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TulipTree Publishing, LLC TulipTree Publishing, LLC, is the home of TulipTree Review literary journal and TulipTree Books. Located in Fort Collins, Colorado.

The deadline is approaching fast for our 10th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest! https://www.tuliptree...
02/08/2024

The deadline is approaching fast for our 10th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest!

https://www.tuliptreepub.com/contest.html

Enter your stories and poems by August 9th.

The grand prize is $1,000, and at least five merit prizes of $200 each will be awarded.

There is a $20 entry fee because without entry fees there are no prizes. (I promise we're just as disappointed as you are that publishers also have to pay to exist.)

See website for full guidelines.

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

There's still time to enter the 2nd annual Humor story contest!Details at
10/10/2023

There's still time to enter the 2nd annual Humor story contest!

Details at

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

Our 9th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest is accepting entries until August 9th!You can find the detai...
24/07/2023

Our 9th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest is accepting entries until August 9th!

You can find the details at

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

Happy International Women's Day! Don't forget to send in your Wild Women stories today!
08/03/2023

Happy International Women's Day! Don't forget to send in your Wild Women stories today!

Entries for this year's contest are due by March 8th. In the meantime, our first four issues are on sale!Visit www.tulip...
13/02/2023

Entries for this year's contest are due by March 8th. In the meantime, our first four issues are on sale!

Visit www.tuliptreepub.com to order your 4-pack and enter the contest!

From TulipTree Review Spring 2022 Wild Women issue: Grand Prize winner “Ashore” by Branden Boyer-White and “Prophecy” by Jess LunaFrom Stories That Need to Be Told 2022: Grand Prize winner “Liv and Let Liv” by Julie Esther Fisher and Depth merit winner “Dear Dad” by Darian Ged...

Exactly. The Wild Women contest issue is open for entries until March 8th!
13/02/2023

Exactly. The Wild Women contest issue is open for entries until March 8th!

Congratulations, Vanessa (one of our Wild Women '22 contributors)!
27/10/2022

Congratulations, Vanessa (one of our Wild Women '22 contributors)!

Congratulations to Vanessa Baehr-Jones, first place winner in the Memoir/Personal Essay category of the 91st Annual Writer's Digest Writing Competition. Here's the winning essay, "The Chasm Opens."

One more reason to celebrate Halloween! You now have until October 31st to enter TulipTree's Humor story contest for our...
22/10/2022

One more reason to celebrate Halloween! You now have until October 31st to enter TulipTree's Humor story contest for our Fall/Winter issue!

http://www.tuliptreepub.com/tuliptree-review.html

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

Our 8th annual Stories That Need to Be Told contest is about to close! Get your entries in by August 9th!http://www.tuli...
03/08/2022

Our 8th annual Stories That Need to Be Told contest is about to close! Get your entries in by August 9th!

http://www.tuliptreepub.com/contest.html

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

The deadline for the 4th annual Wild Women story contest is March 8th!http://www.tuliptreepub.com/wild-women-contest.htm...
28/02/2022

The deadline for the 4th annual Wild Women story contest is March 8th!

http://www.tuliptreepub.com/wild-women-contest.html

The Wild Woman takes on many forms: rebels, subversives, and the untamed; maidens, mothers, queens, and crones; Holy women, healers, explorers, artists, and teachers.

Our 7th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest is now open! Send us your stories by August 9th to win the $...
08/07/2021

Our 7th annual Stories That Need to Be Told writing contest is now open! Send us your stories by August 9th to win the $1,000 grand prize or one of five $200 merit prizes. Winners and HMs are published in the award-winning annual anthology.

See the website for details:
http://www.tuliptreepub.com/contest.html

TulipTree Stories That Need to Be Told contest

We're so pleased to announce the release of the 2021 Wild Women issue of TulipTree Review! These stories are poignant, b...
01/06/2021

We're so pleased to announce the release of the 2021 Wild Women issue of TulipTree Review! These stories are poignant, beautiful, and wild. They speak to the connection between the Wild Feminine and the elements—women as fire, water, earth, and wind, and as sisters, daughters, grandmothers, and mothers.

Get your Wild fix here: https://www.amazon.com/TulipTree-Review-Women-Spring-Summer/dp/1734969032/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3V13WQT530MIZ&dchild=1&keywords=tuliptree+review+wild+women+2021&qid=1622577151&sprefix=tuliptree+review%2Caps%2C222&sr=8-1

We are so thrilled! Stories That Need to Be Told 2020 is a finalist for a Colorado Book Award! Thanks to all of our awes...
08/04/2021

We are so thrilled! Stories That Need to Be Told 2020 is a finalist for a Colorado Book Award! Thanks to all of our awesome contributors!

