Part I of this feature listed 10 personal essay markets. Now we’re bringing you more venues that love printing this distinct and accessible style of writing. We spoke with editors at pubs that focus on everything from sex and parenting to what those with a green thumb experience from the human, rather than how-to, side of gardening.
So get those great ideas ready and be sure to come back for our final installment of the print markets in Part III, as well as our digital guide in Part IV.
11. Elle
Elle uses personal narrative as a way to explore the gray area of hot-button issues, from health to culture, so timeless “chestnut” topics probably won’t get ink. An example of a past piece explored how one woman crossed the line from Facebook friends to a full-blown affair.
Length: 2,000 words
Pay: $2 a word
Assigning editors: Rachel Baker, RACHELBAKER at HEARST dot COM; or Ben Dickinson, BDICKINSON at HEARST dot COM
Dickinson’s advice: “They’re called personal essays for a reason, so please be as open as possible in your manuscript.” Elle editors say they hate getting submissions that read as if the writer is holding back.
12. Geez
Geez is a quarterly Canadian publication for social-justice-minded readers on the fringes of faith. With roots in the Christian tradition, it’s for the over-churched, out-churched and unchurchable. Geez is ad-free, feminist, post-colonial, LGBTQ inclusive, eco-conscious and class sensitive. Look for the magazine’s call for pitches on its website or send an email to STORIES at GEEZMAGAZINE dot ORG to be added to its writers’ email list.
Length: 650 to 1,300 words for creative nonfiction pieces; 50 to 350 words for flash nonfiction essays
Pay: $25-$75 or more, depending on length
Assigning editors: Aiden Enns and Kyla Neufeld, AIDEN at GEEZMAGAZINE dot ORG, KYLA at GEEZMAGAZINE dot ORG (send submissions to STORIES at GEEZMAGAZINE dot ORG)
Neufeld’s advice: “We look for stories of people subverting our assumptions of the North American way.”
13. Good Housekeeping — “Heart-to-Heart”
“Heart-to-Heart” is Good Housekeeping’s personal essay page that runs in the “Real Life” section. It seeks submissions on a wide range of topics (relationships, parenting, loss, aging).
Length: 500 to 750 words
Pay: $1,000
Assigning editor: Kristen Mascia, KMASCIA at HEARST dot COM
Mascia’s advice: “We’re quite open to ideas as long as they take readers on a little journey.” Writers who’d like to try out an essay will find it helpful to read BLESSINGS: Reflections on Gratitude, Love, and What Makes Us Happy (Sterling, 2009), a selection of Good Housekeeping essays by well-known writers who were invited to contribute.
14. GreenPrints
Known as “the weeder’s digest,” GreenPrints focuses on the human, rather than how-to, side of gardening. “After all, gardening is a relationship, not a recipe,” said editor Pat Stone.
Length: Up to 2,000 words
Pay: Up to $150
Assigning editor: Pat Stone, PAT at GREENPRINTS dot COM
Stone’s advice: None, other than his detailed (and humorous) writer’s guidelines.
15. Guideposts
Guideposts is an interfaith magazine that seeks uplifting true stories about how faith has helped you overcome an obstacle or changed your life. A past example includes a story of a lawyer who intended to go on a short missions trip to Uganda and ended up fighting for incarcerated youth.
Length: 750 to 1,500 words
Pay: $250-$500
Assigning editor: Rick Hamlin, RHAMLIN at GUIDEPOSTS dot ORG
Hamlin’s advice: “We are looking for narratives of personal change with vivid scenes. They must offer some spiritual help to the reader.”
16. Hemispheres — “Travel Essay”
Hemispheres is United Airlines’ in-flight magazine. Its travel essay column is open to freelancers. Rather than covering any specific places or travel experiences, the column aims to get at how travel can be a transformative experience or can challenge travelers’ notion about themselves or the world around them. One successful essay involved the author being forced to rethink his feelings about the human victims of wild animals after confronting a hungry lion on safari. Other successful essays included one about the joys of rediscovering your hometown through the eyes of a tourist, and another about the security that a wary traveler found in a hotel robe.
Length: 900 words
Pay: $900
Assigning editors: Jordan Heller and Chris Wright, FIRSTNAME at HEMISPHERESMAGAZINE dot COM
Heller’s advice: “Rather than pitch, just write the damn thing and send it in. If we like it, we’ll print it and pay you for it.”
17. Knit Simple — “Last Stitch”
“Last Stitch” essays should tie into either knitting or crochet. There are no other guidelines.
Length: 1,000-1,200 words; essays of shorter length will not be considered.
Pay: $150
Assigning editor: Leslie Barber, LESLIE at SOHOPUBLISHINGCO dot COM
Barber’s advice: “Writers should tell a story that will resonate with fellow stitchers.”
18. Literary magazines (see The Examined Life, Hunger Mountain, The Threepenny Review, Tin House)
Are essays for literary magazines different from those for consumer mags? “It’s not that literary writing is ‘good’ and consumer magazine writing is ‘bad,'” said writer Alle C. Hall, a teacher at Richard Hugo House. “Consumer magazines are looking to get information to the reader, so the writing needs to be good, but it’s not everything. In a literary magazine, the writing is the whole point.”
