“No excessive gore.” Are you tired of this frequent restriction in calls for fiction submissions? Here’s your opportunity to run amok with the most grisly and vile stuff you can imagine. There’s just one catch: your revolting creations must deliver a positive message.
Theaker’s Quarterly Fiction (TQF), supposedly the UK’s second-longest-running sci-fi/horror/fantasy ’zine (and the birthplace of the unsplatterpunk subgenre), has opened to short stories for the ninth chapter in its often criticized yet never silenced UNSPLATTERPUNK! series. Failed novelist and second-rate humourist Douglas J. Ogurek returns as editor to unearth and intensify the most outrageous submissions.
Send us your morally enlightening filth of up to 10,000 words by 30 September, 2026. We’re also looking for attention-getting cover art that reinforces the unsplatterpunk theme. Note: this is a nonpaying market (more on this below).
A Vat Full of Barbarity
Stories in the UNSPLATTERPUNK! series range from cringe-worthy sci-fi and fantasy to gag-inducing realism and bizarro. Just make it disgusting… and enlightening.
Explore the previous anthologies, downloadable for free or available for purchase in paper format:
- UNSPLATTERPUNK!
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 2
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 3
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 4
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 5
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 6
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 7
- UNSPLATTERPUNK! 8
Following are a few suggestions for crafting your story:
- Create content as intrusive as a death metal band at a baby shower.
- Try to make readers think to themselves, Why am I reading this? And why can’t I stop?
- Avoid revenge stories: the market is saturated with them, and they rarely convey a positive message.
- If you want to philosophize or pontificate, submit elsewhere.
- Imagine a violinist standing over you and starting to play each time your work gets the least bit dramatic. Don’t let him play!
- Don’t impress us with your writing style – impress us with your story.
- Read previous entries in the UNSPLATTERPUNK! series. Why not? They’re free.
- Read as many splatterpunk stories as possible so you can understand what has already been done… and outdo it.
- Conflict reigns. Show us conflict and don’t stop till the end.
- Don’t forget humour. The over-the-top nature of these stories means there’s an element of humour in them. When authors take their subject matter too seriously, their work often devolves into dramatic hogwash.
- Don’t tack a moral lesson onto your conclusion. Embed it into your story.
- Please, for the love of all that is holy, don’t write your story in a chatty style full of colloquialisms. You’re writing to your reader, not your bestie.
The Gory Details
Send stories (no poetry, please) and artwork to TQFunsplatterpunk@gmail.com. Put “UNSPLATTERPUNK! 9 submission” in the subject line. Include a bio and tell us about the positive message your story conveys.
- Deadline: 30 September 2026
- Max word count: 10,000
- Reprints: No
- Multiple submissions: Yes
- Simultaneous submissions: No. We’ll get back to you within a couple of weeks.
- File type: DOC (preferred) or DOCX files for stories; PDF or JPG files for artwork
After publication, you are free to reprint your story elsewhere, but please credit Theaker’s Quarterly Fiction for original publication. See the TQF standard guidelines for additional information on rights and legal matters.
A Word on No Payment
We do not offer contributor payment. However, all authors and artists (and everyone, for that matter) will receive a free PDF. Paperback versions of the anthology are also available for purchase via Amazon.
The UNSPLATTERPUNK! series (and the TQF ezine in general) is not a moneymaking venture. Those who think we’re “getting rich off writer slave labour” are completely off base. Rather, we’re a group of hobbyists trying to have some fun and maybe just make the world a better place. Over the course of the UNSPLATTERPUNK! series, we have collected next to nothing from hard copy sales, and all of this nothing has gone right back into the publication of the anthology.
Nevertheless, if you believe your short story or artwork is destined for the best-seller list and you deserve payment for your masterpiece, we encourage you to submit elsewhere. And if you’ve been inspired to write something unsplatterpunkish elsewhere, let us know so we can send readers your way!
Also, keep in mind that while some anthologists select contributors from a tiny pool of acquaintances, we take a different approach here. First, our sole criterion for acceptance is a good story that follows the parameters. Thus, everyone who submits has an equal chance of getting a story selected. Second, we read every submission from beginning to end. If we reject it, we tell you why. If we find promise in a story, we work closely with the contributor to make it as tight, violent, nauseating and illuminating as possible.
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| Join the unsplatterpunk movement by blending the grisly and the gross to achieve a positive message. |
Thanks to the many talented contributors, TQF has thrown a tantrum in the splatterpunk classroom eight times. The gore-slingers who’ve screamed and writhed within our pages include Hugh Alsin, Joe Koch, DW Milton, Tom Over, Garvan Giltinan, Triffooper Saxelbax, Drew Tapley, and many others.
What triggers your moral compass? Environmental destruction? Intolerance? Poverty? Inequality? Speciesism? Write us a story that shows us how to deal with it. Dump all the brutality, carnage and vileness you can into your creation, but don’t forget to sprinkle in the virtue.
So get ready to hurl your juice box, fall to the floor, and get some attention – it’s time for UNSPLATTERPUNK! 9. Remember: sometimes to teach a lesson through writing, you have to snap a femur, suck out an eyeball and chew it, or lick a crusty foot covered in rotten yogurt.
You have until 30 September 2026.
Go ahead. Give us your worst.

























