Taddle Creek (magazine) explained

Editor:Conan Tobias
Editor Title:Editor-in-Chief/Publisher
Frequency:Biannually
Circulation:1,500
Category:Literary magazine
Finaldate:2022
Country:Canada
Based:Toronto
Language:English

Taddle Creek was a literary magazine based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was published twice yearly and had a mix of various kinds of fiction, nonfiction, and visual art.

Style and content

Taddle Creek showcases the work of authors and illustrators who live (primarily, but not exclusively) in the Toronto area. This has led to the perception "in some catty literary circles" that Taddle Creek is "Torontocentric".[1] A typical issue of Taddle Creek will feature a mix of fiction, poetry, interviews, comics, essays, and photographs,

The magazine also has an on-line component that features a large archive of previously published material, subscription information, book recommendations, and contributor bios.

Utne Reader has described the magazine as "offbeat". According to Taddle Creek itself, it aims for an "urban" and contemporary attitude that avoids the "snowstorm on the prairie kind of thing" or even the confines of any one literary style, and calls itself "the journal for those who have come to detest everything the literary magazine has become in the twenty-first century."[2] [3] Broken Pencils writers declared Taddle Creek a "gorgeous" magazine and said it had achieved "a track record of consistently publishing an extremely engaging collection of fiction, poetry and illustration."[1]

Editorial guidelines and focus on proofreading

Editor Tobias used to be a fact checker at Canadian Business and he brings that quest for accuracy to Taddle Creek.[4] Taddle Creek has emphasized the importance of grammar and proofreading in a number of ways. For example Taddle Creek has taken a firm but humorous stand against the erratic and error filled ways modern writers use apostrophes. It encouraged its readers to join in a letter writing campaign to inform misusers of apostrophes of the error of their ways.[5] At another date it published all the errors it had ever made in a series of entertainingly "absurd" online error messages. Despite the lighthearted approach Tobias calls the error page a "serious business" and intends to report any new errors that slip through.[4] The magazine has even offered free two year subscriptions to any readers that discover new errors.[6] It has also published a reference book calledThe Taddle Creek Guidebook to Fact-Checking Fiction that aims to help writers avoid anachronisms and other factual errors.[7]

Broken Pencil comments on the perception that Taddle Creek has "very rigid grammar and submission expectations". Tobias himself notices that "sometimes their submissions guidelines seem to offend" but sees this as the result of "disparate senses of humour at play".[1] [3]

History

Founded in 1997[8] by publisher Conan Tobias, the magazine originally served Toronto's Annex neighbourhood with an annual Christmas issue.[9] [1] But the magazine later expanded both its focus and its output - to the whole of Toronto and to twice a year. Taddle Creek is published twice a year in June and December. By 2002, the magazine had found national distribution.

In December 2007, the magazine celebrated its tenth anniversary with an unusually large, 72-page issue, a launch party at Toronto's Gladstone Hotel.

Commendations and shortlists

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Cant, Ian Sullivan; Brooke Ford; Lindsay Gibb; Nathaniel G. Moore; Hal Niedzviecki and Richard Rosenbaum. "50 people (and places) we love", Broken Pencil, p. 18. January 2011.
  2. Web site: About Taddle Creek | Taddle Creek . www.taddlecreekmag.com . 2012-01-06.
  3. Sung, Hannah. "Tips on getting published for the aspiring authors among us", CBC Books, July 19, 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  4. Silverman, Craig. "Facts and Fiction: A small literary magazine lists all of its mistakes—ever", Columbia Journalism Review, May 21, 2010.
  5. http://www.utne.com/2008-03-25/GreatWriting/That-Most-Abused-Apostrophe.aspx "That Most Abused Apostrophe..."
  6. "Headline-grabbing literary magazine of the week", National Post, Don Mills, Ontario, May 29, 2010.
  7. Fox, Matthew. "Flub Free", Maisonneuve, November 29, 2007.
  8. Web site: A Writer’s Guide to Canadian Literary Magazines & Journals. National Magazine Awards. April 24, 2017. November 7, 2013.
  9. http://www.utne.com/2006-12-01/FromtheStacksDecember222006.aspx "From the Stacks: December 22, 2006,"
  10. http://www.magazine-awards.com/index.cfm/ci_id/1397/la_id/1 "Past Awards"