Wednesday 26 January 2022

Over 200 Writing Markets and a Writing Competition

Here is a list containing over 200 writing markets to choose from, and a play writing competition, to help you earn even more money from your writing.

And when you've finished with the list, go over to https://ruthiswriting.com/books/12MTH.html and use the discount code, 12mthpromo, to download your own copy of The 12 Month Writing Challenge for only $9.99 while this less-than-half-price deal lasts. It's already proving popular.  :)

Happy writing and earning.

Speculative Science Fiction Stories
Proton Reader is a new, not-for-profit speculative & science fiction semiprozine.
Accepting stories ranging from 250 to 15,000 words.
Speculative fiction involves speculating in some form or another (directly, indirectly, metaphorically, etc) about the human condition in the immediate or distant future. 
Prefer stories that use technology over stories that use magic.
Payment: $0.08/word for the first 2,000 words, and $0.02/word after that.
Deadline: Midnight 31st January 2022

The Financial Diet
TFD is “the #1 destination for women to talk about money.”
Looking for pitches of personal essays and experience about money.
No topic is too serious, or not serious enough.
Saving money by going to free yoga meet-up groups is just as valid as hard-learned investment advice. It’s all part of living smarter.
Everyone has a story to tell about personal finance, whether it’s living with six figures of student debt or buying a home at 25.
Pitch via email with Headline idea(s), and a 2-3 sentence description of your proposed article(s).
Article length: 800-1,000 words.
Payment: $250 per article

10 Literary Magazines Open to Fiction, Poetry, Essays NOW
Here are ten literary magazines with no firm deadlines open to submissions right now.
These publications want everything from horror, to SFF, to social commentary, to anarchist poetry, to Yiddish humor. The sky's the limit. None charge submission fees and all are paying markets.

Playwright Competition
The 2022 Platform Presents Playwright’s Prize. 
An open call for distinctive, dynamic, heart-stopping, extraordinary, wonderful plays.
Plays to be no more than 10,000 words.
The prize includes ongoing mentoring and producing the winning script, as well as the £5,000 cash prize.
Closing Date: 7th March 2022

94 Poetry Manuscript Publishers Who Do Not Charge Reading Fees
Most traditional poetry manuscript publishers charge their readers a fee to submit.
This is the longest and most accurate list of poetry manuscript publishers who do not charge fees for online or postal submissions. 

Children’s Picture Books
Cardinal Rule Press are accepting unsolicited submissions for children’s picture books that empower children through meaningful stories for readers, age 4-11.
Stories must be realistic fiction, meaning, it could happen in our real world.
Word Count: Up to 1,000 words.
Deadline February 1st, 2022

100 Websites that Pay Writers in 2022
In this list, you’ll find a variety of websites that pay you to write, covering various topics and pay rates.











You Don’t Have To Write, You Get To Write

Enjoy writing and you'll write better
Photo by Austin Schmid on Unsplash
I was reading an article recently about a man who is a single parent of a very special needs child.

He said that his life seemed difficult and often he felt it was unfair that he was always so busy and that his son required his constant care.

Then one day he had an epiphany and suddenly his life was so much easier and pleasurable. He didn’t change a thing about his life. He still got up every day and did the same things he’d always done. The only thing that he did change was his attitude.

It all happened when he was showering with his son one night (his son can’t shower on his own) and he was grumping to himself about never being able to shower on his own because he always had to shower with his son.

Then for some unknown reason he suddenly stopped and thought, “I don’t HAVE to shower with my son, I GET to shower with him.”

And that was it. His life changed in that moment. He decided that from then on, he would stop saying ‘have to’ and say ‘get to’ instead. And that one small decision changed his whole life.

I then read about a woman whose friend had an auto-immune disease and could no longer move and needed constant nursing.

She said that seeing her friend’s predicament changed her life because it made her appreciate things instead of complaining.

She said that whenever she woke up during the night and had to turnover, instead of her usual irritable thought about being awake when she didn’t want to be, she’d think to herself that she didn’t have to turn over, she gets to turnover, which is more than her friend could do now. Her friend had to wait to be turned over, no matter how long she was awake and how uncomfortable she was. She didn’t get to turn over anymore.

