Editors of open anthologies actively seek submissions from all comers, established and unknown. They are willing to read whatever the tide washes up at their feet.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I'll have to self-publish it because unless you're on the 'New York Times' bestseller lists, anthologies don't sell all that well. However, low sales to a big publisher are a major success to a small one!
I am also working on a couple of short stories for anthologies. This is new to me and I'm enjoying it.
I think new writers everywhere need opportunities to get published.
The first writers are first and the rest, in the long run, nowhere but in anthologies.
I'm pretty much an open book.
I'm willing to be an open book, to a point.
Since I'm a fan of collections and anthologies, believe that the best writing often shines in shards and galloping stretches, I never find myself lobbying for a writer I enjoy reading regularly to hole up in Heidegger's hut for four or five years to bring forth a mountain.
I'm a pretty open book.
I am an anthologist, you see. I sort of make anthologies for people.
Nowadays, everyone seems to have a blog that finds readers.
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