05/03/2021

"Stories have to be told or they die, and when they die, we can't remember who we are or why we're here." — Sue Monk Kidd (The Secret Life of Bees)

Star Talk by Jakki Moore

02/03/2021

"Wild women are an unexplainable spark of life. They ooze freedom and seek awareness, they belong to nobody but themselves yet give a piece of who they are to everyone they meet.
If you have met one, hold on to her, she'll allow you into her chaos but she'll also show you her magic.”
Nikki Rowe

Joseph Christian Leyendecker

01/02/2021

In 1856, twenty-three-year-old widow Kate Warne walked into the office of the Pinkerton Detective Agency in Chicago, announcing that she had seen the company’s ad and wanted to apply for the job. “Sorry,” Alan Pinkerton told her, “but we don’t have any clerical staff openings. We’re looking to hire a new detective.” Pinkerton would later describe Warne as having a “commanding” presence that morning. “I’m here to apply for the detective position,” she replied. Taken aback, Pinkerton explained to Kate that women aren’t suited to be detectives, and then Kate forcefully and eloquently made her case. Women have access to places male detectives can’t go, she noted, and women can befriend the wives and girlfriends of suspects and gain information from them. Finally, she observed, men tend to become braggards around women who encourage boasting, and women have keen eyes for detail. Pinkerton was convinced. He hired her.

Shortly after Warne was hired, she proved her value as a detective by befriending the wife of a suspect in a major embezzlement case. Warne not only gained the information necessary to arrest and convict the thief, but she discovered where the embezzled funds were hidden and was able to recover nearly all of them. On another case she extracted a confession from a suspect while posing as a fortune teller. Pinkerton was so impressed that he created a Women’s Detective Bureau within his agency and made Kate Warne the leader of it.

In her most famous case, Kate Warne may have changed the history of the world. In February 1861 the president of the Wilmington and Baltimore railroad hired Pinkerton to investigate rumors of threats against the railroad. Looking into it, Pinkerton soon found evidence of something much more dangerous—a plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln before his inauguration. Pinkerton assigned Kate Warne to the case. Taking the persona of “Mrs. Cherry,” a Southern woman visiting Baltimore, she managed to infiltrate the secessionist movement there and learn the specific details of the scheme—a plan to kill the president-elect as he passed through Baltimore on the way to Washington.

Pinkerton relayed the threat to Lincoln and urged him to travel to Washington from a different direction. But Lincoln was unwilling to cancel the speaking engagements he had agreed to along the way, so Pinkerton resorted to a Plan B. For the trip through Baltimore Lincoln was secretly transferred to a different train and disguised as an invalid. Posing as his caregiver was Kate Warne. When she afterwards described her sleepless night with the President, Pinkerton was inspired to adopt the motto that became famously associated with his agency: “We never sleep.” The details Kate Warne had uncovered had enabled the “Baltimore Plot” to be thwarted.

During the Civil War, Warne and the female detectives under her supervision conducted numerous risky espionage missions, with Warne’s charm and her skill at impersonating a Confederate sympathizer giving her access to valuable intelligence. After the war she continued to handle dangerous undercover assignments on high-profile cases, while at the same time overseeing the agency’s growing staff of female detectives.

Kate Warne, America’s first female detective, died of pneumonia at age 34, on January 28, 1868, one hundred fifty-three years ago today. “She never let me down,” Pinkerton said of one of his most trusted and valuable agents. She was buried in the Pinkerton family plot in Chicago.

23/01/2021

Excerpt from Moon Gypsy ~
Available worldwide and at https://linktr.ee/melodyleepoetry, Book Depository, Barnes & Noble, BAM, Booktopia, and other online booksellers. 📚

It's time to send us your Wild once again!http://www.tuliptreepub.com/wild-women-contest.html
11/01/2021

It's time to send us your Wild once again!

http://www.tuliptreepub.com/wild-women-contest.html

We are looking for empowering stories with female main characters (written by anyone) that celebrate the Wild Woman: women who are the heroines of their own lives. 

