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Month: February 2025

Submission Guidelines or, How to Do Everything You Can to Turn a ‘No’ Into a ‘Yes’

Background – Submission Guidelines

Every single publisher has them. And every single agent does as well. What are they? Submission guidelines.

Ignore them at your peril.

But let’s back up for a second.

Beforehand

Before you even get to the guidelines, it will behoove you to do some research on the publisher or agent you are courting.

Just like Elton John sang, you can’t find “gold in a silver mine.” (see about one minute into the video)

What I mean is, sending your zombie romance to a publisher which never takes zombie stories is an exercise in futility.

So, start with research. Find the receptive agents and publishers who would accept your book.

And, find out who is taking on new clients. Everything else may be perfect, but if your chosen agent or publisher is taking a break, do not query them until they are ready to start accepting new submissions!

Find Those Guidelines!

Okay, you have found a likely publisher or agent. And you know that they are open to submissions, because their X or Bluesky or Facebook feed said so. Okay, that’s great. Now, where are those pesky guidelines?

Often, these are prominent pages on any publishing or agent website. Guidelines are important to your chosen recipient. So, they are going to make them relatively easy to find. But if you can’t find them, ask! Bluesky, X, or Facebook are often the best places for you to ask.

And while it’s less common, you may even find this information on an About page or the like.

What is in Standard Submission Guidelines?

Nearly always, you will see guidance on things such as:

• Fonts and spacing
† Format
• Date(s) for submissions, if applicable
† Who to address a submission to
• How to add a submission to your query

Let’s take these one at a time.

Fonts and Spacing

Many places will ask that you only submit pieces in Times New Roman. Also, often the size is twelve point, and the spacing is double. But why is this?

Times New Roman is a standard font and virtually every computer has it. Also, virtually every computer and publisher can read it. TNR is also a serif font, and those tend to be easier to read. The twelve point standard is also meant to make a piece easier to read.

So is double spacing. But double spacing has another purpose.

Double spacing is good if the agent or publisher prints any (or even all) of the pages of the manuscript. Because for people who edit by hand, double spacing just plain gives them more room to work with.

Format

Formatting generally refers to stuff like whether a recipient wants your MS to come in Word format, PDF, Google doc, or something else.

If you don’t have Adobe, don’t worry! Just run a search for free tools to convert Word (or whichever format your MS is in) to PDF. And for Word to PDF, you can use Adobe Acrobat.

Submission Guidelines: Dates

Some publishers and zines have rolling submissions. Others have specific submission periods. And others might have both, where you can submit any time for their regular stuff but are on a tight deadline for something special.

Consider how you need to be reminded of various deadlines and schedules in your life. Do you need a number of calendar reminders? Or is one sufficient? Either way, set up a reminder for the submission deadline the same way.

Bonus! Shave a few days off the submission deadline and set your reminder for that date instead. You’re a lot more likely to get something in by the 15th if you tell yourself it’s due on the tenth.

Oh, and don’t ask for extensions unless you’ve been working with a publisher a lot. They have crafted their schedules to best optimize their time and resources. Maybe they’ve paid for ads. If you’re going to be late, that throws a monkey wrench into everything.

And the publisher will simply pick someone else who won’t mess up their schedule.

Who to Address the Submission to

Unless you have a contact on the inside and they’ve said you can do this, only send your MS to the correct person. Adding the CEO to your submission distribution list isn’t going to endear you to anyone.

That is, unless the CEO is a close family relation or has specifically said you can do this. Otherwise, just leave the CEO alone.

How to Add a Submission to Your Query

What do I mean by this, when it comes to submission guidelines?

Is there submission software you must use? Or will they take your MS as an attachment to an email? Or do they want you to upload it somewhere (a Google folder is usually great for this) and just give them the link?

Keep in mind that you will need to check sharing settings if you have to upload anything.

Bonus: Saving Styles in Word

Wait, what?

Before you take on the wonderful world of submission guidelines, and hopefully even before you start writing, you should create styles in Word. That is, if you’re using that software. It’s also useful to create a template and then just reuse it.

Knowing that publishers often want TNR in twelve point type means you can just make a style that fills these parameters.

Now, recognize that these instructions are for Word version 2411, which is part of my current Microsoft 365 subscription. But Microsoft doesn’t change this methodology too often.

How to Save a Style

1. Start typing.
2. Format your prose any way you like. Don’t forget extras like font size, margins, and indentation.
2a. If you must have the first sentence of a chapter look different (such as if you add a drop cap or don’t indent), then make a separate style just for the first line.
3. In the Home menu, choose Styles.
4. In the bottom left, click on ‘Create a Style’.
4a. Name it something logical, rather than Style5. You want to name it something more like XYZ Publisher Submission Guidelines.
5. Click ‘Modify’.
6. Check and update any specifics you may have missed in step #2 or #2a.
7. Save that bad boy!

Now, you can use your new style to make your submissions beautiful and perfect. And, if a publisher has a different variation, you can always change the style, or create a new one from the old.

In addition, if a publisher changes their mind after you’ve written your MS, you can still fix it easily.

After all, updating the style means Word will update it wherever you used it.

Pretty neat trick, eh?

Why Do All This?

Some of this may feel like jumping through just so many hoops. And perhaps a bit of it is. But if you ignore these hoops, you’ll be giving a publisher or agent a reason to say no.

Don’t do that. If you’ve got 20 ways for them to simply say no, do your level best to eliminate all 20 of them. Smooth out every bump in the road you see. Following an agent or publisher’s submission guidelines is key to achieving your main objective.

