If you are interested in participating, please fill out this form.
About
There was a tension that Spiderman/Peter Parker had with his secret identity; how did he interact with his loved ones? His ordinary bullies (that he could have easily defeated), etc. This is NOT intended to be a superhero anthology. You could have a retired spy, someone in the witness protection program, a benevolent billionaire who wants to see how the real people live, a former celebrity just wanting to live their life, an android seeking to pose as human, an alien wanting to do research for their doctoral study, someone who gives a great gift anonymously (secret benefactor), or the flip side: a criminal who hides their identity so they can get away with a crime (or so they think), etc.
These are the stories, flash fiction, and poems that delve into reasons why someone might have a secret identity and how they (and those that love or hate them) deal with this reality.
Not all the stories and poems need to be serious/dramatic; there is room for humor. There are many reasons to have a secret identity (to protect self, to protect family, to avoid the limelight, protective coloring, shyness). Humorous situations could arise when expectations are not fulfilled. E.g., the superhero with the valiant disguise discovers that everyone could see through the disguise all along, even the villains, but they were all humoring him for their own reasons. Or the secret philanthropist finally wants someone to know it was her all along, but fate thwarts each opportunity she takes to discreetly drop hints.
Formats
This anthology will support three formats of entries:
- Short stories (up to 3000 words)
- Flash fiction (up to 1000 words but ideally 750)
- Poems (Ideally 1000 words or less)
Genres
There are no limits on genres or genre combinations.
Schedule
Date | Description |
Jan 18 | Kick-off (Saturday) |
Feb 23 | First drafts due Sunday, Feb 23 (five weeks after the kick-off) |
Mar 08 | First round of inter-author critiques due (2 weeks; critiques will be assigned rather than free-for-all) |
Mar 29 | Three weeks to redraft: second drafts are due |
Apr 12 | Two weeks for inter-author critiques: due |
May 3 | Three weeks for rewrites: third draft due |
May 17 | Final critiques due (two weeks) |
Jun 7 | Final draft due (three weeks) |
Jul 5 | Editor reviews completed |
Aug 2 | Author final edits completed |
Aug 30 | Final layouts; submitted to KDP |
PG-13
All stories must fit within the PG-13 rating. Would you share this story with your 13 year old son, daughter, niece, or nephew? This applies to the topic/theme of your story or poem, the language used within it, and the actions the characters take. If you have questions about this, please talk with the Editors.
Editors
- Tim Yao
- Jenny Johnson
- Tauna Sonn-LeMarbe
- Cathy Goodman
- Milda Willoughby
Authors
- Tim Yao
- Lauren Rogers
- Kira Swanson
- Leslie Gail
- Savannah Reynard
- Todd Hogan
- Jenny Johnson
- Paige Adams
- Jenn Bauer
- Sue Wachowski
- Elaine Fisher
- Frances Moritz
- Ana Koulouris
- Liz Hall
- Karen Stumm Limbrick
- Mary O’Brien Glatz
- Brian Cable
- Steve Fortuna
- Tim Paulson
- Barbara Lipkin
- Sarah Vu
- Tauna Sonn-LeMarbe
- Jennifer Stasinopoulos
- Lara Krupicka
- Amelia Kouba
- Susan Ekins
- Yolanda Huslig
- Keshia L. Nowden
- Bonnie B. Bradlee
- Diana Jean
- Debra Kollar
- Cathy Goodman
- Annerose Walz
- Bevan Das
- Milda Willoughby
- Vikki Williams
REQUIREMENTS
Editors will jointly decide which pieces to include and reject. Feel free to submit up to two short stories and up to three to four flash fiction and/or poetry pieces as you wish but know that no more than three pieces per author will be included in the final draft. Our goal is that every Journey member who submits pieces will have at least one piece included in the final draft, but this may not be guaranteed – especially if we receive an overwhelming number of submissions. In light of this, we encourage you to take full advantage of the critiquing process to best hone your stories or poems. The anthology is a group collaboration, and each story serves to represent not just the individual author but also the collective efforts of the Writing Journey. For this reason, stories that do not meet basic standards of grammar, for example, will be deemed unpublishable. All critiques are made with the intention of making the best anthology possible – weigh them all with an open mind.
We are asking that stories do not exceed 3000 words, though some exceptions may be made. Just because you have 3000 words does not mean you ought to use them all – please consider how long your story you are trying to tell really is. And again, we’re shooting for a PG-13 rating. If you’re not sure some of your content meets that requirement, go ahead and submit it and see what reviewers say – you may need to edit it out, but maybe not.
The editors will read and comment on every story/poem submitted (typically not full critiques but to provide directional guidance).
If you are interested in participating in this anthology, please enter your information here.
Process
There will be three rounds of inter-author critiquing, editing, and new drafts after first drafts are submitted. In each of the three rounds, every author is required to critique three pieces for each piece that they have submitted. In general, each author is limited to three pieces submitted to the anthology. The editors will give feedback to each author on first drafts and on third drafts.
Authors will need to sign a contract that gives first publishing rights to the anthology for both print and e-book publications of the anthology. Authors will decide together if they will share the expense for a professionally designed cover (we did this for Near Myths; all other anthologies either had covers done by authors or by friends of authors). See writingjourney.org/books for links to other Journey anthologies.
Cover mock-up
2 comments
Tim, I must commend you on the detailed, professional and beautiful work you apply to The Writing Journey publications and programs. Not, to mention, but I, of course, am, all the help you give to the blind (in my case). Not a case of the blind leading the blind, but the Gifted leading the trip over her own feet, skirt hems, and wheels. (You will understand that line better once you meet my electric chariot in person.)
I had questions about the newest anthology, and this answers most of them before I even had to ask (pester you again).
I do have a few more regarding the Anthologies. I do not see a style requirement for submission and I was wondering if complying to something like the “Chicago Elements of Style” would help when it came to editing. I was told lately that New “York Times Roman” was one of the fonts most used, but that for proof-reading the structure of “Courier” made it easier to catch mistakes for content and formating. I am curious if this would make your job easier as well.
The second question has to do with the dates for submissions, etc. Due dates are shown but would it be bad form to put written pieces in our folders early. Blame my fever but pinned to my bed, as the old joke goes, “A poem, a flash, and a short can stumble into my folder at any moment.”
And because all good and bad things are said to come in threes. Have you considered having internal illustrations, or is that even possible with your formatting program?
We typically follow the Chicago Manual of Style. Early submissions are fine. And internal illustrations are possible, but they must be black and white. Thanks!