The first and second installments of this feature highlighted 30 pitchable personal essay markets. Round 3 brings you an extra 15 venues that are hungry for your true-life tales. And stay tuned for a list of online markets in Part IV.
31. Proto — “First Person”
This quarterly biomedical magazine published by Massachusetts General Hospital prints first-person articles that originate “at the other end of the stethoscope, presenting essays and commentary from patients, consumers and other medical outsiders,” according to its mission statement.
Length: 700 words
Pay: $700
Assigning editor: Jason Anthony, JASON underscore ANTHONY at TIMEINC dot COM
Anthony’s advice: “Though some of our stories are tear-jerking, they need not be. We look for beautiful writing and a compelling voice. A Massachusetts connection is not necessary.”
32. Psychology Today — “Two Minute Memoir”
In every issue, this magazine on human behavior runs a “Two Minute Memoir” column featuring narratives that focus on interpersonal relationships of the romantic, platonic and familial nature. A past example addressed how a sleepwalker got a handle on her dangerous behavior by finally revealing her nocturnal habits to a man who loved her. Another was a father’s realization that he, like his son, had Asperger syndrome.
Length: 1,000 to 1,500 words
Pay: Up to $1 a word
Assigning editor: Jennifer Bleyer, JENNIFER dot BLEYER at PSYCHOLOGYTODAY dot COM
Editors’ advice: Essays must be written
on spec, so submissions are preferable to pitches. PT is particularly interested in essays focused on more unusual relationships. Because the high volume of submissions received focus on a parent’s mental illness or the loss of a loved one, the bar is especially high on these subjects. Editors cannot respond to every submission.
33. Runner’s World — “Life & Times”
These essays about a running-related experience are open to a wide variety of voices (humorous, reflective, sentimental, etc.). Examples include how running helped a young adult with disabilities feel just like everyone else and how running with a little dog helped an expat overcome her fear of a big city.
Length: 500-600 words
Pay: $700 (generally)
Assigning editor: Christine Fennessy, CHRISTINE dot FENNESSY at RODALE dot COM
Fennessy’s advice: “Essays that work have a larger message. They aren’t just about your favorite run or something funny that happened on a run. The essays that work capture some insight that speaks to a broader audience.”
34. Sierra
With more than 1 million readers, Sierra, the magazine of the Sierra Club, is devoted to exploring, enjoying and protecting the planet. There are several one-page essay slots for human-powered travel, general environmental topics and humor that offer writers the opportunity to craft short, first-person narratives about an experience that relates to the magazine’s environmental or outdoor-adventure themes. You can find examples in its archives. Review submission guidelines.
Length: 600-800 words
Pay: $1 a word, but flat fees are sometimes negotiated
Assigning editors: Jake Abrahamson, Wendy Becktold, Reed McManus, Paul Rauber or Avital Andrews, FirstName dot LastName at SIERRACLUB dot ORG
Andrews’ advice: “Pitch stories with unusual angles and strong narratives. We respond best to ideas about climate issues and solutions, adventure travel, and green-living trends. We aim to tell the story of how people of all cultures are affected by their environment, so if your pitch has a diversity aspect to it, so much the better.”
35. Skirt! Magazine — “Essays”
This magazine about women’s work, play, families, creativity, style, health, wealth, bodies and soul publishes at least two essays each month in its print editions. Each essay should fit one of its print themes and resonate with the publication’s women readers and their interests. Themes for 2015 include: The Local Issue, August (what home means to you); The Go Issue, September (a winning moment in sports); The Numbers Issue, October (write an exact time in the headline — a time you will always remember); The Taste Issue, November (best or worse dinner parties); and The Magic Issue, December (inexplicable events or incidents).
Length: 800 to 1,100 words
Pay: $200
Assigning editor: Skirt! no longer has an in-house editor. A number of different outside editors review essays. Send submissions to SUBMISSIONS at SKIRT dot COM, preferably as a rich text format or an .RTF attachment.
Editors’ advice: Study previously published essays in order to get a sense of what editors choose over time. And be persistent: essays are rejected for a variety of reasons. Sometimes they just miss the mark, sometimes the work isn’t up to par and sometimes editors are looking for a more diverse mix. The magazine has had writers who submitted different pieces up to 10 times before one was accepted.
36. Spirituality & Health
Personal essays run in every issue, both front-of-book and in the features well. A past essay discussed how a woman overcame her skepticism and visited a shaman to heal her broken heart. Another was a man’s simple but emotional story of discussing love and death with his 5-year-old granddaughter. Topics can vary widely but should fall under the umbrella of health and spirituality, which can include personal transformation, the inner life, spiritual practice, wellness or healing. While it is fine to tell personal stories of faith, the magazine shies away from articles that focus on dogma or organized religion. Personal essays are considered on spec only.
Length: FOB runs 500-900 words; features can be up to 2,000 words
Pay: Varies, based on writer’s skill and experience
Assigning editor: Steve Kiesling, EDITORS at SPIRITUALITYHEALTH dot COM
Editors’ advice: While personal essays are an important part of the magazine, editors receive a lot of submissions and look for something that stands out from the crowd. Either the story should be extraordinary, or, if the writer’s covering a universal experience, it should have an extraordinary voice that can shine a new light on a familiar subject.
37. The Sun — “Essays, Memoirs & True Stories”
Each issue of this magazine runs a number of literary essays. Editors tend to favor personal writing, but they are also looking for provocative nonfiction on political and cultural issues. Previously published essays include Cheryl Strayed’s “The Love of My Life” and Mark O’Brien’s “On Seeing a Sex Surrogate.”
