Poets & Writers

Submit That Manuscript!

JUST a few days ago I received a rejection letter from the Southern Review. The e-mail read, in part, “Dear Joey Franklin: Thank you for sending us [your essay]. We enjoyed this piece, but we didn’t feel it was right for the Southern Review.”

How to describe the emotions wrapped up in this brief encounter? First there was surprise at the unexpected response after months of waiting. Then a jolt of anticipation as my finger hovered over the e-mail link on my phone’s screen—the possibility of sharing journal space with so many writers I admire; the schmoozing when I run into editors at next year’s AWP book fair; the kudos from colleagues who’ve been trying to get into the magazine for years—eat your hearts out! And there’s also the practical matter of money (the Southern Review actually pays cash) as well as the all-important publication line on my curriculum vitae.

Then, of course, I open the e-mail and all that irrational optimism plunges deep into the pit of my stomach. Rejection is a sickening experience, something akin to airplane turbulence or bumping into your ex while she’s out with her new fling. Neuroscientists have actually identified similarities between our response to rejection and our response to physical pain. And the more personal the rejection, the more pain we feel. A friend of mine recently told me she received two rejection letters in one day—one from a poetry

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers6 min read
The Contest You Didn’t Enter
FEW literary honors inspire as many mixed emotions as “best” lists. These festivities are still primarily annual, still primarily relegated to Q4, but in recent times the promotional bonanza seems to have exploded, both in terms of the number of lis
Poets & Writers2 min read
Submission Calendar
AMERICAN POETRY REVIEW Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize DIAGRAM/NEW MICHIGAN PRESS Chapbook Contest  LEEWAY FOUNDATION  Transformation Awards LOST HORSE PRESS Idaho Prize for Poetry NATIONAL BOOK FOUNDATION National Book Awards  PITTSBURG STATE UNIVERSI
Poets & Writers4 min read
Prize Judged by Incarcerated Readers
Reginald Dwayne Betts didn’t consider himself a reader until he was sent to solitary confinement for the first time. Betts, then a teenager serving an eight-year prison sentence for carjacking, was surprised by what he saw: a world centered in many w

Related Books & Audiobooks