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What are chances of being published?
ksalat09:
Hi, I'm Kevin and I'm new at making crosswords. I've made a several for my school newspaper and have gotten very positive reviews of them from my peers and now I'd like to start making some extra money by publishing them in the LA Times.
I've been doing the LA Times Crosswords for about a year now and I feel that the one's that I've made are just as up to snuff.
But how many people, roughly, send in crosswords to the LA Times?
What percent chance do I have for my crosswords that I send routinely to be published? (I just sent two crosswords today through CCW)
Are my chances of being paid/published for my 15x15 crosswords, like 1% or 50% or 90%?
SJS:
The editor of the LA puzzle is Rich Norris, and about 2 years ago (maybe less) he reported that he receives about 60 puzzles per week. Obviously he can publish only 7. So considering no other factors, your odds would be about 12%.
Of course, there are other factors! I'm sure some are rejected immediately for one reason or another. Some are maybe amateurish, some are maybe duplications of themes seen before, etc. If your puzzles are excellent and inventive, then your odds would be higher than the straight numbers.
ksalat09:
Well, I think I read somewhere that it takes about 3 months for the puzzle to be published after acceptance. Maybe I'm wrong. But say Rich gets 8 puzzles he really likes, is he just going to reluctantly throw out one of them? Can't he just use it later?
sunburnt63:
As far as a time line goes, I sent out my submission on 12/10, received an acceptance on 1/09 and it is going to be published 2/28. So a little less than 2 months from submit to publish on that one. Obviously one example does not show a trend, but I thought it would give some insight (plus its my first puzzle, so I don't have anymore data).
If a puzzle is good, a publisher will take it, but if he takes 8 in one week, maybe he only takes 6 the next since the puzzles aren't as good of quality. Also, if a publisher gets lots and lots of puzzles that they would normally accept, they may up the standards for acceptance. Using the rule of thumb that they take 7 a week is an easy way to make some statistics.
SJS:
Congratulations on your publication!
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