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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedMothers of Invention
Folio: The Magazine for Magazine Management, Nov 1, 2002 by Geoff Van Dyke
Byline: Geoff Van Dyke
The idea of a literary magazine for mothers might seem oxymoronic: What rug-rat wrangler, after all, actually has the time to sit down and read - or write - a 10,000-word article between changing diapers, strapping in car seats, and policing hellions?
"Mommy, I want to come downstairs!" is the kind of nonintellectual commentary, for example, that can be heard at the home offices of just such a publication, where phone conversations are frequently punctuated with interruptions from the editor's three-year-old son and exclamations like "Hey, kid! Put that down!"
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That's work politics - and story fodder for literary imaginations at Brain, Child, the self-styled "magazine for thinking mothers" that Virginia-based co-editors Jennifer Niesslein, 30, and Stephanie Wilkinson, 40, launched from their respective home offices and a nearby cafe three years ago. Since then the quarterly has been named one of Utne Reader's top new alternative publications, and the Alternative Press Association's "best magazine covering personal life issues."
An eclectic mix of first-person essays, in-depth articles, fiction, humor, and debate, Brain, Child publishes big names like Barbara Kingsolver and Jane Smiley alongside lesser-known authors who tackle subjects like punishing children in public, hiding dirty diapers at the mall, and remembering forgotten mothers in jail. The stylish writing and get-real attitude transcends the usual service-oriented parenting fare, according to Utne Reader's executive editor Craig Cox. "It's a really interesting niche they've carved out for themselves: the literary parenting magazine," he says. "I don't know that anybody's ever done that."
Literary recognition alone won't pay the bills, but Brain, Child's circulation does. This year's four issues generated about $80,000 from 6,000 readers. Pulling in about $20,000 more from advertising and single-copy sales, Niesslein and Wilkinson operate on a shoestring budget that's mostly do-it-yourself: They lay out the magazine, sell ads, and negotiate with the printer. With creative strategies like bartering ad space for direct-mail subscription marketing, they've cleared enough to start paying themselves salaries for the first time - about $12,000 each next year.
THE BIRTH OF INSPIRATION
Years before forming a publishing partnership, the duo met as colleagues working for C-Ville Weekly, an alternative newspaper in Charlottesville, Virginia. When they had babies six months apart in 1998, both felt moved to write about the challenges they faced as women and parents. Niesslein wrote about how colleagues perceived her switch from full-time employment to being "just a housewife," as they phrased it. Wilkinson wrote about the futility of how-to advice when trying to calm a colicky newborn. "You have this idea that a mother's love is going to solve everything," she says, recalling the agony of the nonstop screaming. "It's bullshit, basically. There's nothing you can do."
Nothing to do except write - and they did. But when they looked around and realized that there were no "literary" magazines about being a mother, getting published was another story. That's when they hatched the idea for Brain, Child, a title that addresses both sides of their experience - thinking and parenthood. "This is something we wanted to read," Niesslein says. "And it's also something we wanted to write for."
"DON'T DO IT"
The first person Niesslein and Wilkinson talked to about launching a magazine - the editor of the alternative weekly where both had worked - told them, "Don't do it." But that conventional advice didn't dissuade the two women, who invested a total of $23,000 from their own savings to launch Brain, Child.
The pair felt confident about the editorial side of things because Niesslein had worked as the managing editor of C-Ville Weekly, and Wilkinson had contributed to business and tech publications such as eWeek and Investor's Business Daily. But the business side was another story. They spent about a year researching - including reading articles and books like Starting and Running a Successful Newsletter or Magazine, by Cheryl Ann Woodard. They found Independent Press Association's how-to brochures on periodical mail rates and direct mail marketing particularly helpful (see sidebar).
With an initial distribution of 5,000 copies, Brain, Child was - and is - an admittedly small operation. Finding a printer that not only fit their budget but also their special needs was critical. "Here we were, two fairly young women who had worked in publishing but didn't know really the first thing about printing," Wilkinson says. They interviewed a parade of candidates, finally settling on a Bridgewater, Virginia-based plant, Good Printers, that "took us very seriously," Wilkinson says. "They took us on a tour of the plant and explained all of the different printing techniques. They've stuck by us."
