Tag List (.txt file)
Hard link (copy to your browser’s navigation bar if needed):
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CJw05lP62STpK8iRsaDjgeWd-KrFcHGL/view?usp=sharing
The tag list was last updated on June 12, 2025, at 11:05 p.m.
The Substack handles of Sci-Friday participants are listed in a text (.txt) file, publicly available in Google Drive. Copy the list from Drive or download the file. It can be opened in various programs, e.g. Notepad, Wordpad, or Microsoft Word.
Using the Text File to Tag
Only handles appear in the file, each separated by a single space. So, you can select all text (Ctrl + A), copy it (Ctrl + C), and paste it (Ctrl + Shift + V) into your Notes post.
Note: The keystroke Ctrl + V may copy the text with formatting. You want to copy it without formatting, so use Ctrl + Shift + V. Alternatively, open your own document, copy the text there, then select it all and copy-and-paste again. This is a bit clunky, but once you figure out how to do it cleanly, you’ll know going forward.
In your post on Substack Notes, click at the end of a handle. Substack will suggest the person to be tagged. In many cases, Substack makes only one suggestion. However, in some cases, you’ll see multiple suggestions. The one at the top of the list is usually the correct person — but not always! Check that the handle appearing under the name in Substack’s list of suggestions matches up with the handle in the tag list, like this:
Opt-In / Opt-Out
If you wish to join or leave this curated Sci-Friday tag list, please leave a comment on this page. I’ll oblige as soon as I can.
Do not ask me to add or remove someone else. See my rules, below.
Please bear with me if it takes a while. I don’t always have immediate Internet access. If I don’t act within two weeks, reply to your original comment and nudge me.
Unless absolutely necessary, please do not send me direct / private messages!
When to Expect Updates
I will update the .txt file on this page as regularly as possible, most likely on Thursday nights, so everyone can get a freshly updated list for use in posts on Friday.
My Rules
I’m doing this as a voluntary service for the Substack sci-fi community. While I don’t expect thanks, I do expect courtesy from folks. These are my rules:
Request opt-in / opt-out by commenting on this page, not by PM / DM.
Do not ask me to add or remove someone else. Instead, if they wish to be added or removed, give them the link to this page. I will honor any opt-in / opt-out request I receive directly from the participant in question.
So there’s no clutter, please do not carry on conversations in this page’s comment section. (If you want to drop a word of thanks for my efforts, that’s fine.)
This page is only a home for the tag list. It is not a forum to post for Sci-Friday — so again, to reduce clutter, please don’t. Sci-Friday posts belong on Notes.
Do not ask me to collect, publish, promote, or restack your work — that’s not what this page is for.
I will remove you from the tag list on my own initiative if you…
…delete your Substack account, i.e. your profile disappears. (Obviously.)
…disable mentions. (You can no longer be tagged. Why keep you on a tag list?)
…block me. (You’re actively making it harder for me to maintain the tag list.)
If curating this list becomes an onerous chore for me or if at some point I decide to close down my ‘stack, I’ll try to find someone else to take over this curating job.
Sci-Friday Etiquette
In Sci-Friday posts on Notes, it’s common for people to include an opt-out disclaimer below the list of people they’ve tagged, reading, “If you don’t want to be tagged, please let me know and I’ll remove you” — or some version of that. I encourage this.
If someone asks to be removed, honor their request yourself by editing your post, and if you’ve downloaded the .txt file, remove their handle from your copy, so you won’t accidentally tag them again in the future. But since their request suggests they might not want to participate in Sci-Friday, feel free also to give them the link to this page, where they can submit an opt-out request to get off my curated list.
And this really should go without saying (but whenever you think it should, it doesn’t): the Sci-Friday action takes place on Fridays only in Substack Notes.
Disclaimer
I don’t “own” this tag list; I’m only curating it.
I don’t “run” Sci-Friday, either. As far as I can tell, nobody runs Sci-Friday. It just happens. I’ve been told
and had a hand in starting it.I’m curating the list to encourage Sci-Friday and make life easier for the participants, including myself.
publishes a review of Sci-Friday posts. I have no connection to that.Why This Exists
I’d been publishing my science fiction on Substack — and wondering where the other sci-fi writers were — for months before I learned of Sci-Friday, the weekly ritual in which writers post their work (or someone else’s work) and tag other writers in Notes.
inducted me. Soon, I saw how valuable it was for connecting people and exposing us all to each other’s writing.Soon, too, I began squinting at other participants’ lists of writers, trying to determine if So-and-So was already on the list I got from Andy, to which I was regularly adding new names as I saw them. It became apparent that in fact there were several lists with lots of crossover but also discrepancies. I could find no single list of all the participants.
I love things people do organically without central planning, but the multiplicity of circulating lists is confusing and cumbersome, and it can give rise to problems.
For instance, it’s a common courtesy for Sci-Friday folks to say, “If you don’t want to be tagged, please let me know and I’ll remove you.” But with multiple, redundant lists around, you might ask to be removed — to stop participating in Sci-Friday — but still find yourself being tagged by other people weeks or even months later.
With so many people active in Sci-Friday and more joining in all the time, I think it just makes sense to have a one-stop shop where folks can find a fully current list of participants — One List to Rule Them All. (Ahem, sorry, I’ll just show myself out…)
While you’re here…
I’d love for you to take a gander at what I publish on Singular Dream! The centerpiece is Quibble, a cybermonk sci-fi novel set in a far-future transhuman theocracy. I also write reflections on the novel’s themes, other books which inspired it, and my writing process. Here’s the best place to get acquainted:
I've updated my post to reflect this list.
We post a recommended short story in public domain every Friday under the title "Deej Recommends." We'd love to be added to the list! https://open.substack.com/pub/raconteurpress/p/deej-recommends-pail-of-air?r=2pggz3&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false