One of the favorite subjects of those (like me) who like to write mystery/crime short stories is the sad fact that there are so few current markets for that kind of fiction. Or at least fewer than there used to be. Don't get me wrong: I love the ones that are still around. I just wish there were more of them. I wish there were a thousand of them.
As for me, I didn't start writing for publication until the mid-'90s, which to some of you is a bit late--I don't remember, for example, the really old markets like Black Mask, Manhunt, Menace, Mike Shayne, Pursuit, and others. But I do know that between the time I started out and, say, five years ago, there were still a good many places out there for mystery/crime submissions. Some of them, bless their souls, were purely mystery markets and others were non-genre or different-genre or multi-genre magazines, but most would at least consider crime fiction submissions. (Remember, I'm talking about magazines right now, not anthologies.)
As I grow older, I find myself doing a lot of reminiscing, and in looking over my old writing records--submissions (many), acceptances (some), rejections (many)--I uncovered the names of a lot of long-defunct magazines that I've dealt with, and that were kind enough, over the years, to publish my stories. Some of them stayed around for a long time, some were only a flash in the pan, and some I probably killed because they closed up shop immediately after publishing my stuff.
What surprised me most is that there were so many of these magazines. If you've been doing this for a while, as I have, some of these might hold some memories for you as well.
Anyone remember these publications?
Murderous Intent Mystery Magazine
Detective Mystery Stories
Over My Dead Body
Mystery Time
Grit
Orchard Press Mysteries
The Rex Stout Journal
Lines in the Sand
Short Stuff for Grown-Ups
Anterior Fiction Quarterly
Just a Moment
Pebbles
Green's Magazine
Red Herring Mystery Magazine
The Oak
Eureka Literary Magazine
Writer's Block Magazine
Western Digest
Spring Fantasy
Roswell Literary Review
Dream International Quarterly
Writers on the River
The Ultimate Writer
Matilda Ziegler Magazine for the Blind (braille)
Nefarious
Enigma
Futures (later Futures Mysterious Anthology Magazine)
Ancient Paths
Yellow Sticky Notes
Cenotaph
The Villager
Heist Magazine
Lost Worlds
Scavenger's Newsletter
The Mid-South Review
The Copperfield Review
T-Zero
Phoebe
The Pegasus Review
Crimestalker Casebook (which I understand will soon make a comeback)
Desert Voices
Mindprints
Penny Dreadful
Writer's Guidelines & News
The Taj Mahal Review
Antipodean SF
Setu
Simulacrum
Ethereal Gazette
Spinetingler Magazine
Champagne Shivers
Listen
Apollo's Lyre
Scifantastic
50-Word Stories
Star*Line
Crime & Suspense E-Zine
Flashshot
Illya's Honey
Night Roses
Jupiter World Press
Flash Tales
Mouth Full of Bullets
Thirteen
Oxford So-and-So
Sniplets
Byline Magazine
Prairie Times
Deep South Magazine
Pages of Stories (Leigh, remember this one?)
Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine
The Big Adios
Flash Bang Mysteries
The Norwegian American
Bewildering Stories
Gathering Storm Magazine
Mystery Weekly (later Mystery Magazine)
Serial Magazine
Ficta Fabula
Allegory
Elixir Magazine
Fiction on the Web
Down & Out: The Magazine
Did any of you publish stories at any of those places? I'd like to hear about your experiences. Remember some of those long-ago editors--Babs Lakey, Margo Power, Cheri Jung, Rick Ollerman, Linda Hutton, Andrew McAleer, Tony Burton, BJ Bourg, Marvin Kaye? Any others? Some of them were wonderful.
One market that I didn't mention--Amazon Shorts--was more of a program than a magazine or anthology. It ran from (I think) 2005 until maybe 2010, and published 19 of my stories. Hated to see them go. Another great market was of course Untreed Reads, which is still here but under different leadership.
Before I close, I should certainly mention--and thank--some of those markets that are still around: Thema, Pleiades, The Strand, AHMM, EQMM, Black Cat Mystery Magazine, Black Cat Weekly, Crimeucopia, Tough, Shotgun Honey, Star Magazine (yes, Star is still alive and kickin'), Pulp Modern, Mysterical-E, Our Southern Memories, Mystery Tribune, Saddlebag Dispatches, Kings River Life, St. Anthony Messenger, Tales from the Moonlit Path, The Texas Gardener (Seeds), Hoosier Noir, Indelible, Frontier Tales, Punk Noir, The Saturday Evening Post, and Woman's World. There are of course others, but, again, I've listed those that I'm familiar with because they've published my stories.
Ah, memory lane. Nice place to visit, right? As for the present--
Thank God for the markets that have survived. May they live long and prosper!