no. 18

AI is flooding libraries, but at least MSWL day is coming. This is fine.

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hey there.

As always, thanks for signing up and scrolling through. I hope your pitches and/or queries land and the words flow this week.

Without further ado.

Table of Contents

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tips for freelance writers + novelists

craft

The idea that shaking things up helps with creativity can feel like an old wives tale. Yet for writer Marty Ross-Dolen, experimenting with unconventional techniques — her grandmother's letters for erasure poetry, creating speculative conversations, and even writing TV scripts to tell her family's story — helped her write her memoir. Breaking free from traditional memoir formats and allowing yourself to "play" with different forms can unlock new ways to tell personal stories that might otherwise feel too daunting to tackle. (The Brevity Blog) 

Want to write more authentic characters? Novelist Eimear McBride's method acting background reveals the key: ditch judgment and use your own emotional experiences as bridges to understand characters from the inside out. Finding personal connections to even your most unlikeable characters allows you to create people who feel real on the page — not just pawns serving your plot. (The Guardian)

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all things book publishing

scams

Beware of a new scam targeting authors with too-good-to-be-true podcast interview offers. They’re promising thousands in payment and millions of listeners as bait to steal personal and financial information. Watch for red flags like unverifiable staff names, generic email domains, and unusual payment requests. Remember: legitimate podcasts rarely pay their guests. If you’re being offered anything more than exposure, the offer is (probably) too good to be true. (Author’s Guild)

publishing news

AI-generated books aren’t just flooding the internet; they’re also infiltrating public libraries through digital catalogs, with thousands of low-quality works hiding behind fake authors and AI-created covers competing for and taking space away from actual human authors. For many, this "vendor slurry" is a wake-up call about the future of digital publishing and the growing challenge of standing out in an increasingly AI-cluttered marketplace. (404 media)

The path to publishing your first poetry book is paved with paywalls. 58% of first-book reading periods charge $20-35, often generating more revenue for the small press from submission fees than book sales. For emerging poets, this means the biggest barrier to launching their career isn't talent but rather the ability to pay submission fees, creating an increasingly exclusive gateway to the publishing world. (Poetry Bulletin)

for querying writers

Reminder:
I have openings + a quick turnaround on query letter edits.

The next #MSWL day is scheduled for Feb 12 at the new official Bluesky location. Starting at 9 am ET, literary agents will share what they wish was landing in their inboxes.

Monica Rodriguez, literary agent at Context Literary, updated her MSWL this week. She’s hoping for more horror and mystery, especially mystery with societal commentary, bipoc main characters, siblings protecting each other, and a side of humor in her inbox. Send queries to: [email protected].

calls for pitches +
paid creative opportunities

FYI: You can sign up for a subscription to receive pitches and creative opportunities a day early or right when I find them. If you appreciate these weekly roundups, feel free to leave a tip or buy me a coffee

Reminder: Vet each opportunity before submitting.
Inclusion does not equal endorsement. 

reported stories + personal essays

Groceries: Mara Weinraub, Senior Editor at The Kitchn, is looking for pitches from new writers who have “ingenious advice and strong opinions about the groceries we buy and the retailers and we buy them from.” She is looking for personal essays, reported features, expert-approved tips, noteworthy trends, cultural phenomena, and more. Rate: $150/300 word story. Pitch: mara.@[email protected].

Outdoors: Ryan Wichelns, founding editor at Trails Magazine, is looking for pitches from through-hikers or members of the Appalachian Trail Community about Hurricane Helene, its impact on the trail/trail community, or its recovery. Pitch: [email protected].

from previous issues

food

Grocery Diaries: Stephanie Pitera Statile, Lifestyle/Entertainment editor at Business Insider, is looking for fresh pitches for their Aldi, Costco, and Trader Joe’s grocery diaries. Rate: $175. Pitch here.

Whisky: Glug Magazine’s sister, Stramash, is looking for contributors who have fresh, interesting things to say about the whisky world. Rate: $.25/word. E-mail pitches to [email protected]. 

Food Writing: Taste Cooking is looking for a variety of topics, including recipes and food culture features. "We’re most interested in your well-reasoned idea. A story with a strong point of view that is backed by clear reporting and/or supported by proven expertise." With your pitch, please include "why you are qualified to write this story. And if we don’t know you, we’d like to see some of your work. Links are great. The pitch should outline the story in detail, with specifics. For us, the excitement comes from not just colorful copy but substance to back it up. A wise turn of phrase is not a substitute for detailed observation and reporting. If you pitch a feature involving recipe development or sourcing from chefs, clips of similar work are required." E-mail pitches to Matt Rodbard at [email protected].

