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Call for Submissions!

Book Worms Issue 10 – Apocalyptic Horror!

Submission Guidelines

Weโ€™re kicking off 2026 with all the optimism of a Threads viewingโ€”yes, the 1984 nuclear war drama, not the app.

If you recognize our Wormy cartoon to the left, then youโ€™ve seen itโ€”and you know. If not, buckle up. Thereโ€™s a reason itโ€™s considered one of the scariest films ever made.

For ourย 10th issue ofย Book Worms Horror Zine, weโ€™re chasing that same level of end-of-the-world dread. If our current political climate gives you the creeps, channel it. Or take us somewhere entirely differentโ€”your own futuristic nightmare is fair game, as long as the vision is dark.

Weโ€™re looking for stories and poetry that dive into nuclear winters, climate catastrophes, algorithmic uprisings, techno-anarchy, or whatever fresh brand of apocalypse your twisted imagination can conjure.

Have fun with the devastation. We certainly will.

SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES:

Please read ALL of the following before submitting!

Deadline: January 10, 2026 (must be received by deadline, so please mail early).

PAYMENT: 8 cents a word for fiction (1500 words or less). $25 flat fee for poetry (20 lines or less)

No reprints, please. Exclusive rights for six months after publication.

ACCEPTING MAIL-IN SUBMISSIONS ONLY! (*see exception below)

Mail your submissions to: La Regina Studio/Grundy Commons/925 Canal Street/Bristol, PA 19007

Decision notices are sent through email so there is no need to include a self-addressed, stamped envelope.ย Please include your email address and your mailing address with your submission.ย All submissions must be typed (cover letters preferred but not mandatory) and beย properly formatted. Also, if you have a social media presence, please include those beneath your email.

A few new things to know:

  • Send only one submission, meaning don’t send multiple short stories or poems or a combination of both. Send only one piece and send your best.
  • DO NOT send your submissions using registered mail or any kind of correspondence requiring a signature. It probably won’t get to us and you’ll be wasting your money.
  • *If you’ve had work previously published in Book Worms (you know who you are) you may email your submission to bookwormssubmissions@gmail.com (same deadline) Please write Returning Author Submission in the subject line.
  • Please use the EXACT mailing address listed above. Please don’t write Book Worms on the address. This is a side project and our mailman might get confused. The mailbox is in a huge industrial complex and unfortunately, letters have gotten lost in the past, so please follow the instructions and mail as early as possible.

Editorโ€™s Note:

Each submission period, we have to pass on many wonderful storiesโ€”not because they lack quality, but because the authors didnโ€™t follow the guidelines. Common issues include exceeding the word count, missing the deadline, straying from the theme, or sending work via email instead of the required method (exceptions notwithstanding).

Please donโ€™t be discouraged if your story isnโ€™t selected for this issue. We receive many more submissions than we can publish, and the competition is always fierce. Often, the final decisions come down to word count limits or maintaining a balance of story types. If your piece isnโ€™t chosen this time, we hope youโ€™ll keep writing and submittingโ€”your voice matters, and weโ€™d love to see your work again.

Curious about what kinds of stories we publish? Pick up a copy of Book Worms here!

Featured

Autumn Vibes

Autumn, Are You Coming or Not?

Some autumns creep in with cool winds that grow stronger by the day, stirring up dry leaves and wistful memories that sing and crackle like a roaring bonfire. Other autumns, like the one weโ€™re experiencing this year, cling to summer like a desperate lover, unwilling to let go of the heat. To this autumn, I sayโ€”itโ€™s time to let go.

Better relationships awaitโ€”like my new Ralph Lauren tweed blazer (snagged at a recent Nordstrom Rack sale) paired with my Vince wool sweater. Or perhaps a cozy throuple featuring jeans, my penny loafers, and a tartan wool cape? Autumn has been calling me for weeks, yet summer refuses to leave. Still, todayโ€™s rainy coolness gives me hope. It may be premature to pull my Filson waxed barn coat from the depths of the closet and tread the grounds with the hounds (do Shih Tzus count?), but I can certainly wear jeans, my short Wellies, and a light jacket. At least give me that!

Longing for my tweeds.

Today, Iโ€™m doing my annual closet switch from summer to fall, and I donโ€™t care if I swelter for the next few weeks. At least we had a beautiful Harvest Moon the other night, and my morning bike rides have been shrouded in fog. The autumn vibes are kicking in at last, and Iโ€™ve been keeping busyโ€”cleaning house, writing my new book, reading (currently wrapping up Vamptember), and doing some sketching. Itโ€™s nice to slow the pace when the days grow shorter.

Comforting foggy mornings.

This morning, I woke early to continue final edits onย Starlexย (always worth the effortโ€”turns out Iโ€™d switched a few character names without realizing it). I was thrilled to find an early review that could only be described as glowing! I try not to let it go to my head, but itโ€™s okay to let a little positivity galvanize the final stretch of bringing this story to life. You can pick up an ARC copy ofย Starlexย on NetGalley or Booksprout if youโ€™d like. It officially releases in print and ebook onย November 12 (pre-order ebook now).

