Please notify us promptly if your work is accepted elsewhere. We do not accept previously published work, but we do accept simultaneous submissions. We appreciate your patience as we give all submissions the consideration they deserve. Please, don’t submit another story for a period of 30 days after receiving a rejection. Our editors are all volunteers, with other work, family, and creative commitments. After 45 days feel free to query on the status of your submissions to any of the emails below:,. Please allow at least 3 months while we review your submission. We are grateful for the opportunity to consider your work. Submissions for artwork, poetry, essay, and short fiction are accepted by both women and men. These will be included when we publish the work, online and/or in print, as well as when we share the work through our social media accounts. Should we choose to publish such work, we want to demonstrate care for our readers as well, and our Publication Contract will include an opportunity for you to offer a Content Warning. If the work you are sending us depicts traumatic events, whether personal or historical in nature, we invite you to consider including a Content Warning for our editors. We know how difficult it can be to share work, especially of a sensitive nature. While were open to longer work, we typically publish essays under 6,000 words. Please send one essay, memoir, or nonfiction excerpt at a time. We will remain open each month until we hit our 300 submission cap. How might ripeness be a lens for thinking ecologically and theologically? Are you in a season of ripeness in nature, in faith? Between April 20 and May 4, EcoTheo Review invites your ripest essays, photographs, short stories, and other works of writing and visual art ĮcoTheo Review appreciates the trust involved in our relationships with authors and readers. Our normal nonfiction submission period runs from September 1 through April 30. In summer as vines and trees fill with ripening fruits, we also think about the fullness of time. “Ripeness is all,” Shakespeare said, and while we might not consider it so encompassing, we do love to consider things when they are ripe. We consider all submissions for publication on our website and/or in our quarterly print issues. We are delighted by thoughtful art, compelling stories, bewitching poems that reflect our values of curiosity, justice, and community. We consider submissions of poetry, prose, and visual art that explore questions of ecology and spirituality from within and outside all religious traditions.
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