Attention, Philadelphia Poets!

Guidelines and applications for the 2006 Pew Fellowships in the Arts are now available. This year fellowship applications are welcome in the fields of poetry, performance art, and sculpture and installation. Grants of $50,000 are awarded to selected applicants, who must be “verifiable Pennsylvania residents of Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, or Philadelphia County for two years or longer immediately prior to the application deadline.” There is NO APPLICATION FEE INDICATED. Click here for more information and application forms.

Needles in a Haystack? Paying Markets for Long Poems

Here’s how this article came to be: on a discussion board a poet mentioned encountering some difficulty trying to locate paying market possibilities for a longer poem. She was finding that most guidelines specified line limits that didn’t accommodate her work, or they didn’t address the question at all.

So the next time I checked all the guidelines for our e-book directory of paying poetry markets (I do recheck each and every source when I revise the e-books; I’ve once again updated and expanded the poetry market directory just this past month), I made a note of publications that seemed particularly welcoming to longer poems, saying as much on their websites.

I posted a couple of times back on the thread to let that poet know about what I was finding. Now all of our own practicing poets can benefit, too.

Artful Dodge
Department of English
College of Wooster
Wooster, OH 44691

Literary journal. Send six poems, maximum. Note that “long poems are encouraged.” Pays $5/page, plus copies.

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Gettysburg Review
Gettysburg College
Gettysburg, PA 17325-1491

Literary journal where “both short and long poems are of interest, including longer narrative poems.” Pays $2.50/line for poetry. Contributors also receive two copies of the issue containing their work and a one-year subscription.

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Massachusetts Review
South College
University of Massachusetts
Amherst, MA 01003

Literary journal. Submit up to six poems. “There are no restrictions in terms of length, but generally our poems are less than 100 lines.” Pays $.35/line for poetry ($10 minimum) on publication, plus 2 copies.

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Meridian
University of Virginia
PO Box 400145
Charlottesville, VA 22904-4145

Semiannual, student-edited literary journal. Submit no more than five poems. Doesn’t mind long poems “but we aren’t likely to publish any ‘epics.'” Pays $15/page, $25 minimum and $250 maximum. “These amounts are subject to change without notice.” Download a complete printer-friendly version of the guidelines at the site.

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New England Review
Middlebury College
Middlebury, VT 05753

Literary journal considers “long and short poems.” Submit no more than six poems at a time. Pays $10/page, $20 minimum, plus two copies of the issue in which your work appears.

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The Pedestal Magazine

Online literary journal is “open to a wide variety of poetry, from the highly experimental to the traditional formal.” No length restrictions. Pays $30/poem.

And don’t forget the Malahat Review’s biannual Long Poem Contest (it does charge a fee). For details on this competition, open to both Canadian and foreign entrants (and to be held again in 2007), check with the journal.

(This article was originally published in The Practicing Writer Newsletter, October 2005.)

Attention, New York Writers!

The Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts offers both summer fellowships (one-month residencies at the Saltonstall Arts Colony open to all New York State artists and writers over 21 years of age–categories include poetry; fiction and creative nonfiction; photography; and painting, sculpture, and other visual arts) and individual artist grants ($5,000 grants open to writers and visual artists living in specified New York State central and western counties). For 2006, individual artist grant categories include works on paper; photography; poetry; and creative nonfiction. The application deadline for both programs is January 15, 2006. For more information, including detailed eligibility guidelines and the required forms, visit the website.

A Change in the (Submission) Seasons

NEWN (formerly New England Writers’ Network) publishes on a quarterly basis and describes itself as “devoted to helping writers around the world to get published and to teaching through content and example.” And its submission period has very recently changed. Regular submissions will now be welcome from January 1 through March 31. This is a low-paying market for fiction, essays, and poetry (but a paying market nonetheless). Read more about it and check the guidelines here.