

#Popshot submissions windows#
Can you afford to be without it?Įditor Laura Silverman and Art Editor Alicia Fernandes operate submissions windows and would love to see your work (words or visual) as soon as the next theme is set.įor updates go to or email or visit: Popshot MagazineĪ man in a blue gabardine and trilby is walking through a yellow wall.
#Popshot submissions plus#
Not to mention those cute otter cubs gambolling over front and back cover by Vector That Fox.Ī £20 subscription buys you four issues a year plus free access to Popshot’s digital archives of more than 500 stories. Plus so many gorgeous illustrations – among my favourites Adamastor Studio’s depiction of my poem ‘Butterfly Night’ (see above) Elisa Puglielli’s neat block work the fluid lines of Joanna Layla’s ‘Chosen’ black & white pointillist portraits by Renzo Razzetto Charlie Davis’ ravishing colour palette and the surreal impact of Jorn Kaspuhl’s work. There are haunting stories about hemiplegia, a giant squid and a Texan ghost by Jeremy Adam Smith, Jenny Holden and Joe Giordano flash fiction by Alice Ash and Jack Somers as well as poetry by Claire Booker, Rachel Bower, Jo Brandon, Helen Cox, Michelle Marie Earl, Audrey Molloy and Emma Tilley, among others. The current (Dream) issue is headlined by Hodder author Lydia Ruffles. It’s a picture book for adults with imagination and flair – a genuine treat to read, pulsing with the unexpected. I find myself returning to old issues time and time again. We are often planning and looking one or two issues ahead as we are reviewing and soliciting submissions.I dreamt I had a poem published in Popshot then woke up and found I really did! A quarterly magazine of flash fiction, poetry and short stories mouth-wateringly illustrated by more than 20 cutting-edge artists – that’s what dreams are made of.Įach issue of Popshot works to a theme and draws submissions from across the globe. We publish two issues a year, approximately the middle of the month in January and July.
#Popshot submissions software#
Other journals use this fine software so you may find that you are already registered, but in any case this will make tracking your submissions easier for us and for you.

If curious check out our Duotrope editorial interview linked on the Welcome page.

We enjoy and often try to publish more than one poem from an author whose work we accept in order to show a poet’s range. We also appreciate poets who workshop or blog online who are writing seriously, constantly, uniquely and interestingly who are not currently finding much of an audience for their work, but deserve one. We welcome prose poetry submissions specifically, and other kinds of work that utilizes or springboards from a tradition or conventions but is not afraid to step out and take risks if warranted. We welcome poetry submissions from poets with or without name recognition or publication credits. Look at the last couple of issues to see what has impressed us in the past and to get a feel for our editorial tastes and biases.
