CHRYSOPOEIA: Open for Submissions!

Chrysopoeia, the first Alkimia Fables anthology, is now open for submissions! The submission period goes from August 17th to October 17th, closing at 11:59 EST. Edit: Submission deadline has been changed to Dec 1st!

Chrysopoeia is Ground Zero, Proof-of-Concept; it’s a place for you to write about characters or plots influenced by and taking place in the Alkimia Fables universe, and to explore how said characters might have gotten their powers (the nature of their trauma), what they do with those powers, and how they exist. We are looking for urban fantasy, magical realism, fabulism, mythic retellings, paranormal romances, horror tales, or even literary fiction that just happens to have speculative elements!

The only hard and fast rules are as follows:

  • It has to abide by the confines of the Alkimia Fables universe; that is, it takes place somewhere in our current universe, with the magic system as outlined by our lore page.
  • The main character has to be human. We will be playing around with gods, monsters, changelings, and fae in later anthologies, and they can certainly be present – but expect to work closely with the loremasters if you include them.
  • We are not accepting the following genres: traditional scifi (Stranger Things is fine, Star Wars not so much), erotica, westerns or fanfiction. Influences and elements showing up is to be expected, but consider how your story would ultimately be classified.
  • No racism, sexism, ableism, transantagonism, homoantagonism, anti-Rroma sentiment, antisemitism, fatphobia, classism, abuse apologism, etc. If it shows up in your story as an antagonist or as a background force, that’s understandable; but anything apologizing for, excusing or justifying it won’t be accepted, and neither will work that uses it as ‘flavour’ for no obvious reason.
  • While obviously we can’t police this, we ask that you only submit if you have personal experience with trauma of some sort. This is deeply subjective, and you do not need to disclose details, but if you’d like to self-identify, you may do so in your bio or cover letter.
  • Please do not send us a completed story or piece of artwork, etc! Pitch us instead, following the instructions HERE. You may also send casual, “so what if I X” emails prior to the Official Pitch, if you have questions you’d like answered off-the-record before completing your pitch.

Send your pitches to elliott.dunstan@gmail.com, with the subject line ‘SUBMISSION: Chrysopoeia, <(Flash Fiction, Art, Fiction, Multimedia, or Poetry)>: <Your Name>’ We will try to acknowledge all received submissions, but obviously things will slip through the cracks; if you haven’t heard from us after 30 days, or after the end of the submission period, please feel free to follow up.

Plan your idea for the following size restrictions:

Flash Fiction: 200-1000 words.
Fiction: 1500-5000 words
Artwork: One full-page piece; our current estimates is that our pages will be 6″x9″ but its unlikely you’ll need that for a pitch.
Poetry: 1-3 pieces, not surpassing 5 pages of content.
Multimedia: This is incredibly hard to gage, so we’ll tell you if your idea needs refining down and we’ll figure it out from there. Generally, though, we don’t want your multimedia to take up more than 3 pages, and it needs to be printable. (IE: as much as we love audio projects, video games, etc. we can’t print them!)

All contributors will receive $10 USD upon acceptance and a percentage of royalties from sales, with hopeful potential increase depending on the success of the Kickstarter campaign.

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CHRYSOPOEIA: Deadline Extension!

Hello everyone! We’ve extended the deadline for CHRYSOPOEIA pitch submissions to Dec 1st – please get your pitches in if you haven’t already!

We’ve done our first round of acceptances, so if you’ve submitted and haven’t heard from us, please follow up. On our end, we’ve responded to everything. However, if you’ve pitched via anywhere but email, we may not have received it; please use the email below to contact us.

We’d particularly like to get some more poetry, visual art, and multimedia/boundary-breaking pitches – please don’t self-reject, because we’d love to hear from you. We are also looking for more work by Black/Indigenous, trans and non-binary, and physically disabled creatives!

We are looking for urban fantasy, magical realism, fabulism, mythic retellings, paranormal romances, horror tales, or even literary fiction that just happens to have speculative elements!

