BUT even with a growing trend of charging $1-3 for submissions, even some journals charging a MANDATORY fee to submit, I've never heard of a $10 fee to submit a short story, when you don't pay anything in return. It's not just you guys, Kyah, I wouldn't pay a mandatory $3 fee to ANYONE. I have paid $10 to submit to a few contests, such as BOMB (a very well known magazine) but I got a subscription AND the prizes were HUGE (lots of them, and big money). Maybe things are different down under, and maybe a student run journal has to raise it's money in different ways, but I think you'll find a LOT of resistance to this here at LR and other places. MAYBE if the fee was $1-3 and there was payment of the stories. MAYBE. Hell, if any of you LR guys have the spare cash, a great story, and dig the aesthetic (the design IS pretty cool) take a shot. I mean, what's $10? The price of a movie? Lunch? A pint or two at the local pub? Your call. But I won't be spending $10 to submit. Best of luck, Kyah.
Just joined, and I'm sure this thread has long gone the wasy of the dodo, but I just want to agree that $10 is far too high of an investment for submitting a short story that might not even get published. That said, I would like to say that I really enjoy your journal's visual asthetic. Quite nice. Would love to check out an online version to get a feel for the type of fiction you tend to publish.
A lot
A lot of placs have fees. Either you do it or not. the magazines have to make some money too. I don't mind paying a little bit now, until I get Awesome.
Sadly, with recent government cuts to university funding...
It's a wonderful time to be an Australian student, is it not?
"sigh"
EDIT: actually, I take that back... we still have it amazingly good here, I'm a little embarrassed for complaining.
I don't have a problem with a small, optional fee. But when it's a $10 MANDATORY fee, and they don't pay anything in return, that's where I get hung up. The money needs to funnel back to the author, IMO. Not the other way around.
^^^
What Richard said.