Food: Stephanie Pitera Statile, Lifestyle/Entertainment Editor at Business Insider, is looking for stores on food/beverage rankings, traveling to many US states/countries, and visiting chain restaurants for the first time.

Food: Gastro Obscura is open for pitches. They have a very in-depth breakdown of how to pitch them, including examples of what they’re looking for. Pay: $.50/word.

Food: Vittles Cooking is opening the cooking section for pitches for the first time. Although there are no restrictions on what you can pitch – beyond the need to be related to home cooking in one way or another – they’re especially interested in stories on “the rules don’t matter” (the pleasures of ignoring the ‘right’ way of doing things), “..maybe they do” (techniques and approaches that transforming/optimize cooking), “cooking and work” (fitting cooking into daily life), “cooking and climate crisis” (impact of ecological disasters and seasonal disruptions in markets and the kitchen), “cooking under duress (what it takes to keep yourself/others fed during illness, grief, turmoil), and recipe sets. They’re also particularly interested in hearing from people whose work challenges the traditional European and/or American-centred perspective of mainstream food writing. Rate: £150/40p a word for shorter pieces, £500 for 500 - 800 word essays. Pitch: [email protected] with the subject, COOKING PITCH.

travel

Moving abroad: Conz Preti, deputy editor at Business Insider, is looking for pitches for stories comparing US vs other countries (i.e. did you move to another country and parenting was easier?). Send pitches to [email protected]

Travel: Stephanie Pitera Statile, Lifestyle/Entertainment editor at Business Insider, wants short (500 - 600 word) essays on disappointing travel experiences. Think: your dream vacation didn’t live up to the hype, an underwhelming cruise, and regrets about moving countries or states. Plus, stories on travel to many US states or countries. Rate: $200. Pitch here.

Food/Drink/Travel: Daria Smith at Late Checkout seeks travel, food, and drink stories with Gen Z energy. Pitches must be newsworthy/have a news angle (why does this story need to be told now?) and have accompanying visuals. Successful pitches also focus on one specific column, are 200 words max, nail Late Checkout’s voice, and have a fleshed-out concept. Rate: $200. Read full pitching guidelines here. E-mail pitches to: [email protected].

New England Travel: Jen Rose Smith, editor at Seven Days, is always looking for pitches for a travel series “about visiting Québec aimed at people living in Vermont.” “We're next-door neighbors, so stories can assume some basic familiarity. (i.e., this is not the place for ‘Montreal!! A cosmopolitan wonderland with Euro flair!!’)." They generally cover places within a few hours of the Vermont border — Montréal, the Eastern Townships, Québec City, etc., “but we're also open to big, dreamy stories that showcase how vast and diverse the province is.” Rate: $250-$325 for 1,200-1,800 words. Pitch: [email protected].

Travel: Atlas Obscura is open for pitches. They have a very in-depth breakdown of how to pitch them, including examples of what they’re looking for. Pay: $.50/word.

Travel: Off Assignment seeks submissions for their "Letter to a Stranger," "Under the Influence," "No Equivalent," "What I Didn't Say," and "Witching Hour" columns. Only completed drafts are considered for publication. Simultaneous submissions are accepted. Pay range: $100 (Witching Hour) - $300.

Outdoors: Ryan Wichelns, founding editor at Trails Magazine, is looking for North American-focused pitches for features and reviews for upcoming issues with the themes of “Efficiency” (Issue 10) and “Connection" (Issue 11). Rate: $0.50 per word. Pitch: [email protected].

home + garden

Mortgages: Jessica Orwig, senior editor at Business Insider, is looking for pitches of personal essays about home mortgages. “Are you aiming to pay, or have paid, your mortgage off early? If yes, why, and has it been beneficial? Or do you refuse to pay off your mortgage early and are using those extra funds for other endeavors?” Rate:$250. Pitch: [email protected].

Moving: Paige DiFiore, Deputy Editor of Lifestyle and Entertainment at Business Insider, wants pitches from “folks who moved away from a place they loved living in for years, moved for a job or a partner's job, unexpectedly fell in love with living in a place they never thought they'd love or have lived many places until finding one that they adore.” Rate: $240 for 600 - 700 words. Submit pitches here.

