Submission Guidelines
General
Make sure your piece is specifically about drinking. Specifically.
There's a large backlog, so it may be a while before
you hear from us. If at all. If you don't hear from us
within two months, you may deduce your submission wasn't
selected. We edit for content and space, sometimes rather
heavily. Be prepared for changes.
Send your electronic submissions to: editor@drunkard.com in
either .txt or Microsoft Word .doc format.
Send your snail mail submissions to:
Modern Drunkard Magazine
Editorial Dept.
212 Santa Fe Dr
Denver, CO 80223
Poetry
Shorter pieces are more likely to be printed. Occasionally we print an
epic, but it has to be very good. Send them here.
Fiction
We accept all manner of fiction,
though experimental fiction is less likely to be
published. Hemingway, F. Scott, Parker, J.P. Donleavy
and Bukowski are good models to follow. Follow--not
mimick.
We're looking for stories with
a positive view of drinking -- if we wanted
boo-hoo ballyhoo we'd go to an AA meeting.
The story should be
imbued with drinking. If alcohol doesn't rear
its lovely head on the first page, you're submitting
to the wrong magazine.
Putting a drink in
the hand of your protagonist does not a drinking story
make. If you can replace the booze with coffee and
the plot isn't affected, you're trying to pull a fast
one.
Avoid writing about
writing and being a writer.
While it's commendable
that you wrote the piece while hammered, that's no
excuse for haphazard grammar and bizarre punctuation.
Leave that to us, we're quite good at it.
Exclamation points do
not make a sentence more powerful. Not even triple
exclamation points.
The vast majority of
our submissions are fiction, so realize the competition
is ferocious.
We get a lot of angry
rants and "Me and My Buddies Went Out Drinking
Last Night" type submissions, so that sort has
to be exceptional to make the cut.
One to four thousand
words.
Articles
This category is most in demand, and the range is broad.
It could be historical (Drinking in Colonial America,
Ancient Greece, etc.), humorous, or instructional.
Put
some time in it, if you just dash something off without
doing any research, it most likely won't be accepted.
Make sure you have a point.
One to four thousand
words.
Payment
Our present rate of payment is ten cents per published word for articles
and short stories. Published poetry will receive issues of the relevant
issue. All we want is first time publishing rights in print and on the
web, then the ownership of the story, article or poem reverts back to
the author.