The only hard and fast rules are as follows:

  • It has to abide by the confines of the Alkimia Fables universe; that is, it takes place somewhere in our current universe, with the magic system as outlined by our lore page.
  • The main character has to be human. We will be playing around with gods, monsters, changelings, and fae in later anthologies, and they can certainly be present – but expect to work closely with the loremasters if you include them.
  • We are not accepting the following genres: traditional scifi (Stranger Things is fine, Star Wars not so much), erotica, westerns or fanfiction. Influences and elements showing up is to be expected, but consider how your story would ultimately be classified.
  • No racism, sexism, ableism, transantagonism, homoantagonism, anti-Rroma sentiment, antisemitism, fatphobia, classism, abuse apologism, etc. If it shows up in your story as an antagonist or as a background force, that’s understandable; but anything apologizing for, excusing or justifying it won’t be accepted, and neither will work that uses it as ‘flavour’ for no obvious reason.
  • While obviously we can’t police this, we ask that you only submit if you have personal experience with trauma of some sort. This is deeply subjective, and you do not need to disclose details, but if you’d like to self-identify, you may do so in your bio or cover letter.
  • Please do not send us a completed story or piece of artwork, etc! Pitch us instead, following the instructions HERE. You may also send casual, “so what if I X” emails prior to the Official Pitch, if you have questions you’d like answered off-the-record before completing your pitch.

Send your pitches to elliott.dunstan@gmail.com, with the subject line ‘SUBMISSION: Chrysopoeia, <(Flash Fiction, Art, Fiction, Multimedia, or Poetry)>: <Your Name>’ We will try to acknowledge all received submissions, but obviously things will slip through the cracks; if you haven’t heard from us after 30 days, or after the end of the submission period, please feel free to follow up.

Plan your idea for the following size restrictions:

Flash Fiction: 200-1000 words.
Fiction: 1500-5000 words
Artwork: One full-page piece; our current estimates is that our pages will be 6″x9″ but its unlikely you’ll need that for a pitch.
Poetry: 1-3 pieces, not surpassing 5 pages of content.
Multimedia: This is incredibly hard to gage, so we’ll tell you if your idea needs refining down and we’ll figure it out from there. Generally, though, we don’t want your multimedia to take up more than 3 pages, and it needs to be printable. (IE: as much as we love audio projects, video games, etc. we can’t print them!)

All contributors will receive $10 USD upon acceptance and a percentage of royalties from sales, with hopeful potential increase depending on the success of the Kickstarter campaign.

CHRYSOPOEIA is planned for both digital and physical publication and distribution through channels such as Etsy, Itch.io, Smashwords, and local bookstores.

Editor Interview – Charlotte Warren

Chrysopoeia is still open for submissions, and the final deadline has been extended to December 1st, 2018! Here’s the wrap-up of our editor interviews, with Charlotte Warren! Charlotte is a young author and editor with a personal interest in stories about developmental disorders and trauma.

To submit to Chrysopoeia, read the submission guidelines here, and about the anthology here. 

 

What draws you to a story – the first thing that catches your interest and makes you want to read it?

WARREN: I tend, recently, to stick to recommendations or spiral off into the whole spectrum of whatever inspired something that touched me. If something has a complex, well-written girl character or themes of opening up to others and trauma, it’s an easy sell! I like psychological stories and anything with people like me; I’m also a sucker for pretty covers and blurbs.

 

What’s your favourite piece of ‘classic’ media, and by contrast, something obscure or lesser-known that inspires you?

WARREN: It’s definitely a cliche to say Neon Genesis Evangelion, but it’s true. A lot of classics fall flat for me, or worse, the discussions around them ruined them for me. There’s only so much of sitting in a room with people tearing the characters like you to shreds because their downfall is narratively satisfactory you can take! Evangelion stands out to me both for being one of the first ‘classics’ I went into eyes open and old enough to fully understand, and for my engagement with it being entirely on my own terms.

(Which really, feels entirely appropriate for the themes of the series.)

Lesser known… in the spirit of Al-kimia, I’m gonna say Slice of Cherry and Bleeding Violet, a duology of urban fantasy / horror novels set close to home. They’re not well known, but everything about them rings true, from setting to the handling of mental illness and trauma!

 

What are your personal feelings on the limitations and possibilities of genre and medium?

WARREN: That’s what’s exciting – there aren’t many! The biggest limitation on genre and medium is people going into them in bad faith, trying to restructure and rewrite something they don’t actually care about the original for. That’s why so many ‘genre-breakers’ fall flat; you can’t write a masterpiece if you’re going into it with nothing but disdain for the supposed rules.

 

What interests you about urban fantasy as a setting?

WARREN: The trappings and accumulated debris of urban fantasy, where people chose it for their lived experiences, are more interesting to me than any of the in-practice pieces or tropes, I think. A lot of the stereotypical, teenage girl YA paranormal novels still mean a lot to me for being – if fumbling – the first things I could find with textual representation of people like me.

