A WWS PUBLICATION ROUND UP FOR AUGUST

A laptop computer with an article titled "Submissions Made Simple" on the screen and a stack of literary journals sits on top of the laptop base, titles facing out

The summer wraps up with an inspiring list of publications and acceptances from Women Who Submit members.

Check out Issue 42 of Coffee Lovers Magazine to read Rachel Sona Reed‘s “Reconsidering the Percolator.”

Congratulations to Kate Maruyama whose short story, “Akiko,” will be reprinted in Horror Writers for Peace, a horror anthology. All proceeds from sales of the book will go to Lambda Legal Defense Fund in response to the Orlando Massacre.

Tanya Ko Hong published two poems, “Breathing Free” and “Mustard Flowers Falling” in the Berkeley Korean Literature Society.

From DĂ©sirĂ©e Zamorano‘s “A Woman of Privilege” in Akashic Books’ Mondays are Murder:

Continue reading “A WWS PUBLICATION ROUND UP FOR AUGUST”

Behind the Editor’s Desk: An Interview with Siel Ju

"Remington" by Mark Grapengater (flickr.com/mgrap). Original link: https://www.flickr.com/photos/mgrap/2261210942/in/photolist-4rPiey-37ASje-MUwf8-dXXLCh-bBSf6F-Wdari-8gQCTK-pJLZ1-BYpmP-dmn5g3-gHKpus-dSDBv9-5prNbT-5y4Y3Q-6SZGVh-81FxpK-6SVEgx-cR4sY9-dmn1gF-6SZGTJ-dmn4mz-878fHx-auJWRu-auGeC8-dmn5QX-8uXJ49-9DofZL-ezhHew-auGfwH-auGgqH-d59cyC-x13xS-auGgSz-ma1E7G-dmn929-dmn9aS-6ZA9Sv-dmn5qr-auGf58-6ZA9Mp-dF4Zk6-auJVsQ-qX6Mkb-rBDo5B-r6hX1j-rRNCAL-qNcJP1-rBDobt-6ZEaKL-85H5Ye

by Lauren Eggert-Crowe

Siel Ju is the editor of Flash Flash Click, an online lit zine for fast fiction. Subscribers get a weekly flash prose piece delivered every Tuesday. The pieces range in style, tone, and content but all have a compelling narrative driving them, no matter how short. Some veer more towards the lyrical and sublime while others give the reader a sardonic slice-of-life from a first-person narrator. Siel has featured such authors as Wendy C. Ortiz, Catherine Daly, Lisa Cheby, Maureen Gibbon and Molly Fuller. I asked Siel a few questions about her job as editor of Flash Flash Click.

Why did you decide to start Flash Flash Click? 

The impetus came from feeling there was a big, untapped population of readers out there who weren’t being reached by the current literary marketplace. I have friends who are writers, but I also have many non-writer friends who are smart and literate — who might very well enjoy reading poems and stories but are completely unfamiliar with the world of literary journals. I think a lot of people don’t even know literary journals exist! So the idea was to start a lit zine that sent a short piece a week via email — tiny bits of prose that can be read easily on a smartphone — sort of like a gateway drug to entice “regular” people to become regular readers of contemporary fiction and poetry.

What sets Flash Flash Click apart from other online journals? Continue reading “Behind the Editor’s Desk: An Interview with Siel Ju”