Three things prompted me to write this column today. One was a kind email last week from a writer in the Balkans saying he had read one of my SleuthSayers posts about mystery markets and asking if I had any updated advice about those, the second was a conversation I had the other day with old friend Rob Lopresti about mystery publications, and the third was the recent announcement that the wonderful Mystery Magazine was calling it quits.
All this got me to thinking about how relatively few mystery markets are still out there these days, and which of those have been the most helpful to me, over the years. Now that Mystery Magazine is no more, those are (again, in my case) AHMM, EQMM, Strand Magazine, Black Cat Mystery Magazine, Black Cat Weekly, Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, and (if you consider them a mystery market) Woman's World. For that matter, Black Cat Weekly isn't solely a mystery magazine either, but that's what almost all my BCW stories have been.
Which brings us, in a roundabout way, to today's post. A few weeks ago, my story "Welcome to Armadillo" was published in the new issue of Strand Magazine. It's a private eye story, but a bit different, in several ways. For one thing, my PI spends far more time in this story running from killers than he does in detecting anything, although the skills of his job do help him to survive the tale. Another thing is, one of the people intent on killing him is his own wife. (Have you noticed that very few fictional private detectives are happily married?) Also, though I guess it doesn't matter, this particular guy is new, and not one of my series PIs.
Much of the fun I had in writing this story came from the four or five major plot reversals that happen in the course of the story and from a number of characters I grew to like so much I hated to leave them when I wrote END. The story features betrayals, shootings, stabbings, marital infidelity, political corruption, a bomb threat, a cross-country bus ride, killers for hire, rattlesnakes, drug trafficking, a birthday celebration, a jailbird bent on revenge, a guy abandoned in the middle of the desert, and a roadside cafe. (For some reason, several of my recent stories have featured diners and other restaurants; never let it be said that I allow my hardworking characters to go hungry.)
This story also marked sort of a "first" for me: This was my sixth story in a row to be published by the Strand. I'm not sure I've ever had stories in six consecutive issues of a magazine before, and I would like to think this is the beginning of a trend. With most of the magazines I submit stories to, I'm more accustomed to having half a dozen issues published in a row without one of my stories in them. So I'm enjoying that while I can.
My other most recent publication was a short story that had appeared in Best Mystery Stories of the Year 2024 and then showed up a week or two ago in that anthology's UK edition Best Crime Stories of the Year. That story, "Last Day at the Jackrabbit," also has ties to Strand Magazine--it first appeared in their Spring 2023 issue.
Back on the subject of current mystery markets, I would encourage you to try submitting to them all, including some that I didn't list. I often find that a story rejected at one market can later be accepted at one of the others. I'll close with two tips: (1) don't spend too much time trying to make sense of the selection process--that way lies madness--and (2) don't worry if your story isn't a traditional whodunit mystery. Very few of mine are. If your story contains a crime, that's all you need, for these markets.
Questions: If you're a short-story writer, which mystery magazines do you submit to most often? Which ones do you tend to try first, second, third, etc.? Which magazines have proven to be the best match for the kind of stories you write? Do you--as I do--find yourself writing less for magazines nowadays, and more for anthologies? I welcome you to share your experiences and thoughts on all this, in the comments.
Meanwhile, keep writing!
An amazing list of achievements, John! My head spins just thinking about so many stories published in so many prestigious markets. To answer one of your questions: With the demise of Mystery Magazine, I find myself submitting mostly to anthologies. I’m also writing more horror. My most recent acceptance was a dark fantasy story. Looking forward to your next post.
ReplyDeleteEdward Lodi
Thank you, Edward. Yes, yours is one of the names I think of, anytime we talk about Mystery Magazine--they have been good to both of us these past few years.
DeleteGood for you (!) for writing more horror/fantasy. Hope you find lots of markets there--I know plenty of SF markets are out there also. I write some in those genres, but have always felt more comfortable writing mystery/crime stories, probably because that's mostly what I read.
Thanks again, and keep up the good work!
As always, John, CONGRATULATIONS!!!!
ReplyDeleteMy go-tos are Black Cat Mystery Magazine, AHMM, Crimeucopia (for the really weird stuff - if I told you the line that the editor wrote back, "You had me at ...." this would no longer be a family blog), and I keep trying (occasionally) at the Strand. I have given up on EQMM. I'm going to have to try Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine some time...
Hi Eve! Yes, I love Black Cat MM, and Crimeucopia also. I too have a hard time getting into EQMM these days, but I do keep trying them--they've been kind to me in the past. Sherlock Holmes MM is great, although--as you know--they don't publish new issues regularly.
DeleteAnd you and I both love AHMM, long response times or not! Truth is, I love all the mystery mags, but wish there were more of them out there.
Thanks as always!
Great post, as always, John. I have never had a story accepted to EQMM, but they are still high on my submission list because they respond quickly. Tough is high on my list, too because Rusty Barnes is good to work with and seems to like my stuff. I send many stories to AHMM as simultaneous submissions as sort of a place-holder, too.
ReplyDeleteI like both Black Cat Mystery Magazine and Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, but they pay on publication and publish so sporadically that it's not worth the wait. I have a story that was accepted for BCMM in October of 2021 still awaiting the light of day. Carla Coupe accepted a story for Sherlock Holmes 14 months ago and said she didn't know when it would be published. I don't see myself sending them more stories.
