Thursday, March 7, 2024

SCANTIC BOOKS ~ HOME

SCANTIC BOOKS ~ HOME

~~ Scantic Books is OPEN to submissions. ~~

Scantic Books is a small, independent publisher located in New England.

The Scantic River flows through many small towns of Connecticut and Massachusetts and brings with it local history and lore. Named after a local Native American tribe who settled nearby, the Scantic roars in the spring, murmurs in the summer, and once powered such mills as the Hazard Gunpowder Company. This hidden river in the heart of New England now lends its name to a publishing house dedicated to bringing high-quality authors to light.

New!  View the Scantic Books trailer by clicking the link below!

Scantic Books

 
Our Editors:
Are experienced writers, editors, and instructors who work in higher education teaching English (Composition, Literature, Creative Writing, Communication, etc) to college students. They are widely traveled, have held seminars on writer's block, led fiction writing and journalism clubs, and have served as reviewers and tutors for other authors. They are animal lovers, newspaper columnists, and literary club advisors. They believe small press has the ability to publish voices that otherwise may go unheard by major publishing corporations. They believe in working closely with their authors to produce and publish quality literature that all involved can be proud of.
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What We ARE Looking For:
In FICTION:
Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Horror (for Horror think scary, not buckets of blood.) Short Story Collections, Novels and Novellas, Young Adult, and Children’s Literature.  Limited Historical Fiction.
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In NON - FICTION:
Memoir, Essay Collections, Politics/Current Events.
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We ARE accepting GRAPHIC NOVELS!!  Finished PDFs only.  If your novel falls under one of the genres listed above (For example, fantasy), and is finished in PDF format, send it along!
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What We AREN'T Looking For:
Romance, Relationships, Dystopia, Mystery, Religion.
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What Acquisitions would LOVE to see: Speculative Fiction with strong female characters.
 
GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSIONS TO SCANTIC BOOKS:
Please send a cover letter, synopsis, and first 15-25 pages in the body of the email to: ScanticEditors@yahoo.com Be sure to include the word QUERY in the subject line, followed by the title of the manuscript. For example: Query - Heartbreak Hill.  No attachments unless requested.
Questions? Contact us via email.  We are also on Facebook.
We prefer to work with un-agented authors, and never charge reading fees.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES 


 

GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSIONS TO SCANTIC BOOKS:
Please send a cover letter, synopsis, and first 15-25 pages in the body of the email to: ScanticEditors@yahoo.com Be sure to include the word QUERY in the subject line, followed by the title of the manuscript. For example: Query - Heartbreak Hill.  No attachments unless requested.
Questions? Contact us via email.  We are also on Facebook.
We never charge reading fees. 

What We ARE Looking For:
In FICTION:
Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Horror (for Horror think scary, not buckets of blood.) Short Story Collections, Novels and Novellas, Young Adult, and Children’s Literature.  Limited Historical Fiction.
*
In NON - FICTION:
Memoir, Essay Collections, Politics/Current Events.
*
We ARE accepting GRAPHIC NOVELS!!  Finished PDFs only.  If your novel falls under one of the genres listed above (For example, fantasy), and is finished in PDF format, send it along!
 *
What We AREN'T Looking For:
Romance, Relationships, Dystopia, Mystery, Religion.
 *
What Acquisitions would LOVE to see: Speculative Fiction with strong female characters.

"The Loneliness Channel" by Michael C. Keith

 

"The Loneliness Channel" by Michael C. Keith
 
Scantic Books is proud to present "The Loneliness Channel" by acclaimed author Michael C. Keith. (Available in paperback and ebook; proceeds to go to charity supporting loneliness.)
 
The country’s major communication media (networks, magazines, journals, newspapers, and internet) have been reporting what it considers the new global pandemic: loneliness. The reports stem from the research of prominent medical and psychology institutions. While the findings are startling, they have not been a surprise to Michael C. Keith, the author of The Loneliness Channel. A sense of aloneness and isolation were prominent aspects of his life as a child hitchhiking America under the dubious stewardship of his divorced alcoholic parent. Frequently left to his own resources in strange cities while his hapless father took day jobs before hitting the road again to places the elder Keith imbued with endless unrealistic possibilities, his son passed time companionless in gloomy rooming houses. While the pair’s cross-country jaunts possessed moments of distracting adventure, they were inevitably followed by long periods of disappointment and longing. This left an indelible mark on the author even as he grew to be a successful adult, surrounded by loving friends and family. In recent years, those far-gone days have manifested in a myriad of fiction and an acclaimed memoir, including this new collection, which is devoted to the topic of loneliness through the literary devices of irony, humor, and pathos. 
 
“Pithy and profound mini-tales abound in The Loneliness Channel. New perceptions, decisions, regrets, rants, all things possible and impossible on every page. Delights and forebodings. Joys and sorrows. Keith plays with real and potentially real life from every angle in this marvel of a book. Powerful and compelling. Such abundance in compression.” –Tony Press, author of Crossing the Lines
“Two great strains in American culture are vulgarity and loneliness. Michael C. Keith understands one without resorting to the other.” –Luke Salisbury, author of No Common War
“Michael C. Keith’s The Loneliness Channel is a collection of quietly powerful prose poems, or ‘micro-prose,’ as the author describes them, that explore solitude and loss. The work is suffused with a sense of poignancy and regret, but also with touches of dark and subtle humor. One thing that strikes the reader is that this could only be the work of a mature writer, one who realizes that the value of what has been lost reminds us of the value of what remains.” –Charles Coe, author of Purgatory Row
“In this marvelous compendium, Michael C. Keith provides an amazing range of very brief stories about the experience of loneliness, most with a sardonic twist, many with a touching tone. Turns out there are more than a hundred ways to be lonely!” –Lawrence Kessenich, author of Hard Times Require Furious Dancing