Thinking that we get to do something instead of having to do it, puts everything in a new perspective of realising how lucky we are that we get to do so much.

And it can be applied to writing when you really don’t feel like it.

Just think that you don’t have to write, you get to write.

And then sit down and enjoy it.


Mission Critical For Life: Start Living Your Life on Your Terms by Pursuing Your True Life Mission










Monday 24 January 2022

This is better Than a Writing Prompt

This is so much better than a writing prompt
Photo by Mike Tinnion on Unsplash
Writing prompts are such useful things for getting our creative minds working. They also give us a starting idea of what to write about which is all a writer needs to get going.

But writing prompts are just that. A bump to get you started writing. Nothing more.

So, what if, instead of using random prompts, you looked for paying markets and writing competitions and used them as prompts.

You don’t have to submit them, just use them as writing practice. There’s a lot of advantage of doing it this way.

1.    You’ll be practicing writing what the industry is looking for, so you’ll know what kind of writing sells         and what subjects/topics are currently popular.

2.    You’ll get used to writing to deadlines. Having a limited time to write can give you the bit of pressure you need to get your writing done. Writing to tight deadlines can also help improve your writing by not giving you time to second-guess yourself or to try and edit as you write, both of which are fatal to good writing.

3.    You can submit your writing if you want to and earn money. And because you’re only practicing your writing, it doesn’t matter if it gets accepted or not or if it wins a free competition or not. You’re just getting used to being a regular writer.

There really are no disadvantages to using writing markets and competitions as writing prompts.

It’s great practice, gets you writing regularly, and gets you used to deadlines.

Plus, you can submit your work if you want to, and even if it’s not accepted, you can find another market for it later. Or not.

And it can really get your creative mind working, which is what using prompts is all about.


Monthly Challenge Writing Series




















Monday 17 January 2022

Writing a Million Words a Year

I was reading a story recently about a writer, who already had two traditionally published novels, when she had a baby. She also had a full-time job. He husband, in his infinite wisdom, decided that writing, working, and family obligations were too much for her, so for the time being he said she should stop writing, and instead spend her time at home spending time with him and their new daughter.

Stop writing? What a dangerous thing to say to a writer.

Fast forward a year later, and she tells him that she's just had her latest book accepted by her publisher.

It turns out, she'd been using her lunch hour at work to write her novel.

Her husband was furious and accused her of being unfaithful. They had a huge fight about it and she was upset because he still wasn't speaking to her.

I thought, wow. This woman has a full-time job and is clearly a good mother and wife, yet her husband is angry at what she does at lunch time at work.

Writing during lunch at work is also how J K Rowling wrote her second Harry Potter book. Her first one was written when she was an unemployed single parent (which she hated) so she got a job once her first book was published and started her second. She wrote so much at work that one of her female colleagues eventually asked her if she was having an affair because she always turned down 'lunch with the girls'.

What all this goes to demonstrate is how easy it is to write a book if your determined to do so. And the important word here is DETERMINED. Just one hour a day helped these writers produce best-selling novels.

This year I plan to have my best writing year ever and write a book a month. So far I'm on track. I'm actually ahead of schedule.

I'm also currently reading a book about pulp fiction writers who used to be only paid by word count so they had to write a lot in order to earn a living.

They used average a million words a year. Some even wrote one and a half million words a year.

So I worked it out (with the help of my trusty calculator). 

To write a million words a year, if you wrote for 5 days a week, you'd need to write 3,800 words a day. 

Even if you only wrote during your lunch hour on week days, at 1,000 words an hour, you could still write 261,000 words a year (261 working days a  year).

So if you want to up your game (and it's certainly got my interest) to a million words a year, you need to write 3,800 words a day, 5 days a week.

Or if you want to write every day, it's a mere 2,700 words a day.

How about it?

What's your average daily word count?

If you don't know, try writing as much as you can in one week, and then divide it by 7. 

That will give you your daily average.

Then try and beat it every week.

Start today.