Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest
Editor Tyler Moss, January 2018
Frequency 8 per year
Company F+W Media
Country United States
Based in Cincinnati, Ohio
Language English
Website www.writersdigest.com
ISSN 0043-9525

Writer's Digest is an American magazine aimed at beginning and established writers. It contains interviews, market listings, calls for manuscripts, and how-to articles.

Writer's Digest is owned by F+W Media, which publishes the annual edition of Writer's Market, a guide containing a list of paying markets magazines, publishing houses, and contests as well as an index and tips for the beginning writers. The magazine is published eight times per year.

Writer's Digest also sponsors several in-house contests annually, including the Writer's Digest International Self-Published Book Awards and their Annual Writing Competition for short stories.

Writer's Digest partnered with book publisher BookBaby, the sister company of CD Baby, in August 2014, to create a self-publishing division called Blue Ash Publishing, to provide instruction and education alongside book publishing and printing services. Blue Ash Publishing takes its name from the home office of the Writer’s Digest editorial team located in Blue Ash, Ohio.

History

A copy of the 1939 edition of Writer's Market, published by Writer's Digest Books rests next to William Faulkner's Underwood Universal Portable typewriter in his office at his home, Rowan Oak, which is now maintained by the University of Mississippi in Oxford as a museum.

Writer's Digest was established in 1920 under the name Successful Writing, first issue, December. It changed name to Writer's Digest with the March 1921 issue. By the late 1920s, it shifted emphasis more from literary-quality writing to the rapidly growing pulp magazine field, which offered the widest opportunities to freelance writers. An important feature from 1933 forward was the New York Market Letter, edited by Harriet Bradfield, which gave timely updates on editor needs in the magazine field. As the pulp field collapsed in the 1950s, Writer's Digest shifted emphasis to famous writers and quality fiction.[1][2][3]

Paid circulation 63000 per 2017 media kit, down from 69000 in the 2016 media kit.

Annual grand prize winners

  • 2003 Michele Bardsley "A Mother Scorned" (short story)
  • 2004 J. K. Mason "My Own Avatar" (short story)
  • 2005 Nancy Tupper Ling "White Birch" (poem)
  • 2006 Mary Feuer "House on Fire" (short story)
  • 2007 Eros-Alegra Clarke "Salamander Prayer" (memoir)
  • 2008 Jacob Appel "The Mistress of Wholesome" (drama)
  • 2009 John Moir "Condors in a Coal Mine" (non-fiction)
  • 2010 Julie L. Moran "Lunch With Debbie" (short story)
  • 2013 Dan J. Fiore "Masks" (short story)

See also

References

  1. Locke, John; editor. Pulp Fictioneers: Adventures in the Storytelling Business, Adventure House, 2004. ISBN 978-1-886937-83-3.
  2. Sexton, Philip; editor. Legends of Literature: The Best Essays, Interviews and Articles from the Archives of Writer's Digest Magazine, Writer's Digest Books, 2007. ISBN 1-58297-473-X.
  3. Locke, John; editor. Pulpwood Days: Volume 1: Editors You Want to Know, Off-Trail Publications, 2007. ISBN 978-0-9786836-2-7.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.