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Should I/How to participate in anthologies?
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A.N.
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Jun 28, 2015 09:14PM

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Four of us decided to do the first one. We all wanted to write sweet romance. I came up with the concept and asked the others to join. Of the original four, three of us are in all six anthologies. A new author was added for #4. This gave her name recognition before her solo novels were published (by the same indie publisher who did the anthologies).
For books #5 and #6, one of the original three opted out.
Find others who write in your same genre. Come up with an overall theme, and invite them to participate.

BTW, don't do it to make money. With the split, you make nearly nothing.



As far as participating in them, you don't need to know people ahead of time. There are several websites that list anthologies looking for contributions. I search them a lot.


As far as participating in them, you don't need to know people ahead of time...."
Wayland, could you post that list on this thread? I'd love to see it and others probably would to.


The ones I use most often are:
darkmarkets.com ralan.com and The Submission Grinder, at http://thegrinder.diabolicalplots.com/
Ralan is probably the hardest to navigate, but once you get used to it, has the most on it. I am sure there are more, but those three are good. If anyone knows of others, feel free to add them here.


I've been published in five. Two I found through Ralan, two through networking (nobody I knew, but someone I'd sold to forwarded my name to the editor as a possible). Two paid well for fiction, the others not so much (royalties are very small when divided between nine or ten people). But unless your choice is between an anthology and some project you know will make you money, I'd say go for it.

My go-to site is Duotrope. I've used it for years:
https://duotrope.com
They have a free trial you can use for a week, after that it's $5/month. I use their annual subscription. You can use it to keep track of submissions too so you don't accidentally send to the same market, keep track of submission statistics, view other submission statistics, etc.



They used to be a free site. When I started using them they were free, but they didn't receive enough donations to continue operating at that model.
As a writer, I agree with you. As a programmer myself, I understand their perspective too. I use the site regularly, so it's worth the price for me.