 

What are some stories or identities you’d like to see more of?

WARREN: My not-so-secret favorite trope and setting are magical girls and superheroes! I’d love to see more of these types of stories – with the clarification that I want an honest love letter to them, and darkness or trauma to be handled with all the emotional import than it needs to be – something where the consequences matter but there’s still hope and light, and the potential to heal. Also, no ableism IRT the villains, please.

 

What are some tropes in media that you feel are overdone, harmful or just hit personal gripes?

WARREN: If I never see another poorly written ‘MPD’ murder alter it’ll still be too soon. They exist – I won’t deny that – but it’s cruel to take a vulnerable subset of people, always formed for their own and their ‘family’s protection, and write them as nothing but monsters.

 

What fictional character would be your ideal roommate?

WARREN: …Can I just say all of the Kaworu Nagisa expies in existence? He’s a ray of sunshine, and I think he’d be legitimately fun to spend time with, as well as being polite even when he doesn’t get it. Me too, baby.

 

What element would you most want to be in the Alkimia setting?

WARREN: I’m pretty sure I’d be a Mercury – but as for wanting, probably water. To be able to hide or heal as necessary, to help others and myself.. it’d be comforting, in every way.

 

Chrysopoeia’s first round of acceptances go out on October 17th; the new deadline for pitches is on December 1st! Don’t self-reject – we want to hear from you!

Editor Interview – Lisa Davis

Chrysopoeia is open for submissions! To give you a look behind the scenes, here’s the second of our editor interviews. Lisa is an assistant editor for Alkimia Fables, and a queer writer and poet who has her own blog up at saintlisa.tumblr.com.

To submit to Chrysopoeia, read the submission guidelines here, and about the anthology here. 

What draws you to a story – the first thing that catches your interest and makes you want to read it?

DAVIS: I feel like this is a little vague, but I’m not sure how else to put it except that if it’s weird, I’m probably interested. I’ve got a thing for the bizarre and the surreal, and if it’s spooky to boot? I’m all over it.

 

What’s your favourite piece of ‘classic’ media, and by contrast, something obscure or lesser-known that inspires you?

DAVIS: David Bowie, in general, inspires me and also a lot of the aesthetic I tend to lean toward in writing.

As for something a little more obscure, REPO: The Genetic Opera. I love my cyberpunk dystopias and this one is as gritty as they come.

 

What are your personal feelings on the limitations and possibilities of genre and medium?

DAVIS: I mean we’ve already established that I’m into the Weird™ stuff, so I’m a big advocate for using a medium in any way you can. Things that play with layout and structure like House of Leaves keep me breathing.

Genre is an odd one because it’s so much how we define our interests in terms of the media we consume, and I’m not going to say anything new or groundbreaking here, but there is often a lot of overlap, and ignoring that can limit us from experiencing the full scope of a story. Sometimes, a piece of media can encompass a whole lot that we fail to notice when we think of it as fitting One Particular Box. Not many people probably think of Fight Club as a romance, but the indicators are there.

 

What interests you about urban fantasy as a setting?

DAVIS: My escapist tendencies have followed me into adulthood and the idea of the Weird and Fantastic being just around the corner is appealing. I was dabbling in urban fantasy before I even knew it was a genre, and I’d also been trying to find a more concise term for “fairy tales but Now” for a long time – and urban fantasy encompasses so much more than just that, too.

Not to mention there’s a lot of fun to be had thinking about how certain elements of fantasy would play out in a modern setting, how they would impact character interactions… There’s a lot of room to explore our own reality, all while building another world around it.

 

What are some stories or identities you’d like to see more of?

DAVIS: It goes without saying that I want to see more LGBT/queer identities represented. In addition to that, I’d love to see more Rroma representation, especially Rroma in the US and North America. I personally connect a lot with stories about conflicting cultural identities, or a loss of cultural connection, or of trying to regain that connection – all three is even better, and will 100% make me cry like a baby.

 

What are some tropes in media that you feel are overdone, harmful or just hit personal gripes?

DAVIS: There are a lot of tropes surrounding abuse that I loathe, but specifically: abused kid grows up to be just like whoever abused them. “Abuse creates abusers,” where the abusee is doomed to repeat the cycle and become a monster without any hope of learning or changing.

That said, I’ve also got a bone to pick with writing characters who only ever express their trauma in Perfect, Pretty ways, or not at all. Same goes for mental illness.