Stephanie Anderson's debut nonfiction book, One Size Fits None: A Farm Girl's Search for the Promise of Regenerative Agr...
30/10/2020

Stephanie Anderson's debut nonfiction book, One Size Fits None: A Farm Girl's Search for the Promise of Regenerative Agriculture, was released in January 2019 with University of Nebraska Press. The book won a 2019 Midwest Book Award (Nature) and was one of three finalists for the 2020 High Plains Book Award in Nonfiction. Her essays and short stories have appeared or are forthcoming in The Rumpus, TriQuarterly, Flyway, The Pinch, Hotel Amerika, Midwestern Gothic, The Chronicle Review, Sweet, and many others. She also contributed to the essay collection Permanent Vacation: Eighteen Writers on Work and Life in Our National Parks, Vol. 2 from Bona Fide Books. Her essay "Greyhound" won the 2016 Payton James Freeman Essay Prize from The Rumpus, Drake University, and the Freeman family. Her short story "The Wickedest Thing They Ever Saw" was a finalist for the 2014 Devil's Lake Annual Driftless Prize in Fiction.

Stephanie holds an MFA in creative nonfiction from Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, FL, and a bachelor’s degree in English from Augustana University in Sioux Falls, SD. She currently serves as an Instructor of English at FAU teaching creative writing, composition, literary interpretation, professional writing, and other writing and literature courses. She has also taught workshops in fiction, poetry, and memoir at FAU's Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Read her story "The Dog in the Desert" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Elizabeth Argelia Leonard is a writer, educator, and editor with a master's in novel writing from City University London...
30/10/2020

Elizabeth Argelia Leonard is a writer, educator, and editor with a master's in novel writing from City University London. She has been a teaching artist for the last several years, providing creative writing workshops for NYC students in grades K–12, with a view toward restorative justice and healing. She leads cross-genre, poetry and fiction workshops for adults, in English and Spanish, with organizations throughout the US. Learn more at elizabethaleonard.com.

Find her poem "Learning to Count" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Andrew W. Jones is a high school English teacher and writer, whose teaching and writing career has spanned several diffe...
30/10/2020

Andrew W. Jones is a high school English teacher and writer, whose teaching and writing career has spanned several different countries. He's the author of the published memoir, Two Seasons in the Bubble: Living and Coaching Basketball in Bulgaria, as well as magazine pieces that range from cigarette smuggling in Ukraine to playing soccer against descendants of the Incas in Peru. He lives with his wife, Erin, and two young children, Eliza and Clark, in Brasilia, Brazil.

Read his timely story "Bolsonaro Eats Too Much Cheese" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Karen Gregory specializes in story writing, advertising copywriting, branding, and creative development. She is a repeat...
30/10/2020

Karen Gregory specializes in story writing, advertising copywriting, branding, and creative development. She is a repeat contributor to Stories That Need to Be Told, first appearing in last year's anthology with her story "My Mother's Lesson" and this year with "The Brown Bag." She has another story forthcoming by SCARS Publications, "My My, Hay Hay."

Karen loves to work on jigsaw puzzles and crosswords. She has lived with her wonderful husband Kent for 44 years, and they have two kitty kids: Sparky and Tootsie.

Find her online at www.karengregorycreative.com or on Twitter .

Find out what's in "The Brown Bag" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Theo (aka Ted, aka Theodore) Johnston is a senior gay male, happily married for 45 years to Simon, 7 years legally. Theo...
30/10/2020

Theo (aka Ted, aka Theodore) Johnston is a senior gay male, happily married for 45 years to Simon, 7 years legally. Theo retired from teaching English at El Paso Community College after 43 wonderful years and still lives in El Paso. Fluent Spanish speakers and lovers of Mexican culture, he and Simon lived in Mexico off and on for 10 years and have frequently worked on behalf of immigrant rights and in getting out the vote in their border community. Theo loves (indeed is obsessed with) drawing/painting portraits and urbanscapes and also writing short stories based on his past, particularly the rare ups and frequent downs of attending pre-Vatican II Catholic schools in Kansas as the "weird" kid discovering his sexuality in a rigid religious environment. He is completing a novel composed of such stories (including "Blue Boy") entitled Occasions of Sin, Glimmers of Grace. Theo and his husband used to love to travel and are hoping to be able to do so again in the not-too-distant future. They are proud parents of two incorrigibly spoiled fur babies, a pug named Pikachu and a peke named Beijing.