Coming soon!

And speaking of creations, the newย Book Wormsย is hereโ€”and selling fast! This issue is all about folk horror, perfect for setting the spooky-season mood even if the weather isnโ€™t quite cooperating. Do check it out, and let me know in the comments how youโ€™re spending your autumn so farโ€”hopefully not poolside (unless thatโ€™s your thingโ€ฆ in which case, I pity youโ€”just kidding).

Obey my dog! Buy Book Worms!

Featured

Call for Submissions for our Halloween Issue!

Theme: Folk Horror

For our next issue,ย Book Wormsย is venturing deep into the twisted roots ofย folk horrorโ€”that uncanny space where ancient legends, rural isolation, and old-world rituals fester just beneath the surface of pastoral charm.

Think of it like this: you and your partner leave the city behind for a peaceful life in a quaint countryside village. The air is clean, the neighbors are… unusually welcoming. Then one night, you hear drums echoing from the forest. You follow the sound. There’s firelight flickering through the trees. Chanting. Masks. A circle. And just like that, you realize you’re not the guestโ€”youโ€™re the offering.

Folk horror thrives on the uneasy tension between tradition and terror. Classic examples includeย Young Goodman Brown by Nathaniel Hawthorne,ย Harvest Homeย by Thomas Tryon,ย Starve Acreย by Andrew Michael Hurley, andย The Only Good Indiansย by Stephen Graham Jones. On screen:ย The Wicker Man,ย The Witch, andย Midsommar.

That said, folk horror is fluidโ€”so stretch the boundaries. Invent your own cursed villages, pagan rites, or ghost-haunted fields. Just keep it eerie, keep it folkloric, and above all, make it scary.

This Halloween, Book Worms wants stories that chill, not just charm. Weโ€™re still suckers for โ€œfunโ€ horror, but this issue? Weโ€™re going full nightmare.
Ready to scare us?
Send us your tale.

Deadline: September 10, 2025 (must be received by deadline, so please mail early).

PAYMENT: 8 cents a word for fiction (1500 words or less). $25 flat fee for poetry (20 lines or less)

No reprints or multiple submissions, please. Exclusive rights for six months after publication.

ACCEPTING MAIL-IN SUBMISSIONS ONLY! (*see exception below)

Mail your submissions to: La Regina Studio/Grundy Commons/925 Canal Street/Bristol, PA 19007

Decision notices are sent through email so there is no need to include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Please include your email address and your mailing address with your submission. All submissions must be typed (cover letters preferred but not mandatory) and be properly formatted.

A few new things to know:

  • Send only one submission, meaning don’t send multiple short stories or poems or a combination of both. Send only one piece and send your best.
  • DO NOT send your submissions using registered mail or any kind of correspondence requiring a signature. It probably won’t get to us and you’ll be wasting your money.
  • If you’ve had work previously published in Book Worms (you know who are) you may email your submission to bookwormssubmissions@gmail.com (same deadline) Please write Halloween Submission in the subject line.
  • Please use the EXACT mailing address listed above. Please don’t write Book Worms on the address. This is a side project and our mailman might get confused. The mailbox is in a huge industrial complex and unfortunately, letters have gotten lost in the past, so please follow the instructions and mail as early as you can.

And finally, please donโ€™t be discouraged if your story isnโ€™t selected for this issue. We receive many submissions for each zine and can only accept a small handful. If your piece isnโ€™t chosen this time, we still encourage you to keep writing and submittingโ€”your voice matters, and weโ€™d love to see your work again.

Featured

Book Worms Summer Issue!

The Summer Issue of Book Worms is hereโ€”and itโ€™s our biggest, boldest, most jam-packed zine yet! Weโ€™ve gone all out this time, with our very first full-color cover to kick off the season in style.

Since summer is all about camping trips, lakeside adventures, and spooky stories by the fire, we thought: why not go full cryptid? From lake monsters to forest beasts, this issue is crawling with strange sightings and spine-tingling tales.

Weโ€™re thrilled to welcome back some of our favorite contributorsโ€”like Clay McLeod Chapman and Angelique Fawnsโ€”along with a new crop of rising horror stars who are bound to blow your mind.

Book Worms has everything you need to unplug and escape: creepy reads, quirky puzzles, eerie gamesโ€”anything to keep you off your phone and in the moment.

So go ahead, order your copy today. Toss it in your backpack next to the marshmallows and bug spray. You wonโ€™t regret it.

  • Click on the cover to order your Book Worms Horror Zine!
Featured

Call for Submissions!

Book Worms Horror Zine Issue #8

Call for Submissions: Cryptid Horror โ€“ Summer Issue

This summer, weโ€™re hunting monstersโ€”and we want you to join the chase.

