Posts Tagged ‘contests’

writers @ work competition

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

It’s very late notice, but my inbox informs me that the Writers @ Work Competition deadline has been extended to March 15th, 2008. There’s an entry fee of $20 and they’re looking for poetry, fiction and non-fiction. See the guidelines for more details. First prize in each genre is publication in Quarterly West, a literary journal associated with the University of Utah, tuition to their June conference and $1,500. Not too shabby.

They’ll accept excerpts from a novel, so there’s really no excuse not to send in something. Angela.

zeros2heros.com

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Some more good news in the friends of litfarm department. Jennica Harper, a poet, instructor at Vancouver Film School and someone I harassed at a house warming party not long ago, was just named a winner in the Comic Creation Nation contest. It’s put on by zeros2heros.com, a social networking site built for writers, artists and fans of comics (and other genre entertainment).

This means that Jennica’s script Abigail’s War is going to get made into a graphic novel, and possibly more. Check out the other winners and the writer’s guidelines. Be warned that if you’re from part of North America that’s not Canada, you probably can’t enter, because they’re partnered with a government sponsored arts organization.

Just one of the ways Canada keeps the rest of North America under its thumb.

vancouver sun: 2008 ones to watch

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Way back at the end of 2007, the Vancouver Sun published some predictions on talented unknowns set to blow up in Aught Eight. (Notice how I imply that Aught Eight is some kind of trendy new way of referring to 2008, therefore firming up my hipster-cred. It could be, for all I know.) Anyway, on the list of people we need to keep an eye on, is my fellow alumna (TWS ’06) Gurjinder Basran:

A regional manager with Bell Mobility and a mother of two, north Delta’s Gurjinder Basran squeezed a creative writing program at Simon Fraser University into her life. There she wrote a novel about a young Indo-Canadian woman trying to assert her independence in a strict Punjabi Sikh community. She’s calling it Everything Was Goodbye.

Apart from Ranj Dhaliwal’s Daaku, not many novels have been written about the Indo-Canadian experience. Few books speak to “the first generation that grew up here,” says 35-year-old Basran, who is seeking an agent and a publisher. “I’m hoping it will resonate with all kinds of people.”

Not only that, but the novel is a semi-finalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award competition, one of 100 entries out of 5,000 chosen by Penguin editors for the final read-through to narrow the field to ten books, which will then be chosen by Amazon readers… and presumably will be published by Penguin, although there’s no information about that on the Amazon site that I could find. Check out the excerpt of Everything Was Good-bye for as a free download from Amazon.

the short long-distance writing contest

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Geist is having a short fiction contest! Snail mail a short story, maximum 500 words, fiction or non-fiction, where the action takes place in at least two time zones within Canada, along with a cover letter and $20 dollars (includes a one-year subscription) by June 1st, 2008.

Prizes are $250, $150, $100 and swell Geist gifts. Winners will be published in Geist, geist.com and selected stories will be published the thetyee.ca.

Gory details at the link above.

symphony space’s short story prize

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Symphony Space recently announced the 2008 Stella Kupferberg Memorial Short Story Prize. Entries will be judged by a master of the form, Amy Hempel, and the winner will have his story read as part of the Selected Shorts performance at Symphony Space on May 21, 2008 and receive $1000. The reading will also be recorded for possible broadcast on PRI.

The story must address the question, Are We There Yet? The deadline is March 14, 2008.

Let me know if you enter, and good luck.