Not exact matches
Library Journal and
Publishers Weekly star it, with LJ writing, «Beautifully crafted and smartly written, this fairy - tale novella is everything that
speculative fiction readers look for: fantastical worlds, diverse characters, and prose that hits home with its emotional truths.»
Unfortunately I will pass on reading your work, as I publish
speculative fiction genres and I would never be able to do yours justice as a reader, editor or
publisher.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer BewareRecently, Big 5
publisher Simon & Schuster announced the launch of two adult trade
speculative fiction imprints: Saga Press, which will do both print and digital, and Simon451, which will also do print an... -LSB-...]
An upside of being a writer of
speculative fiction is that if your
publisher pulls your ebook file and replaces it with a new one you can be sure that one of your readers is going to hack the files and analyze what's changed.
My attempt to restore this weekly feature on my blog was thwarted a few months into the year by a series of challenging, distressing, exhilarating, and generally overwhelming events — from editing a new
speculative fiction anthology to the death of my mother - in - law, from a six - week home renovation to a partial roof collapse at my place of employment that caused 100 - hour work weeks, from caring for a sick bunny (he's better now, thankfully) to building a new website for one of the small - press
publishers I work with.
A
publisher that is specifically looking for
Speculative Fiction with minority characters that is 60 - 120k words long should not simply post an open call for submissions, but rather specify exactly what they're looking for.
Dr. Lindy Ryan is owner and
publisher of Black Spot Books, a traditional publishing house publishing titles in
speculative fiction, including genres of fantasy, dark humor, thrillers, and paranormal.
Our stories take place in the here and now (or close to it) but have a twist of
speculative fiction — the type of stories that don't quite fit into the the nice, neat categories most traditional Christian
publishers offer.
In Christian
fiction dragon stories and their success — books such as the Dragons in our Midst series by Bryan Davis and The DragonKeeper Chronicles by Donita Paul — had much to do with opening up traditional
publishers to
speculative fiction