Our upcoming issue is diving deep into cryptid horror, where folklore meets fear and the shadows are never empty. From the fog-drenched hollows of Appalachia to the eerie stillness of primeval forests, weโ€™re looking for stories that stir that ancient dreadโ€”the kind that makes you glance over your shoulderโ€ฆ just in case.

Whether itโ€™s beasts from local legend or psychological horrors born from the depths of your own personal wilderness, we want your weirdest, wildest, and most chilling creations.

Think: backwoods folklore, eerie encounters, survival nightmares, and twisted myths.

Unleash your inner cryptozoologist and show us whatโ€™s hiding just out of sight.

Deadline: May 31, 2025 (must be received by deadline, so please mail early).

PAYMENT: 8 cents a word for fiction and essays (1500 words or less). $25 for short poems (ten lines or less), $50 for longer poems. Includes one contributor copy.

No reprints or multiple submissions, please. Exclusive rights for six months after publication.

ACCEPTING MAIL-IN SUBMISSIONS ONLY!

Mail your submissions to: La Regina Studio/Grundy Commons/925 Canal Street/Bristol, PA 19007

Decision notices are sent through email so there is no need to include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Please include your email address with your submission. All submissions must be typed (cover letters preferred but not mandatory) and be properly formatted.

Frequently Asked Question: What kind of stories are you looking for?

We generally enjoy โ€œfunโ€, โ€œ80s styleโ€ horror reminiscent of the zineโ€™s old-school vibe, but weโ€™ve also been blown away by fresh voices that take the genre in a new direction. That being said, the best chance for your story being accepted by Book Worms is to follow the submission guidelines. Make sure your story is of the horror genre, mail in your submission versus email, meet the deadline, and donโ€™t exceed the word count limit. And if your story doesnโ€™t make it, please keep trying. Weโ€™ve had to turn down many excellent stories due to space constraints alone. A good way to get an idea about what weโ€™re looking for is to read our current issue or one of our back issues that are still available.

A Few Tips:

  • Mail early. Unfortunately, weโ€™ve had a few submissions lost in the mail and that didnโ€™t arrive until weeks after the deadline.
  • Consider writing shorter stories. Sometimes we have just enough room to a 500-800 word flash fiction piece.

It might also be helpful to explain what we donโ€™t want.

  • Paranormal romance (Love the genre. Itโ€™s not right for Book Worms.)
  • Beyond the pale violence or pornographic material. Keep it fun, kids.
  • Overtly political themes.

Featured

Halloween Haunts and More!

New Release!

Halloween has turned into a holiday as bustling as Christmas, which is probably why Iโ€™m finally getting around to sharing my thoughts on the new collection I launched at the beginning of October. At least I managed to release it just in time for Halloween! Iโ€™m thrilled to share that the collection, which includes five short stories and a novella, hit the number one new release spot on Amazon in its category. Thatโ€™s definitely encouraging! This collection is designed for teens and young adults, focusing on all the fun chills without diving into anything too gory. If youโ€™re on the lookout for some cozy companion stories for those chilly October nights, Iโ€™d love for you to check out Halloween Haunts, only 99 cents for the ebook during the month of October!

Too Much Exposure?

If you’re an artist or a creative individual, you won’t want to miss the latest episode of The Right Brain Cafรฉ podcast, produced by my Book Worms partner, James DeFeo, and me. This week, we dive into a crucial topic: the ongoing pressure artists face when deciding between working for exposure versus earning money. Is exposure truly beneficial, or does it undermine the value of your craft? Join us for an insightful discussion that could change your perspective on the choices you make in your creative journey.

While you’re busy with your Halloween shopping, donโ€™t forget to pick up our Halloween issue of Book Worms Horror Zine! It features stories by Grady Hendrix, author of “Paperbacks From Hell,” and popular horror writer Clay McLeod Chapman. Issues are selling out quickly, so be sure to get your copy today!

Finally, please leave a message about how you plan to spend Halloween. Do you dress up, attend parties, or turn off the lights and hope to avoid any mischievous tricks? Whether you celebrate (or not), please have a haunted good time!

Featured

Book Worms – New Horror Zine

Book Worms, a new mail-order only horror zine, is now available for purchase online and at selective indie book stores. If you like old-school fan zines, check out Book Worms for only $5 an issue (USA shipping cost included). In Book Worms you’ll find engaging articles, reviews, short stories, puzzles, art, and all kinds of (cheap) horror fun!

SCAN CODE to BUY or click
on image to access link!

Write for Book Worms!

Currently accepting submissions for our Halloween issue.

Deadline: September 15, 2023

Payment is 8 cents a word.

No reprints or multiple submissions please. Exclusive rights for six months after publication.

Mail new horror fiction and essays (Halloween themes please) under 1500 words to:

La Regina Studio/Grundy Commons/925 Canal Street/Bristol, PA 19007

Acceptance notices are sent through email so no need to include self-addressed, stamped envelope. Please include your email address on your submission.

Check out our new Book Worms Horror Writing Podcast!