Read his story "Blue Boy" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Geoffrey Kent Graves was a finalist for the Pinch Literary Award (2019), and for Cutthroat’s Barry Lopez Nonfiction Awar...
30/10/2020

Geoffrey Kent Graves was a finalist for the Pinch Literary Award (2019), and for Cutthroat’s Barry Lopez Nonfiction Award (2019). He’s been published by Calliope Literary Journal (2019 & 2020), Retreat West Short Fiction Anthology (UK, 2020), Short Story Project (2019), and elsewhere. His stories have been recognized as a Notable Story for Gemini Magazine’s short story competition (2019), Honorable Mention for New Millennium Writing Awards (2018), short-listed for the International Fish Memoir Prize (Ireland, 2019), and Honorable Mention Writer’s Digest 89th Annual Writing Competition (2020). He worked in the script department at CBS, Television City, Hollywood and holds BA and MA degrees from California State University, Fullerton, where he won the university’s first playwriting contest.

Check out his humorous story "Synchronicity" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020:

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

A multiple award-winning writer, Rosie Cohan has traveled to over 60 countries, including 15 trips to Turkey, her “home ...
30/10/2020

A multiple award-winning writer, Rosie Cohan has traveled to over 60 countries, including 15 trips to Turkey, her “home away from home.” Rosie’s storytelling takes the reader with her on her journeys. She introduces you to interesting characters, beautiful landscapes, and different cultural experiences, while connecting the reader to the universality of the human experience.

Her travel stories have appeared online at BestTravelWriting.com, GEOEX Wanderlust blog, www.TravelerTalesstories.com, and www.AboutPlace.org., and will appear in the 2020 Bay Area Travel Writers’ anthology, Unforgotten.

As an international management and organizational development consultant and executive coach, Rosie has published articles in several professional management magazines.

Rosie lives and writes in Berkeley, CA—a world unto itself.

Check out her story and travel along with her to "Yusuf's Wedding Celebration" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020.

https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Kimberly A. Werner, MD, FAAD, is a half Korean, board-certified dermatologist—a US citizen born abroad in Korea and rais...
30/10/2020

Kimberly A. Werner, MD, FAAD, is a half Korean, board-certified dermatologist—a US citizen born abroad in Korea and raised in Indonesia to artist parents who instilled an eye for beauty and detail at an early age.

She earned her BS degree at William and Mary with a major in Neuroscience and a minor in Biochemistry and Military Science, graduating Suma Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa. Thereafter, Dr. Werner completed her medical degree at Eastern Virginia Medical School, where her superior performance academically secured her a coveted dermatology residency position. She completed her intern year at the world-renowned Walter Reed Military Medical Center prior to seizing an opportunity to perform primary care attached to an infantry unit at the DMZ in South Korea, where her fluency in Korean allowed her to excel in her role among the Korean forces training alongside US troops. Upon her return to the United States, Dr. Werner completed her dermatology residency at San Antonio Uniformed Services Health Education Consortium and thereafter provided medical and surgical care to soldiers, retirees, and their dependents, at several US Army bases nationwide prior to honorably concluding her career in the military.

She is well published in peer-reviewed medical journals and has extensive research experience including that in the fields of neuroscience, family medicine, cosmetic surgery, as well as dermatology. She is very excited to reveal another facet of her creativity in this art form and hopes that the exposure of the raw feelings shared in this human condition brings us together in times of hardship.

Read Kimberly's poem "Fearful Child" in Stories That Need to Be Told 2020.
https://www.amazon.com/Stories-That-Need-Told-2020/dp/1734969024/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stories+that+need+to+be+told+2020&qid=1604088579&sr=8-1

Alan Whelan won the Stories That Need to Be Told 2020 Bonus merit prize for his story "Wilful Damages."Alan lives in the...
30/10/2020

Alan Whelan won the Stories That Need to Be Told 2020 Bonus merit prize for his story "Wilful Damages."

Alan lives in the Blue Mountains of NSW, Australia. He’s been a
political activist, mainly on homelessness and unemployment, and a public servant writing social policy for governments. He’s now a
freelance writer, editor, and researcher.

His story "There Is" was short-listed for the Newcastle Short Story Award in June 2020, and appeared in their 2020 anthology. His book The Lockdown Tales, using Boccaccio’s Decameron framework to show people living with the Covid-19 lockdown, is to appear in bookshops before Christmas 2020.

His novel, Harris in Underland, is seeking a publisher. He is
currently revising a second novel, Blood and Bone.

Learn more at http://alanwhelan.org or on Twitter .

Caption: In March 2020 Alan decided not to shave, as a way of marking the passage of time until a Covid-19 vaccine is available.

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