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CRICKET
June 2007 Issue

Readership: boys and girls ages 9 and up

SUBMISSION SPECIFICS from their guidelines:

"CRICKET, for readers ages 9 to 14, publishes original stories, poems, and articles written by the world's best authors for children and young adults. In some cases, CRICKET purchases rights for excerpts from books yet to be published. Each issue also includes several reprints of high-quality selections.” Note exact word count on each manuscript and cover letter, except in the case of poetry when you should note the line count on the manuscript.

WHAT THEY WANT:

"Fiction: realistic, contemporary, historical, humor, mysteries, fantasy, science fiction, folk tales, fairy tales, legends, myths. 200 to 2000 words. Pays up to 25 cents a word.

Nonfiction: biography, memoir, history, science, technology, natural history, social science, archeology, architecture, geography, foreign culture, travel, adventure, sports, music, dance, theatre. 200 to 1500 words.

(A bibliography is required for all retold folklore and nonfiction articles. Be prepared to send other backup materials and photo references-where applicable-upon request.)"

Note: Having sold nonfiction to CRICKET, I would recommend you make copies/photocopies of all sources at the time of your research. You'll save time. And back up all Internet facts with at least one credible print source.

Poetry: serious, humorous, nonsense rhymes. Not longer than 50 lines. Pays up to $3 a line.

Other: crossword puzzles, logic puzzles, math puzzles, crafts, recipes, science experiments, games and activities from other countries, plays, music, art.

Pays on Publication. Prefers to buy all rights. Send manuscripts (NO QUERIES) to:

Submissions Editor
CRICKET
Carus Publishing
70 East Lake Street
Suite 300
Chicago, IL 60601

Note: Until you've been published in CRICKET four or five times, all submissions will be processed by a manuscript coordinator who sends them to advanced readers before sending to the specific editors. So, if you haven't worked with a specific editor in the past, CRICKET prefers manuscripts be sent to "Submissions Editor." If you absolutely have to send to a specific editor because otherwise you can’t stand it, send to Mr. Lonnie Plecha, editor. Don’t send it to Marianne Carus; she’s never going to be the one reading your submission – trust me on this.)

ANALYSIS OF SPECIFIC ISSUE

CRICKET
June 2007

Letterbox: [Cricket editors definitely pay attention to what readers say they want…so in this issue, the letters were about WW II, fantasy, ecology, languages, Alaska, fencing.] Also readers specifically asked for more funny stories and more pirate stories.

Driving by Martha Cooney. A poem of seventeen lines that does not rhyme about riding in the car at night. [One page]

Storm Chaser by Mary Kay Morel. In this story, a girl spends the summer with her father, a storm chaser. They must take shelter from a tornado in an old barn, and the girl learns things about her own need for adventure and her father’s love of storms. [Six pages] First person.

Wild Winds by Heather Delabre. An interesting activity using talcum power to show how heat causes air currents. [One page]

Icarus by Ann Pedtke. This poem looks at the story of Icarus and freedom. Non rhyming, 42 lines. [Two pages]

My Father Was a Fisherman by Meindert Dejong. A young boy learns the story of an old upturned fishing boat. [Four pages.] Very European in tone, third person.

Amanda’s Fantasies by Fernando Krahn. A wordless four-panel story. A little girl spots a hat and when she picks it up, something dark rises out of the ground and grabs her – but it turns out to be her Dad. One page

Long Meg by Rosemary Minard. Part three a series set in the time of Henry the Eighth. A girl disguises herself as a man in order to have an adventure during a war. Seven pages, third person.

Ugly Bird’s Castle Crossword Puzzle by Binney Paik and Sandy Canahan – medieval theme.

The Thousandth Sword by Pamela S. Turner. The story of a monk who traveled around challenging samurai to duels and taking their swords. He meets a slender boy with a beautiful sword and decides he must have it. The boy bests the monk in a fight and the monk joins the boy – they are part of the historical legends of Japan. Five pages, third person.

Instead of the War Drum: The Story of Ashoka by Uma Krisnawami. Another historical story of a king in India and the moment that turned him away from war. Two pages, third person.

Ahimsa by Josie Tagliente. First person story of a girl who doesn’t like to kill anything, even the caterpillars who eat up her grapevines, and how she deals with the moth invasion. Six pages.

Carnivorous Caterpillars by Jan Fields. My article about the Harvester caterpillars that eat aphids. Three pages.

The Explorer by Christy Lenzi. Part Two – The story of Mynheer Leeuwenhoek, the discoverer of microbes, told through the viewpoint of Hendrik, a boy who wants to be an artist and explorer. Third person, six pages.

The Microscope by Maxine Kumin. A poem about Leeuwenhoek

Water-Drop Microscope by Eugene F. Provenso, Jr. and Asterie Baker Provenzo. Info about Zacharias Janssen and Leeuwenhoak and a brief explanation of how to make a magnifier with a water drop.

The Telescope by Lisa Harries Schumann. A Fantasy story about a magical atlas with a tiny telescope that makes the maps come to life. Begins with fairy tale “Once Upon A Time” and is told in third person. Seven pages.

Favorite First Sentences – Sent in by readers. Writers showcased include Scott Westerfeld, Christopher Paolini, Lynda Durrant, H.G.Wells and Esther Hautzig.

Cricket League – a monthly reader contest.

Old Cricket Says – the editor letter, about the wind

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This page last updated on 01 August 2007
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