Anglo-Indian women played a   pivotal role in shaping the culture and mores of the Anglo-Indian   community in India - and they still continue to do so wherever they live   around the world today.  Whether they are the wind beneath the wings of   their men folk, well-loved matriarchs and home-makers within the family   fold, dedicated social workers, or successful professionals holding   their own in the arenas of medicine, law, accountancy and politics, our   women are the unsung heroines. Yet it seems that almost every book that   has reference to Anglo-Indians, has something derogatory to say about   Anglo-Indian women. It is imperative that we provide a balanced view of   the Anglo-Indian woman - not exaggerated in any dimension (no pun   intended) - just the way she was and is. 
            CTR Inc Publishing would like   to make up for that deficiency by celebrating "The Anglo-Indian   Woman" in an anthology made up of non-fiction and fiction articles   devoted exclusively to the world of Anglo-Indian women.  We want to nail   into the coffin the distorted and oft-publicized image of Anglo-Indian   women as floosies in literature and film, by capturing the way the   Anglo-Indian women actually lived, thought, loved, laughed and cried. We   want you to tell us what motivated them and why. 
            Submissions that are selected   will be compiled and published in an anthology titled "The   Anglo-Indian Woman", slated for publication by mid-to-late 2009. An   honorarium of $35 will be paid for each piece selected. 
            Contributors'   guidelines                       are as follows: 
            
              - Articles                         must be limited to 3000 words or less. Please note   that                         submissions exceeding this length will not be considered.
 
                 
               
              -  The publication, depicting Anglo-Indian women will   cover a broad historical and contemporary canvas.  Articles could be   first person narratives from the perspective of an Anglo-Indian woman,   or third person stories about an Anglo-Indian woman friend or relative.    We are looking for anecdotal material and well structured, annotated   essays.   These may be set in the past, or in the present, and the   locale could be anywhere in the world.  It could feature a fictional   character modeled on real life, or an actual person who in some way   changed the writer’s emotional or mental outlook on life.  Essays,   anecdotes, or memoirs may be humorous or serious.
 
                 
               
              -  Fiction pieces should be engrossing, (whether   entertaining or moving - or both) and should feature as the main   protagonist an Anglo-Indian woman or women who take center stage within   the context of the piece.
 
                 
               
              -  We will not consider material, which, in our sole   discretion,                         is obscene or slanderous.
 
                 
               
              - The writing style should be meticulously polished   but easy to read, and entertaining enough to provoke and sustain   interest.
 
                 
               
              -  All articles must carry the full name, postal   address, e-mail                         and fax/phone number of the entrant. All   submissions should                         be in Times New Roman, 12-font size (please, no   fancy fonts                         or headings). If sent as an e-mail attachment,   this should                         be in Microsoft Word, and in order to ensure the   authenticity                         of the attachment (having regard to virus-embedded   attachments                         on the Internet), the subject heading must contain   the words:                         "The Anglo-Indian Woman".   E-mailed articles                         should be sent to blairrw@att.net.                           If your manuscript is sent via snail-mail, please   direct                         this to: Blair Williams, PO Box 6345, Monroe Twp.,   NJ 08831,                         USA. Please note that hard-copy manuscripts will   not be                         returned.
 
                 
               
              -  Entry is not restricted to Anglo-Indians; anyone   may participate in writing about "The Anglo-Indian Woman",   provided that the content of their work illuminates a relationship or   significantly important interactions with an Anglo-Indian woman, or   women. 
 
                 
               
              - There                         will be a limit of two articles   per person.
 
                 
               
              -  All submissions must contain original material   that has                         not been previously published or accepted for   publication                         prior to March 2008.
 
                 
               
              -  Every submission, whether via e-mail or by postal   communication,                         must be accompanied by a covering letter   incorporating the                         following statement (please cut and paste the   contents of                         the box below):
 
             
            
              
                
                  
                    | The   author                             agrees to grant CTR Inc Publishing first   publication                             rights for this article, on the agreement   that, following                             publication of 'The Anglo-Indian Woman', all   publishing rights                             will revert to the author. The author also   agrees that                             the editors of 'The Anglo-Indian Woman' will   have the right to                             edit material in order to ensure textual   cohesiveness                             and uniformity of syntax, style, grammar,   spelling,                             and punctuation. | 
                   
                
               
             
            
              - As                         a courtesy, authors will receive a copy of the   edited material                         for their review. While the editors, in their sole   discretion,                         may accommodate minor textual amendments as   suggested by                         an individual author, this is a one-time   prerogative,                         and no further changes will be entertained.
 
                 
               
              -  This invitation will be valid from 1st March 2008   to 
  June 30, 2009  .  Submissions received after   June 30, 2009, will not be considered. 
             
            Every   submission will be acknowledged.                       However, those that do not conform to length   restrictions,                       or omit the above statement, or fail to comply with   the above                       guidelines will be rejected without further   consideration.  
            Thank you for   participating. As in the case of all five of our previous publications ('Anglo-Indians:   Vanishing Remnants of a Bygone Era', 'Haunting India', 'Voices on the   Verandah', 'The Way We Were' and 'The Way We Are') , we look   forward to publishing an outstanding anthology on our Anglo-Indian   women. 
            Blair Williams 
              Publisher 
              New Jersey, USA  |