Also, fridging sucks. Like characters dying, okay, it happens, but if the only way a story can progress/character development can happen is if someone dies (and it’s like, always a woman or otherwise minority character, too) then…….I’m not here for that. It’s just meaningless. This goes hand-in-hand with the “bury your gays” trope, which is…pretty self-explanatory, I think. Sometimes characters die, and it’s part of the story, but if an author’s first instinct is to go for the single queer character then that is. Bad.

 

What fictional character would be your ideal roommate?

DAVIS: Jareth, the Goblin King. We’re both sparkly and overdramatic. Also, I mean, the goblins would probably help with chores and stuff.

 

What element would you most want to be in the Alkimia setting?

DAVIS: I’m excitable and sometimes flighty (also, again, sparkly and overdramatic), so take a guess where I’d fall. “Airhead” jokes aside, flying would be pretty cool. I could fight mothman on his own turf.

The submission period for Alkimia Fables: Chrysopoeia closes on October 17th – get your pitches in!

Editor Interview – Elliott Dunstan

To count down to the start of the submission period of our first anthology, CHRYSOPOEIA, we’ve put together some interviews with each of our editors! First up is ELLIOTT DUNSTAN. Elliott is the lead editor for Alkimia Fables, a resident of Canada and has his own blog up at elliottdunstan.com. 

In preparation for submissions opening, read over the Submission Guidelines and Upcoming Calls here!

 

What draws you to a story – the first thing that catches your interest and makes you want to read it?

DUNSTAN: Prose – sharp, interesting prose, wrapped around an idea. It doesn’t have to be perfect English (in fact, I’m all for artful butchering of languages) but for me, it does have to paint a picture, whether an emotional or a physical one. All the best first lines or paragraphs shoot for a particular idea or image right off the bat, and that’s what will catch me like a fishing hook.

The funniest thing about this, about the idea of using language, is that even utter nonsense can drag me in absolutely relentlessly. One of my favourite books is Stephen King’s Misery, and these are the opening lines:

“umber whunnnn
yerrrnnn umber whunnnn
fayunnnn
These sounds: even in the haze.”

That – the idea of haziness and uncertainty and fog – that’s what you need to know, going into Misery. If you have that, and the title, you already have everything you need before reading that novel. And perhaps a few trigger warnings.

 

What’s your favourite piece of ‘classic’ media, and by contrast, something obscure or lesser-known that inspires you?

DUNSTAN: I’m really bad at picking favourites, but I feel like one of the only people who genuinely enjoys The Great Gatsby. I fully subscribe to the theory that Zelda Fitzgerald wrote some, if not all, of the novel – and it really is a good novel! (Novella, by today’s standards, I suppose.) I feel like a lot of the pushback against it by current readers is due to a desire to preserve the 1920s as ‘fun’, whereas Gatsby is pretty relentlessly cynical about the age it takes place in. And then you have the people who hate the 1920s and think it’s glorifying it, who I think just haven’t read the book at all.

My obscure favourite… Uh, well, I have a lot. But for this, I’m going to pick Then Again by Elyse Friedman. It’s a book about growing up traumatized, Jewish and mentally ill, and being forced into somebody else’s vision of your past – Michelle Schafer is invited home after twenty years to a ‘Blast from the Past’ party, hosted by her brother in a fully-reconstructed version of her childhood home. Including actors for her very, very dead parents. The writing is absolutely top-notch, and the premise walks the line between absurdist and dark. And yes, I recognize that neither of these are fantasy – but there’s SO much good literature out there. Why limit yourself?

 

What are your personal feelings on the limitations and possibilities of genre and medium?

DUNSTAN: I’m a big, big fan of experimental formats, and not necessarily in the sense of ‘be as weird as possible for the sake of weirdness’. More in the sense of… How does a particular format engage with your reader, with your audience? What part does the reader play in the story? The most obvious use of this is obviously metafiction and choose-your-own-adventure stories, and the next step down is The Neverending Story by Michael Ende, in which Bastian as the reader is an inescapable part of the tale. But it’s at work in choices as simple as present tense versus past tense as well. Is this a retrospective tale, or one you’re watching as it happens? Or future tense – a rarely-used tense where you feel like an oracle, or a dreamer? Point of view is the same, again.

