
Hey, guys. While Lyrical Press is almost always open for submissions, I wanted to put out a submissions call both to spread the word about the press and with the active intent of building my list. Since I’m one of the newer editors with the house, I’m looking to expand the group of authors I personally work with throughout their careers at Lyrical. What that means is right now you have a better chance of acceptance; there will be times when I have to say no to a project I’d otherwise love, just because I don’t have time for another author or another book. Right now is not one of those times. I have the time, and I want your books. Or short stories. Or novellas.
To submit, you need to read the Lyrical Press submission guidelines and send your query letter, synopsis, and manuscript to submissions@lyricalpress.com. I’d advise looking over the website and getting acquainted with Lyrical, our books, and our authors, so you can make an informed decision as to whether or not Lyrical’s the right publisher for you. Also, keep in mind that I’m not the only editor who reviews submissions, we all have different tastes, and all subs do go through a standard review process. I can specifically request a submission I like, but so can the other editors. Lastly, scroll down past my wishlist for a quick list of things not to do when responding to this call.
While the sub guidelines cover in detail the genres and formats we accept (and don’t accept), I’m personally hoping to see a few specific things. Lyrical does favor romance, so if your story hits these marks and features romance (even where it’s not specified), you may have a better chance. My wishlist:
Dystopian and darker sci-fi. I love dystopian stories with an intensity that would probably be disturbing were they a person or an inanimate object. Dystopian stories are generally sci-fi, often post-apocalyptic, but I’d be just as happy to see well-done dystopian fantasy, alternate realities, or alternative histories. If you have a sci-fi story that’s fairly dark in nature with a strong noir theme but doesn’t really fall into the dystopian category, that’s up my alley, too.
Dark, gritty urban fantasy. By “dark, gritty” I don’t mean “full of as many perverted, disgusting things as you can think of.” I mean I want to see darker worlds where the cities that make this urban fantasy have become as degraded and dark as the iconic Gotham, the heroes are flawed, and you have to struggle to find the light of redemption past the filth of corruption – but it is there, and eventually shines through in some kind of happy ending. Sometimes that kind of setting can mean using perversion, violence, etc. as part of the story, but such things should be well-crafted and entirely necessary to the plot, not used for shock value. Note: I am including paranormal and paranormal romance under this category, but be warned that I’ve reached my saturation point for vampires, werewolves, shifters, and witches. That doesn’t mean I’ll turn down a story with those elements; they’re one of Lyrical’s strongest areas. It does mean that the story must be exceptional for me to request it. Faeries are still fair game.
Steampunk. I admit, I’m not as rabidly into steampunk as many others, and sometimes the movement is downright annoying. But when a steampunk story is good, it really floors me; the genre itself is wonderfully versatile, and the general setting required for steampunk is one of my favorites. Your steampunk can have magic or pure technology, I don’t care. Let’s just get some steam rolling.
Stories with LGBT and cultural diversity. Within the limits of Lyrical’s accepted genres, of course – and this can be combined in with any of the other things on my wishlist. I don’t want to read stories about being gay, bi, trans, black, Chinese, Tanzanian, Aborigine, whatever. I want to read stories where the characters happen to fall somewhere within that spectrum, and it’s an integral part of their character without being a stereotype – but isn’t essential to the overall story. It’s just who they are, just as being white and straight is who classic mainstream protagonists are. They need a plot external to their sexuality, gender identity, or race, but neither should be diminished. (Of course sexuality or gender identity would be more prominent in a story where the romance is the central plot, but that should go without saying.) I want to see a Native American woman as the star of a steampunk story, treated the same way a white woman would be in the same role – but without her culture marginalized. It doesn’t matter if you passingly mention her skin color or tribal affiliation, but let her be recognized as something other than the default assumption of white. Or I’d like to see an urban fantasy where the main protagonist is a gay man. No cliched angst and agonies about coming out, but casual acceptance that he has a boyfriend or actual sexuality-related issues that affect the plot. These are just examples, not a specific request to write these things. I just want you to understand that I’d like to see stories where primary characters are ethnically diverse, LGBT, or both, not stories about the characters being those things.
Western or frontier romance. Cowboys and Indians, Little House on the Prairie with a shot of sensuality, desperado meets schoolmarm…or anywhere in between. I’m a sucker for a well-done romance set on the wild and woolly frontier, as long as it’s authentic to the setting and time period.
Historical romance. Give me London, give me France, give me Scottish underpants. Or go really multicultural on me and send something from the Edo period of Japan, I don’t care. I want history – anyone’s history, as long as it’s interesting, sexy, and gives me that marvelous feeling of seeing something old and forgotten in a new light with characters who really bring it to life. I’ll melt for ancient Assyria, Persia, Egypt…but also for Scotland in the 1500s, or ancient Mayan civilizations (just please, nothing about 2012 in modern day; it has to be set in the actual time of the Mayans). You never know what will catch me.
Gangland stories. Guys and dolls and slinky gang molls, show me a fantasy story set in the Dillinger era and I’ll probably love you forever. I might also squee a little over jazz-era tales.
Don’t fit that list? It’s okay. Lyrical represents a broad range of genres, and as long as your submission meets the criteria posted on the submission guidelines page you’re welcome to submit. For one, I’m not locked into my preferences. Two, if I don’t want it, someone else might. I may be building my list, but other Lyrical editors are always looking for new authors to work with.
Now for the unpleasant part. A few warnings:
If you have questions, feel free to post them here and I’ll answer them here (so others can benefit if they have the same questions).

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