I will miss Mystery Weekly. Kerry Carter was a joy to work with, and several of my favorite stories found homes there.
I often submit a novella to the Black Orchid Novella Award contest, which is all or nothing. If I don't win, Black Cat Weekly is my go-to. Michael Bracken often needs a longer work to fill out an issue, and I love having his eyes go over my work again.
I'm now exploring several of the new markets I'm finding on the SMFS site and looking toward the more literary (within reason) sites because many of my stories have a crime but are more character sketches than mysteries. One step up and two steps back...
I'm Steve Liskow. Don't know why I can't check in.
ReplyDeleteHey Steve -- I though that was you. Forgive the late reply--my wife and I have been out of town most of the day, and just got back.
DeleteI know what you mean, about the long wait times, both to get a reply on acceptances/rejections AND to see it published once a story is accepted. For both of those kinds of waits, that's part of the game for certain publications. Two other places that I might suggest are (as Eve mentioned) Crimeucopia and also Black Cat Weekly. Some BCW stories are invitation-only, but some are via open call. Also Mystery Tribune's a good market, but I waited a long, long time for a response last time I had a story accepted there. I share your grief in seeing Mystery Magazine give up the ghost.
Once again, wish we had more mystery markets out there!
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ReplyDeleteYou nailed the list, John...but then, of course, you are the master. I've try them all and have had success with BCW, Crimeucopia, Murderous Ink Press, also Thriller the Magazine. BCW is of course important because so many SMFS members contribute. The bucket list is AHMM or EQMM. The Strand, too, might make me drink to much wine in celebration. But each acceptance, no matter, is a delight.
ReplyDeleteEach acceptance is indeed a delight, Wil. Please do keep trying, at AHMM, EQMM, and the Strand. I've been lucky at AH and Strand, but both I and Rob Lopresti tried for YEARS before finally breaking in at EQMM. (I think I finally just wore 'em down.)
DeleteBy the way, I've never submitted a story to Thriller--thank you for mentioning that one.
I wish you every success! Please stay in touch.
THIS: (1) don't spend too much time trying to make sense of the selection process--that way lies madness-- John, I now have something to blame for the balmy! smile. I have never understood why Queen usually rejects me (except once or twice), and Hitchcock likes me. I can't figure out what types of stories go where. And yes, I seem to be in anthologies more than mags these days. Novels are gobbling up most of my time these days, but boy, I love writing short stories. Let's see...I've been in STAR magazine a few times, but I think you've listed every other I can think of. What a CV you have! Simply stellar.
ReplyDeleteMelodie, I too wonder about all those things!!--and I have no answers. Some stories that I think'll be snapped up right away take forever to place, and others I was doubtful about get bought first shot out of the box. It's a mystery!
DeleteI agree completely with you about the great fun of writing short stories, though--I just love it. And I bet you and I are the only two folks in our little mystery group who ever even thought of trying STAR magazine. I was in there only once, but the pay was good!
Congratulations, John! Well done! I am envious of your prolificness. I had a story accepted by The Strand (about 6 years ago), they asked for Word doc version, and so on, but they never published it. Go figure. My go-to market has lately become AHMM.
ReplyDeleteHey Stephen. I'm sorry to hear about the misfire at the Strand--I've been lucky there, but their methods can be a bit different sometimes. You might want to email them and ask about that accepted story that never got published--it might've fallen behind the piano or something. And yes, I too love AHMM. Long wait times, but I love the magazine and it's always so satisfying to get a story in there.
DeleteThank you as always!
6 in a row at STRAND! (This won't italicize here, oh well.) I'm impressed. Well, I'm always impressed with you and your stories and your success. Do you ever use non-paying markets? I've had things in Kings River Life Magazine and Killer Nashville kind of recently. My other market is anthologies, especially this year. I like to submit to Michael Bracken's January slot for his gardening site, SEEDS, just because my stuff will be seen by people who don't usually read the places that publish me. Keep it up! Here's to 12 in a row at STRAND!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kaye--I've been fortunate lately, but I'm now probably due for a dry spell. As for non-paying markets, I do occasionally send a story to Kings River Life, and Seeds too, mostly because those are done by Lorie and Michael, but I admit that most of my stories are aimed at the magazines I mentioned, along with Crimeucopia and Tough (both of which I somehow forgot to list) and anthologies edited by folks like Barb, Michael, Josh, Andrew McAleer, and a few others (including YOU).
DeleteKeep up the great storytelling!
Submitted to EQMM and BCW while waiting to submit to AHMM in a couple of days (after a 7 day rejection wait). Outlining and drafting another to self-publish on Kindle and Audible. Keep it going -- you're The Golden Boy of Pulp.
ReplyDeleteHey, sounds like you're doing all the right things, Justin. Always try to keep something in those magazines' submission queues and always try to work on writing future stories. The more you write the more you'll get published. Best of luck to you with all those!
DeleteThanks. I've actually written quite a bit, but for the longest time only self-pubbed through Kindle and Audible (2010-present). Got my start through a couple e-publishers and article content sites (2004-2010).
DeleteI'm trying to focus on writing and releasing work for Kindle and Audible Yet also submitting work for the mags and anthologies. I understand quite a few in the SMFS were balancing both.
They probably are, Justin. I've never self-published anything, but I know lots of folks have, and with good results. Whatever works . . .
Delete