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Weekly sub calls: Expanded

The Submission Marketplace

Literary magazines have always been gatekeepers of taste and opportunity. What Sub Club delivers is something different: a weekly marketplace where 82 submission calls compete for attention, each with its own deadlines, pay rates, and editorial appetites. The piece functions less as journalism and more as infrastructure — a clearinghouse for writers seeking venues willing to read their work.

The Economics of Small Press

Sub Club reports, "Our editors will read your pieces and build you a custom list of matching submission opportunities." This service model treats submission as a matching problem rather than a merit judgment. The piece lists venues ranging from Poetry Wales (paying £20 per piece, 15K+ followers, operating since 1965) to newer journals like Sabr Tooth Tiger Magazine ("an international lit mag with claws, teeth, & heart," founded 2025).

Weekly sub calls: Expanded

Pay structures vary wildly. Mascara Literary Review offers "AU/bin/sh or AU00/piece" — a formatting artifact that obscures actual compensation. Multiple venues list "Pay: No" alongside "Fee: Yes," a reversal that asks writers to pay for the chance of unpaid publication. The Southampton Review notes response times of 1095 days — three years — with a 1% acceptance rate.

Critics might note that this marketplace model commodifies the submission process itself. Writers tracking 82 weekly calls must maintain calendars, submission trackers, and genre-specific portfolios. The infrastructure Sub Club builds is useful, but it also normalizes an ecosystem where writers absorb all the administrative labor.

"Menagerie publishes fiction, essay, poetry, and hybrid works. What we like: sentences so sharp they draw blood; the strange and inexplicable; the wild and weird and uncanny."

Regional and Identity Focus

Many venues anchor themselves in specific geographies or communities. Camas Magazine "cultivates a community of writers and artists dedicated to land health and cultural resilience in the American West." Mascara Literary Review focuses on "decolonising, Asian Australian, Indigenous, migrant & subaltern writing" from the Eora nation. FLARE Magazine seeks work from "creatives who are disabled, deal with mental health, and/or chronically ill."

This clustering reflects how literary magazines have evolved from generalist venues to identity- and place-specific platforms. Wikipedia's entry on literary magazines notes the historical shift from broad-scope publications to specialized journals serving particular communities. Sub Club's list shows this specialization accelerating — every body magazine seeks "Holistic Care" themed work; Polyphony Lit. runs a "Palestine Series for 2026."

The piece argues that specialization creates opportunity. Writers with specific identities or regional connections can target venues likely to understand their work. But specialization also fragments the literary field. A writer without a clear identity marker or regional anchor may find fewer natural fits.

Acceptance Rates and Response Times

Sub Club provides acceptance rates for many venues: The Cawnpore (56%), The Amazine (48%), Acropolis Journal (16.33%), Prairie Schooner (4.96%), Colorado Review (1.73%), Sequestrum (<1%). Response times range from 7 days (Let me tell you a story) to 1095 days (The Southampton Review).

These metrics matter. A 1% acceptance rate with a three-year response window means writers submit, wait, and likely never hear back. The piece presents these numbers without judgment — raw data for writers to weigh.

Critics might argue that publishing acceptance rates creates transparency that pressures journals to improve. But it also creates a hierarchy where low-acceptance venues gain prestige precisely because they reject most submissions. The piece doesn't interrogate whether this prestige model serves writers or institutions.

Bottom Line

Sub Club's weekly call list is infrastructure, not commentary. It maps a literary ecosystem where 82 venues compete for submissions, where pay ranges from £20 to zero, where response times span weeks to years. The piece serves writers who need venues — but it also reveals an industry where writers absorb administrative costs, wait years for responses, and often receive nothing but silence. Useful. Necessary. Not sufficient.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • Literary magazine

    Explains what publications like Poetry Wales, Welter, and Mascara Literary Review are

  • Creative writing

    Defines the genres of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction mentioned in the calls

Sources

Weekly sub calls: Expanded

by Various · Sub Club · Read full article

Want opportunities tailored to your work? Our editors will read your pieces and build you a custom list of matching submission opportunities. Learn more here..

There are 82 weekly sub calls today. Also, in case you missed it from this past week:

Poetry Wales → Deadline: Feb 28 | Fee: No | Pay: £20/piece | Open for Poetry, Nonfiction | Sim Subs | Reprints | R: 30 days | A: 7.48% | 15K+ followers | United Kingdom | 1965 — “National poetry magazine of Wales. Publishing contemporary poetry, features and reviews since 1965.”

Camas Magazine | Theme: Precarity → Deadline: Feb 28 | Fee: Some | Pay: No | Open for Nonfiction, Multimedia, Fiction, Poetry | Sim Subs | Reprints | R: 42 days | A: 6.25% | 2K+ followers | United States | 1992 — “Camas cultivates a community of writers and artists dedicated to land health and cultural resilience in the American West. We pursue fresh ideas and perspectives while remaining rooted in the West’s landscapes and traditions of art and literature.”

Exchanges | Theme: RESONANCE → Deadline: Feb 28 | Fee: No | Pay: No | Open for Nonfiction, Poetry, Fiction, Multimedia | Sim Subs | Reprints | Under 100 followers | United States | 1989 — “An online journal of literary translation published biannually. Edited by current students of the University of Iowa Translation Workshop.”

Nightlight: A Black Horror Podcast → Deadline: Feb 28 | Fee: No | Pay: No | Open for Fiction | Sim Subs | Reprints | R: 42 days | Under 100 followers | United States — “Horror podcast featuring creepy tales from Black writers all over the world”

Welter → Deadline: Mar 1 | Fee: No | Pay: No | Open for Poetry, Fiction, Nonfiction, Multimedia | Sim Subs | Reprints | R: 30 days | 1.5K+ followers | United States | 1965 — “Welter publishes high-quality fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and visual art from writers and artists around the world.”

Short Fiction: The Visual Literary Journal | Theme: Short Fiction - “Introducing” → Deadline: Mar 1 | Fee: No | Pay: $0.02 flat | Open for Fiction | Sim Subs | Some Reprints | R: 60 days | Under 100 followers | United Kingdom | 2006 — “Short Fiction is a high-quality online journal (previously also in print, since 2006), publishing some of the finest short stories from around the ...