The Immigrant Stories series is launched with its first title - Mary's Immigration Story - and a Call for Submissions for young writers

Faultline Press announces the launch of a new series of books. Immigrant Stories will feature voices often unheard. Fiction or non-fiction, it will showcase the authentic voice of an immigrant or be a tale of immigration.   



CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS 
Immigration Stories: The Journey

Are you a first-generation immigrant who arrived in the United States before age 21?  Faultline Press has launched its Immigrant Stories series with the publication of Mary's Immigration Story (Faultline Press, 2024) and we are seeking new voices. 

Do you have a story about your immigration journey? Where did you come from? How long did the journey take? How did you come - by sea, air, land? Did you walk, take a train, travel by car? Why did you leave your native country? Who did you travel with? Who did you leave behind? What did you bring with you? What did you have to leave behind? What was the most unexpected part of your journey? Were you ever afraid, curious, excited? Did you make a new friend along the way? Where did you enter the United States?  What was your first day like?

Faultline Press is looking for first-person immigration stories about the journey to the United States for inclusion in a new book edited by Colleen Crangle, PhD, a 2-time immigrant to the USA. You can be any age, but your immigration must have taken place before you were 21. For consideration by the editorial team please send your contribution to submissions@faultlinepress.com. Publication under a pseudonym may be permitted.

Remember to be specific and honest. We want to get to know you through the story.

Deadline: We must receive the submission by email by October 31, 2024, at midnight Pacific Time.

GUIDELINES
 
Send ALL material for review in a single file (.docx) as an email attachment to submissions@faultlinepress.com
Length: between 1,000 and approximately 15,000 words

On the first page, give:
  • Author’s name and age
  • Contact information (email address, phone number, home address)
  • Title of the story and its word count
  • Pseudonym, if requested, and reason for the request

If you don’t hear from us by December 31, 2024, please know that your story has not been chosen. If selected by the editorial team, it will be edited and included in a special publication of the Immigrant Stories series, titled Immigrant Stories: Our Journey as Children.

Colleen Crangle
Editor, Faultline Press
Palo Alto, CA 94301
May 6, 2024

Download Call for Submissions
Photo by Fabian Fauth on Unsplash 

Immigrant Stories

Mary's Immigration Story  

In 1899, a 13-year-old immigrant, Mary Antin, published a story of her journey from Russia to the United States. Recognizing the beauty and value of her account, Faultline Press has produced this adaptation titled "Mary's Immigration Story." To bring out the emotional and dramatic elements of the story, we transformed it into a series of vignettes through editorial revisions and annotations, adding illustrations, photos, and a map to show her land journey. 

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Falling Up to Grace

In 1955, a three-year-old girl sets sail with her family from New York bound for Belgium, uprooted to allow her father to study medicine abroad, a privilege denied African-Americans at home. So begin Linda Mabry’s school years, a curiosity among white, French-speaking, children. Upon the family’s return to America, her father preaches, “Education will be your salvation,” sending his children to private school. Linda commutes between poverty, violence and upheaval at home in Harlem, to the privilege, status, and affluence of the Upper West Side. In 1993, a graduate of Mount Holyoke, Johns Hopkins, and Georgetown, accomplished in her field, Linda becomes a professor of international law at Stanford. In 1998, an act of betrayal convinces Linda to abandon the “alien, unnatural way of being” she once thought necessary for a “colored girl” to fit in. She finds purpose fighting for gender equity and volunteering in a literacy program. Coming to terms with life after ending her professional career, Linda returns to the empty family house in Harlem, (abandoned after her father's practice had failed 20 years earlier), finding insight among the ghosts and echoes of her past – only to have her life interrupted by pancreatic cancer. Her friends find an unfinished memoir in her drawer after her death and with her husband's support bring her story to publication with “Falling Up to Grace.”
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About us

Faultline Press was launched in 2013 by co-founders David Gleeson and Colleen Crangle. Originally in San Francsico, Faultline Press now has its home in Palo Alto with an editorial office in London. 

An independent publisher in the San Francisco Bay Area, Faultline creates and publishes materials that explore some fissure in society, whether at the personal or institutional level. Its first offering was a memoir about a ‘colored girl’ fitting into the academy in an era thought to be post-racial in the United States. Faultline also seeks to discover new seams of writing on topics others have ignored. 

Whether practical, educational or expressive, the work of Faultline Press exemplifies excellence in writing on topics that matter.
We embrace new voices young or old. We ask two questions: Do you have something important to say? Can you present your ideas skillfully?

Faultline Press is committed to giving new writers a platform from which they can address the world.
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