Genre is, to me, very similar. I personally think genre labels can be just as inhibiting as they are useful – they create expectations that readers unconsciously or consciously follow, and writers end up binding themselves by those expectations. If you’re reading a fantasy work, your capacity to believe whatever happens next is less constrained than if you’re reading, say, a cowboy western – but it’s still constrained by what is Acceptable In Fantasy. It’s why I like magical realism and fabulism; there’s less definition, and more ability for the genre to simply describe what probably falls into it.

 

What interests you about urban fantasy as a setting?

DUNSTAN: I will draw attention to that word – setting. Urban fantasy is so, so much about setting – it’s about the way cities live and breathe. Much of high fantasy is very pastoral, owing to its Tolkienesque roots. And that’s wonderful! Many of us need more talking trees and forest spirits in our lives. However, for a lot of writers that simply isn’t our reality anymore. Urban fantasy lets us explore the mystical and strange in settings we know and understand, without us having to spend, oh, three hours looking up how pumpkin farming works. Not that I’ve ever done that.

The other thing about urban fantasy is that – done right – it can’t ignore the reality of diversity. Even the bad ones, you can see the holes in their world where the Indian convenience store owners or their black schoolmates or the Asian grocery mart should be – especially the ones set in New York or Los Angeles. Twilight, that much maligned trendsetter of paranormal romance, as much as I personally despise it, had a Native American tribe of werewolves. (The actual accuracy of their depiction is besides the point; but it’s certainly a far cry from the standard Noble Savage Elves.)

 

What are some stories or identities you’d like to see more of?

DUNSTAN: I am particularly fond of Jewish diaspora tales, particularly people who reconnected with Judaism later on in life; also of autistic main characters, characters with personality disorders (borderline and narcissistic, in particular; when they show up it tends to be overwhelmingly negative), and characters with complex relationships with their own sexuality and gender. Messy queer narratives are fantastic – often the path to “I Am This!” isn’t clearcut, or some folks never even get there. We make mistakes, we have unhealthy relationships, we do bad things to each other and apologize clumsily with hands that can heal and hurt with equal force –

I’m also very interested in the short- and long-term effects of trauma, and how much it can differ from person to person. There’s actually an episode of Grey’s Anatomy (I know, I know) that handles this absolutely beautifully – in the aftermath of a shooting that killed several doctors, the main cast stars in a documentary. Most of the cast has PTSD, and they all respond to it so differently, some of them healing faster than others, and it’s one of my favourite and most surprising representations of grief. While actually examining the trauma in question isn’t necessary for this anthology and setting, it’s certainly something I welcome and enjoy reading and editing. It is, however, just as effective when it underlies other narratives as a quiet shadow.

 

What are some tropes in media that you feel are overdone, harmful or just hit personal gripes?

DUNSTAN: The perfect trauma victim; the (usually) woman who quietly suffers, cries out her pain once, maybe twice, and maybe walks around sadly. She’ll have associations, but they’ll be mild, and the kind of thing a Helpful Person can guide her through. Her trauma doesn’t intrude on her day-to-day life, and it’s never, even once, disabling. Bull. I’m sure trauma victims and survivors like this exist, but it’s so hard to see, over and over again. I want to see trauma reactions that are messy, and varied, and don’t make sense, and don’t stay within the lines. Socially unacceptable reactions to trauma, “unreasonable” reactions to trauma.

The other one that I’m tired of – that most everybody I know is tired of – is ‘bury your gays’. The dead queers. I don’t care how angsty you’re trying to be, if your first targets when you want to kill characters are the queer and LGBT+ characters, then that’s a problem. I’ve heard a whole range of excuses for it too, ranging from ‘if they’re only introduced to die it doesn’t count’, to ‘when X author/writer does it it’s fine’. If you have a miniscule amount of queer/LGBT+ characters compared to your straight ones, and they’re the ones who end up dead, I have questions. Same goes if they’re the ones who end up maimed, or hurt, or traumatized.

 

What fictional character would be your ideal roommate?

DUNSTAN: Inej Ghafa from Six of Crows. We’d be chill. Barring that, probably Liliana from Magic: The Gathering, because nobody would ever try to steal our stuff. That’s how you get cursed. Or turned into a zombie.

 

What element would you most want to be in the Alkimia setting?

DUNSTAN: Probably Earth, actually. The idea of getting to move things with my mind is pretty cool, and it seems less prone to easy disaster than some of the others. I love all the elements though! And besides, there’s way to have all of them cause major trouble, if you know which buttons to push. *evil laughter*

Keep an eye open for Alkimia Fables’s first submission period, opening August 17th!