Now Accepting Submissions—Winter 2020

We are happy to announce that we are now accepting submissions for our Winter 2020 issue. Please send us your dark fiction, poetry, and art!

More information about submission guidelines and deadlines can be found on our Submissions page.

If you haven’t already, please subscribe to our website to receive updates on new issues, deadlines, special announcements, and more.

Thank you so much for your continuous support!


Victoria Elghasen & Michelle Baleka

Editors

Volume IV – Deadline Extension

Submissions for our Summer 2019 issue will now remain open until 11:59PM ET on March 23rd.

We are seeking dark, psychological literary works, with a particular interest in pieces that explore themes related to mental health, isolation, and displacement.

We are particularly interested in fiction and flashfiction pieces, but will continue to accept poetry and art submissions.

We look forward to reading your submissions!


Victoria Elghasen & Michelle Baleka

Editors

Submission Period Change

Due to the volume of submissions received during our previous submission period, we have decided to change the start date for our winter submission period.

Submissions for the Winter 2018 issue will now open July 10th, and will close October 10th.

If you sent a piece to us after March 10th and before July 10th, we will not begin reviewing it until July. Thank you for your patience and understanding in this matter.

We look forward to reading and reviewing your work!

Déraciné Magazine Winter 2017

We are pleased to announce that our debut issue, Déraciné Winter 2017, is now live.

We would like to thank our talented contributors for providing us with such brilliant works. We would also like to thank those who supported and encouraged us in our endeavour to create a new outlet for literary voices.

Issue one is available here.

Contributors: Kayla Bashe, Jakub Beralski, Joe Bielecki, Kerry E.B. Black, Brian Burmeister, Natalie Crick, Amanda Nevada Demel, Nikhita Dodla, Sano Eli, Adam Fout, Cass Francis, Kristin Garth, Tom Gumbert, David Hanlon, Aislyn Higgins, Caleb Lovelace, Chris Milam, Marie McKay, Phantasmagothica, Tom Reed, R.I.D, Noelle Schmidt, Seigar, Rahul Shirke, Albert Šilvans, M. Stone, Stella Turner, Katie Welch, and Shierri Yasuhisa.

Contest Winners – Winter 2017

Our first contest has come to a close, and we are pleased to announce the winners.

We asked for poems and stories based around the prompt “intrusive thoughts,” and received many fantastic entries as a result. In fact, so many high quality works were sent to us that we have decided to name three winners — two for fiction and one for poetry — as well as five talented runners-up.

Winners will receive publication in our debut issue, which will be available to read for free this December.

CATEGORY: POETRY

WINNER:

Nikhita Dodla, “I’d Prefer if You’d Knock Before Entering My Head.”

Nikhita Dodla is an American student living in California. Dodla’s poems have appeared in Creative Communication publications and regional magazines.

I could.

 

Stop. Let the bystanders go.

my hands hurt.

I can make them hurt

 

You can read the rest of Dodla’s powerful poem when our debut issue is released online this December.

RUNNERS-UP:

Maragaret King, “The Tilted House.”

Margaret King is a Wisconsin writer who enjoys penning poetry, short stories, and young adult novels. In her spare time, she likes to haunt the shores of Lake Michigan, similar to many of her fictional characters.

Omer Zamir, “That.”

Omer Zamir lives in Israel. Chrysopylae was published through Deerbrook Editions. He likes Krapp’s Last Tape by Samuel Beckett, and The Chairs by Eugene Ionesco.

Kristin Garth, “Flutter.”

Kristin Garth is a poet from Pensacola. Her poetry has been featured in Infernal Ink, Anti-Heroin Chic, Quail Bell Magazine, Digging Through the Fat, The Society for Classical Poets, Mookychick, Moonchild Magazine, Occulum and other publications. She’s currently constructing a poetry dollhouse chapbook project entitled Pink Plastic House. Follow her on Twitter: @lolaandjolie.

CATEGORY: FICTION

WINNERS:

Phantasmagothica, “Black Satin, Black Lace.”

A writer from India, Phantasmagothica has been heavily inspired by Gothic literature since the age of 13. She draws inspiration from VC Andrews and Stephen King. Her writing can be found online at www.phantasmagothica.wordpress.com, on Twitter as @phantasmagothic, and Instagram as phantasmagothica.

Waste that had buried itself half-heartedly in the riverbed was catching between my toes. I was too slow, and she was too far.

You can read the rest of Phantasmagothica’s intriguing story when our debut issue is released online this December.

Stella Turner, “Salvador’s Lobster Telephone.”

Stella Turner was sent to Coventry, England at birth. She’s been published in Take a Leap Anthology, Connections Anthology, NFFD 2013 Anthology, and several FlashDogs anthologies. Her writing has also been published on 330words, 1000words, Postcard Shorts, Paragraph Planet, 99fiction and National Flash Fiction Day: The Journal, and National Flash Fiction Day’s Flash Flood. Follower her on twitter @stellakateT.

I feel the dampness of the water on my uniform as the message is relayed. Staccato like Morse code. It is she. She wants me home. I am home. It is she who is not here.

You can read the rest of Turner’s thought-provoking piece when our debut issue is released online this December.

RUNNERS-UP:

Ilana Lindsey,”Echolalia.”

Ilana Lindsey is a graduate of Richard Skinner’s Faber Academy Write a Novel course, and has a short story that was long-listed for the CWA Margery Allingham Short Story Competition in 2015. Lindsey’s inspirations and favourites include Margaret Atwood, Katherine Dunn, David Mitchell and Kazuo Ishiguro.

David Henson, “Yellow Water.”

David Henson’s work recently won the 2017 So Say We All Literary Prize in fiction and the 2016 Problem House Press short story contest. He writes and records music under the name Shadows on a River, which can be heard at shadowsonariver.bandcamp.com and tweets @davidbhenson.

 

Thank you to everyone who participated! Reading your entries was a thrilling, thought-inspiring experience. It’s exciting to see so many different voices creating unique works around the same theme. We hope to run a similar contest again in the future.

It has been a privilege to read your work. Thank you again for making this contest a success.


Victoria Elghasen & Michelle Baleka
Editors