Renovations: Paige is also looking for stories from writers who “recently did renovations and remodels and have regrets. Outdoor spaces, bathrooms, kitchens, fixer-uppers — you name it.” Rate: $230 for 600 - 700 words. Submit pitches here.

parenting + relationships

Parenting: Rosemary Donahue, Health & Parenting editor at Business Insider, is looking for pitches of personal essays on “co-parenting, nontraditional engagements, parenting in 40s or older, not following milestones in relationships in the traditional order, supporting a family financially/being the breadwinner,” and more. Rate: starts at $225 for about 600 words. Pitch: [email protected] with [Pitch: Your proposed headline] as the subject line.

Parenting: Conz Preti, deputy editor at Business Insider, is looking for pitches on feel-good stories, parenting teens, having kids later in life/not having grandchildren, comparing US vs other countries (i.e. did you move to another country and parenting was easier?). Send pitches to [email protected].

lifestyle + culture

Personal Stories: Jessica Reed, head of narrative at The Guardian US, is always looking for pitches about “normal people. Normal people who go on, endure, preserve, resist.” Think: “Walmart workers, broke teachers, gentrifiers meeting the gentrified, struggling surgeons, hard-working farmers, taxi drivers on the brink, unhoused people who choose to go to jail, etc.” Pitch: [email protected].

Culture: Douglas Greenwood, film editor at i-D, is looking to commission across “culture, fashion, art, and photography for i-D this month. op-eds, new talent profiles, left-field looks at what’s cool rn, and introductions to what will be cool tomorrow.” Pitch: [email protected].

Health, Culture: Starlight Williams, editor at Nat Geo, is open to “smart (not academic), interesting (not just to you), and relevant (to a global audience)” pitches. Some examples include hidden histories, health explainers, health debunkers, or “I wonder” stories. Be sure to include sample hed/dek that matches Nat Geo style, plus a Nut Graph that answers the 5 W’s, emphasizing why you are telling this story, and your bio plus relevant clips. E-mail pitches: [email protected].

Literary Life, Culture: LitHub is always open to pitches about "literary life and culture," especially "the ways that books or their authors fit into the culture at large.” They also note they “enjoy rigorous criticism for a general audience." Send pitches (2 - 3 paragraphs outlining your idea) to [email protected].

Features on Echoes: Sophia Epstein, editor at Digital Frontier, is looking for pitches for features on the theme of “echoes.” This can be interpreted as “however you want — as long as it relates to emerging and digital tech, and its impact on our lives.” She's interested in past cultural movements, strange theories about tech moguls being historical figures reincarnated, and more. Rate: up to £0.30 per word. Pitch: [email protected] by February 4.

Neurodivergent Living: Lauren Quinn, managing editor at Motley Bloom, is always looking for pitches of “voice-driven pieces that feature lived experiences of neurodivergence” on “travel, beauty, home design, work and career, product reviews–anything that falls under the umbrella of Neurodivergent Living.” Rate: $300 (short articles) to $500 (longer researched and/or first-person pieces). Pitch: [email protected].

Gaming: Jack King, British GQ contributing editor, is always looking for writers (including US-based) to help expand gaming coverage. “I'd love to meet some great writers — especially with experience across profiles and in-depth feature reportage, and a distinct voice — in the space.” Pitch: [email protected].

gender/identity/sexuality

LGTBQ+ History: QueerAF is looking for pitches for 700-1000 word history articles for Trans+ History Week. They want 'think piece’ style histories, aiming to be thought-provoking and speculative, focusing on the lessons we can learn from history. To pitch, you must provide examples of previous work, a working headline, and four to five bullet points about what your article will cover. One of these bullet points should tell us how the piece will conclude with what learning there is from this history lesson. Pitch here.

More to Her Story is open to pitches for news and feature stories centering on women’s and girls’ rights globally. Submit pitches here.

literary magazines

Many literary magazines pay to publish your creative work, whether they’re short stories, essays, poems, or other mediums. ChillSubs has an amazing (free) database you can use to find the right opportunities.

For this issue of this literary life, I’ve included a curated list of literary magazines with submission deadlines on or before February 16.

Reminder: Vet each opportunity before submitting.
Inclusion does not equal endorsement.

Smokelong Quarterly is looking for flash narrative submissions of up to 1,000 words. Pay: $100. Deadline: February 15.

GriffithReview is accepting non-fiction submissions for GriffithReview89 Here Be Monsters with a max of 4,000 words. Pay: AUD$.075/word. Deadline: February 16.

remote writing + editing jobs

Since we’re all already on LinkedIn, I will do my best to find remote writing and editing jobs not on LinkedIn and/or are set to Easy Apply. These job listings were active when this newsletter was scheduled to be published (Feb 8) but may have expired since.