Length: Typically 3,000-5,000 words, though a few take up to 10,000. There’s also a category called the short-short for pieces under 1,000 words, as can be found in Brevity.
Pay: A few literary magazines pay a flat fee for essays, such as The American Scholar ($500), but many pay in copies only. Most of the ones that do pay, such as The Antioch Review and The Georgia Review, typically pay per printed page, and that can range from $1 a page to $50 a page.
Hall’s advice: “As everyone says, read the journals — but how, right? Follow two publications for a year, either online or through a subscription. If a writer can identify which publications make the most sense for his or her style and voice, the writer will spend far less energy on rejection.”
19. Los Angeles Times — “L.A. Affairs”
This first-person column in the Saturday section chronicles romance and relationships, and the essay should tie into Southern California. A past example is a woman who reunites with a college friend on an online dating site and finds love was there all along.
Length: 750-850 words
Pay: $300
Assigning editor: Assistant managing editor Alice Short. Please submit essays to HOME at LATIMES dot COM.
Editors’ advice: In addition to details outlined in our submission guidelines, we’re especially on the lookout for stories about new and recent relationships that give a sense of today’s dating scene.
20. Marie Claire — “Love + Sex”
Marie Claire’s “Love + Sex” section is looking for strong, literary writing and nonformulaic essays based on compelling personal stories about the ways that smart, empowered women are navigating relationships and romance, heartbreak and sexuality, partnership and singlehood.
Length: 1,000-1,500
Pay: $2 a word
Assigning editor: Lane Florsheim, LFLORSHEIM at HEARST dot COM
Editors’ advice: We’re happy to review pitches or full submissions. Writers should definitely review past issues to get a sense of our style.
21. Men’s Journal — “Essay”
This adventure-travel magazine publishes a first-person story in its “Essay” column each month. A recent example was a piece by a runner who suffers from a compulsive need to train.
Length: 2,000 words
Pay: Varies, depending on writer skill and topic
Assigning editor: Ryan Krogh, RYAN dot KROGH at MENSJOURNAL dot COM
Fischer’s advice: “Review past examples. Our favorite essays uncover meaning through action.”
22. More — “Attitude,” “Memoir” and “Second Sex”
More welcomes strong writing and a fresh point of view that targets the mag’s demographic (women in their mid-30s and above); that often means the writer is in that age group, too. “Memoir” essays range further and deeper than “Attitude,” mapping personal growth and relationships over time. “Second Sex” essays are written by men.
Length: “Attitude” runs 1,200 to 1,800 words; “Memoir” runs up to 3,500 words; “Second Sex” runs 1,200 to 1,800 words.
Pay: Roughly $2 a word
Assigning editor: Cathleen Medwick, CATHLEEN dot MEDWICK at MEREDITH dot COM; Nanette Varian edits Second Sex, NANETTE dot VARIAN at MEREDITH dot COM; Laura Sinberg edits work-related essays, LAURA dot SINBERG at MEREDITH dot COM
Medwick’s advice: “Parenting [topics aren’t] taboo, though our readers are likely to have older children.”
23. The New York Times — “Modern Love”
Everyone has an equal shot at this “human relationships” column that consists of unsolicited submissions, including the occasional book excerpt. All essays are read, and editor Dan Jones aims to respond to submissions within six weeks, but response times may vary due to volume and backlog. Review “Q&A: Modern Love” and the Modern Love Facebook page, where Jones has posted a bunch of tips and comments that writers might find helpful.
Length: 1,600 words
Pay: $300
Assigning editor: Dan Jones, MODERNLOVE at NYTIMES dot COM (read more of his tips on twitter @danjonesnyt)
Jones’ advice: “Although we seek to present a broad range of relationship experience, this range does not extend to a love of places, pets or books. And we receive far too many essays about the death of a loved one for how often we can cover that topic.” Both the Modern Love anthology and the book Love Illuminated give great insight into the column. Writers should also review submission guidelines.
24. The New York Times — “Private Lives”
These personal essays from writers around the globe share stories about the lives of individuals, such as family dynamics (“All Parents Are Cowards“), emergencies (“What Would You Grab in a Fire?“) or loss (“Giving Up My Small-Town Fantasy“).
Length: 900 to 1,200 words
Pay: Varies
Assigning editor: Honor Jones; send submissions to OPED at NYTIMES dot COM
Jones’ advice: Please review past examples.
25. Pacific Standard — “Life in the Data”
Here’s how editor Maria Streshinsky describes “Life in the Data” columns: “Our back page consists of a short personal narrative essay about the interaction between a big social or behavioral pattern — be it demographic, psychological, economic, geographical or cultural — and one’s own personal, lived experience.”
Length: 750 words
Pay: Generally $1 a word
Assigning editor: Maria Streshinsky, MSTRESHINSKY at PSMAG dot COM
Streshinsky’s advice: “We’re looking for personal narrative essays about the experience of being a number; of wrestling with facts; of the tension between intuitive, instinctual, emotional experience and cold, bloodless, sublime fact. We’re not looking for reporting stunts; we’re looking for first-person experience.”
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