Which is to get your prose out there, not turn your work into some odd exception that an agent or publisher has to try to convince themselves to take a chance on.

Takeaways for Submission Guidelines

Submission guidelines exist for a reason. Often, this is to make publishers’ lives easier. Ignore them at your peril.

Because if you don’t follow them, it’s like pulling defeat from the jaws of victory. For a publisher will simply choose to work with someone who will.


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Writing Fiction About Generation Alpha

Generation Alpha (2013 – 2028 or so)

As of the initial writing of this blog post, they haven’t hit any of major age-related touchstones such as turning 18 yet! So, we can’t really cover many pivotal moments, to help inform us when writing fiction about Generation Alpha.

However, we can cover the entire time frame, as far as we know it.

Considering the Entire Time Frame When Writing Fiction About Generation Alpha

This time frame starts off with the aftermaths of the Egyptian revolution of 2011, Arab Spring, and NASA ending the space shuttle program.

The Covid-19 pandemic, the first term of President Donald Trump, and the Russia-Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war dominate the middle of this period. Plus, there’s the rise of artificial intelligence.

The very end of this period hasn’t happened yet. All we can really do is speculate.

Given that President Trump is supposed to only be able to serve one more term, the 2028 presidential elections will be a major event. Will Kamala Harris return? Will JD Vance run for the country’s highest office? How about someone else? We shall see.

What’s Next for Generation Alpha?

For the most part, writing fiction about Generation Alpha means writing science fiction. Certainly, you will have to speculate about the future. In general, extrapolating current events to their logical conclusions can be a good way of going about this.

When I’m Writing Fiction About Generation Alpha

So, here are my characters from Generation Alpha.

There’s no one I specifically name. However, Glenn Storey from The Duck in the Seat Cushion is of the right age.

Takeaways for Writing Fiction About Generation Alpha

As of the initial writing of this blog post, the oldest members of Generation Alpha are only thirteen years old.

Writing fiction about Generation Alpha should cover some of the tween milestones many kids go through, such as confirmation and bar/bat mitzvahs. Also, there are kids with older siblings and friends who may be attending quinceañeras.

And, unless your Generation Alpha characters are the youngest members of the British royal family, their issues, incidents, and problems are more likely to be compact and personal. As in, being affected by parental divorce versus saving the world.

Of course, you can write a ‘chosen one’ story with tweens. But that’s been done a lot lately. What would you like to write that’s different?


Want more about writing fiction about current generations? Then be sure to check out my thoughts on multigenerational fiction writing and the other blog posts in this series:

The Greatest Generation
The Silent Generation
Early Boomers
Generation Jones
Generation X
Millennials AKA Generation Y
Generation Z AKA Zoomers
Generation Alpha

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Writing Fiction About Generation Z

A Look at Writing Fiction About Generation Z or iGen (1997 – 2012)

Of course, as of the initial writing of this blog post, Gen Z had not yet hit 35. And a lot of them hadn’t hit their quarter-century mark, either. And 65? Forget about it! So, unless you’re writing about the future, writing fiction about Generation Z means writing about their youth.

My characters Minka Lopez, Dez Hunter, Nell Murphy, and Kitty Kowalski, all from Mettle are all members of iGen.

So, let’s look at some pivotal moments, to help inform us when writing fiction about Generation Z.

The Generation Z Turns 18 (2015 – 2030)

This time frame starts off with NASA’s Dawn probe orbiting dwarf planet (asteroid) Ceres. The World Health Organization declares the eradication of rubella in the Americas. Also, SpaceX lands an uncrewed Falcon 9 rocket.

The Covid-19 epidemic and the first term of President Donald Trump dominate the middle of this period.

As of the initial writing of this blog post, this time period has not yet ended. However, the period from 2020 to 2024 gave us a world where misinformation is everywhere, and there are significant political divides in the United States.

Considering this generation and the end of this time frame can mean extrapolating what’s already happened. Or try turning it on its head.

The Generation Z Turns 25 (2022 – 2037)

This time frame starts off with billions of people being vaccinated against Covid-19. Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her Platinum Jubilee (70 years on the throne, a record for British monarchs), and Elon Musk buys Twitter.

Since most of the middle and all of the end of this period hasn’t happened yet, we can only speculate about it. The second election of Republican Donald Trump in 2024 means he’s supposed to be president until 2028.

When I’m Writing Fiction About Generation Z

So, here are my characters from Generation Z.

In Mettle, it’s characters Dez Hunter, Minka Lopez, Nell Murphy, and Kitty Kowalski.

There may be some in The Duck in the Seat Cushion, too.

Takeaways for Writing Fiction About Generation Z

Gen Z was raised on the internet. So writing fiction about Generation Z should include computers, tablets, and smartphones. Therefore, if you wish to show iconoclasts or Luddites, or maybe a post-Apocalyptic world, then Zoomers probably wouldn’t have any of that.

And, as character Kitty Kowalski is like in Mettle, when the power goes out and they might not survive, forget her parents. She barely thinks of them at all. This insufferable spoiled brat misses her phone.


Want more about writing fiction about current generations? Then be sure to check out my thoughts on multigenerational fiction writing and the other blog posts in this series:

The Greatest Generation
The Silent Generation
Early Boomers
Generation Jones
Generation X
Millennials AKA Generation Y
Generation Z AKA Zoomers
Generation Alpha

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