You can sign up for a subscription to receive job opportunities either day early or right when I find them. Or, if you appreciate these weekly roundups, feel free to buy me a coffee.

Reminder: Vet each opportunity before submitting.
Inclusion does not equal endorsement.

Seahawk is looking for a full-time Content Writer to join their team. You will be responsible for creating blog posts, social media posts, and other digital materials. Ideal candidates have over four years of experience in content creation, good knowledge of SEO tools, and experience using Google Docs, Google Analytics, WordPress, and social media tracking software.

Lucid is adding a full-time Entry-Level Content Writer to their team, to help research, plan, and develop training materials for Minecraft players. Candidates must have Zen Desk, Office365, and Sharepoint experience and will ideally have at least one year of experience writing video game-related content. Rate: $29 - $31/hr.

Everyday Health wants to add a full-time Editorial Assistant to their team. You will be responsible for helping to manage the editorial content pipeline, assigning new articles, and helping to recruit new freelancers. Ideal candidates have CMS, SEO, and digital editorial experience, especially in health, fitness, or wellness. Pay: $50k - $65k.

from previous issues

Angi wants to add a full-time Staff Writer to its team to produce high-impact content that promotes the Angi and HomeAdvisor brands. Ideal candidates have 3 - 5 years of experience creating search-driven content, working in a CMS like Contentful, and a degree in Marketing, Communications, Journalism, or a related field. Pay: $60k - $70k plus benefits.

Dotdash Meredith is hiring multiple remote roles for PEOPLE Magazine: a full-time Digital Morning News Editor ($35 - $38/hr), a full-time Digital News Writer-Editor ($35/hr), and a full-time Digital News Writer-Editor (Crime) ($35/hr).

Dotdash Meredith is also looking for a full-time News Updates Editor for Better Homes and Garden and a full-time contract Business & Finance News Writer for Investopedia.

Gymshark Central wants to add more freelance writers to its database. Writers should have experience in fitness, wellness, food, or fashion.

Everyday Health is looking to hire more freelance editors. Ideal candidates have experience working on clinical and lifestyle content. They should also be able to write assignment briefs, edit new and updated content, and perform minor updates to optimize existing content. The rate is $30/hr. 

Axios is hiring a full-time Media Editor to join their team. You will be responsible for “overseeing and elevating” all aspects of their coverage, including newsletters, breaking news, live events, and membership programs. You will also support the reporting team “in pursuing scoops, data-driven insights, and distinctive pieces that dig deeper than the obvious storylines.” Pay: $110,000 - $145,000 + benefits.

Additionally, Axios seeks a full-time Senior Technology Reporter. The ideal candidate is “obsessed with chronicling the companies and individuals who are building AI. You must be well-sourced inside the major tech companies and AI upstarts, and eager to break stories and explain the day’s news to Axios readers.” Pay: $87,500 - $175,000 + benefits.

The Dallas Morning News is looking for a full-time Interactive News Developer. You will be responsible for partnering with “reporters, editors, photographers, videographers, and audience engagement editors to help develop visualizations, tooling, and workflows for ambitious, in-depth investigative stories and quick turn dailies. You'll also be able to pitch, report, and develop your own project ideas.” Ideal candidates have front-end coding experience (HTML, CSS, JavaScript) as well as experience with data analysis tools, web scaffolding knowledge, and back-end web development experience.

Eleven is adding more freelance Topic-Expert Writers on a rolling basis. Ideal candidates have “subject-matter expertise as demonstrated by a Bachelor’s degree or equivalent or 3+ years’ industry or relevant writing experience,” plus familiarity with SEO, research skills, and the ability to take constructive feedback. Pay: monthly basis.

Dexerto is still looking to hire more freelance TV and movie writers to pitch stories and accept commissions. Ideal candidates have an “understanding and knowledge of the TV and movie landscape” and experience with CMS, Google Sheets, and SEO. 

The Nerd Stash is looking for part-time weekend Entertainment and Celebrity reporters. Ideal candidates have a proven track record in covering celebrity news, soap operas, reality TV, and related entertainment verticals at established media outlets.

recommendations

books

podcasts

Netflix recently put out Apple Cider Vinegar, a dramedy similar to Inventing Anna about Belle Gibson, an influencer who faked having brain cancer. One friend said they inhaled this TV show in one day after only intending to watch an episode or two. Before (or after) you watch that, I highly recommend listening to the Maintenance Phase episode about Belle Gibson.

And as always, here are the podcasts I listen — and re-listen — to.

limited series

culture, news, politics, history

books, movies, tv, writing

true crime

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