Length: 7,000 words max
Pay: $300 to $2,500
Assigning editor: Carol Ann Fitzgerald, The Sun, 107 N. Roberson St., Chapel Hill, N.C. 27516
Fitzgerald’s advice: “Please read the magazine before submitting. And take a look at our submission guidelines.”
38. Washington Post
The “Health and Science” section, published on Tuesdays, occasionally runs first-person stories on topics related to physical and mental health and wellbeing. Past examples include one mother’s struggle with post-adoption depression, and a health economist’s difficulty in navigating the heathcare industry when she had to undergo brain surgery. Most articles, including essays, are reported stories on new developments in health and science.
Length: 900 to 1,500 words
Pay: $0.50 a word
Assigning editor: Pooh Shapiro, POOH dot SHAPIRO at WASHPOST dot COM
Shapiro’s advice: “Writers should expect to know what all the newest research says about their topic, even if they are only writing first-person narratives. Anyone pitching a story should go back and read what we may have written on that topic in the last several years.”
39. Washingtonian — “First Person”
The back-page essay in this magazine should have a Washington, D.C., angle, and it’s best if the writer lives in or has lived in the area. Past examples include a local woman writing about her conflicted relationship with her Hollywood-actor father and a piece about what it’s like to lose (and regain) your hearing in your 40s.
Length: 600 words
Pay: $1 a word
Assigning editor: Bill O’Sullivan, BOSULLIVAN at WASHINGTONIAN dot COM
O’Sullivan’s advice: “Get in fast — 600 words isn’t much space, so you have to set up your story quickly. Be sure you have something to say (an essay as opposed to an anecdote) and fill it with as many specific details and mini anecdotes as possible. Keep in mind that this is a story, not an opinion piece.”
40. Whole Life Times — “BackWords”
Whole Life Times runs one first-person essay per issue. The publication asks for provocative, insightful or humorous stories related to holistic health, yoga, new spirituality or sustainable living. Examples include a man who is concerned about overpopulation but squeamish about his approaching vasectomy, and an Earth Day event organizer who finds unexpected satisfaction in picking up street trash with her neighbors.
Length: 650 words
Pay: $100
Assigning editor: Abigail Lewis, ABIGAIL at WHOLELIFEMAGAZINE dot COM
Lewis’ advice: “This essay should be a personal story that centers on some pivotal or ‘Aha!’ moment in the life of the writer, and should be related to one of our themes [green living, evolving spirituality, social responsibility, health and wellness]. We particularly appreciate humor and stories that tie into our local area of Los Angeles.”
41. Wine Enthusiast — “Last Drop”
Essays for “Last Drop” should involve wine, food, travel, spirits or beer. Although many essays are humorous, they don’t have to be. Think pieces, philosophical or ruminative, are welcome as well.
Length: 400 words
Pay: $1 a word
Assigning editor: Joe Czerwinski, JCZERWIN at WINEENTHUSIAST dot NET
Czerwinski’s advice: “Often a preliminary query or pitch will yield better results than unsolicited manuscripts.”
42. Working Mother — “LOL” and “IMHO”
These fresh personal essays for Working Mother should be about parenting adventures that tie into work-life balance. “LOL” is humorous (a mother’s lament about the fact that her kids always seem to get sick when an important work deadline is pending), while “IMHO” has a more serious tone (a working mom of one whose life plan is thrown off course when she learns she’s pregnant with twins).
Length: 500-600 words
Pay: In-book, from $400; online, from $300
Assigning editor: Barbara Turvett, BARBARA dot TURVETT at WORKINGMOTHER dot COM
Turvett’s advice: “Real and edgy are good here! Dad essays are welcome, too.” Also review writer’s guidelines.
43. The Writer — “Off the Cuff”
Published in most issues, “Off the Cuff” is a personal essay that covers a specific aspect of writing or the writing life and should include some measure of instruction and advice for writers or a takeaway message.
Length: 1,000-1,500 words
Pay: $300
Assigning editor: Meredith Quinn, MQUINN at MADAVOR dot COM
Editors’ advice: Although writing quality, freshness and instructive value are important in our essays, editors are also open to the occasional contrarian and to unexpected or surprising wisdom.
44. Writer’s Digest — “5-Minute Memoir”
In every “Inkwell” (the FOB section), Writer’s Digest, publishes a first-person essay on some facet of the writing life or publishing industry.
Length: 600 words
Pay: 30 to 50 cents a word
Assigning editor: Adrienne Crezo, WDSUMBISSIONS at FWMEDIA dot COM
Crezo’s advice: “Your submission subject should be ‘5-Minute-Memoir.’ The essays we tend to like best are those that break the mold of what you might expect to find in an instructional writing magazine: something with a narrative, something with a strong pulse, something often with a sense of humor. If you’re writing about a topic such as rejection or writer’s block, we’ve tackled those subjects many, many times, so the key is to offer a fresh means of framing the subject in a way that only you can. Read as many 5MM as you can before submitting. This column has a high volume of submissions; those that stand out are focused, error-free and memorable long after they’re read.”
45. Yankee
Yankee publishes personal essays in its features well that tie into life in New England (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont). Click here for an example of an unsolicited essay that was published in Yankee.
Length: Up to 2,000 words (shorter is usually better since space is always a factor)
Pay: $800-$1,200
Assigning editor: Joe Bills, EDITORS at YANKEEPUB dot COM
Editors’ advice: Yankee is focused on seasonality. For example, the publication has an essay about haying that is set in summer, an essay about hunting that is set in November, and so on. See what editor Mel Allen has to say in “The 5 Best, Surefire Ways to Break into Yankee.”