From the Sutton Writers mailbox: May 2020

From the Sutton Writers mailbox: May 2020

A selection of the correspondence we have had into our mailbox this month. Please note, this has not been verified, we are just passing this information on.

Hammond Hill Staying Home 500 Flash Fiction prize

  • Closes 8 June 2020
  • Limit 500 words
  • Prize: publication
  • Free entry
  • More details here

Bridport Prize

  • Short story, poetry, flash fiction competitions
  • Closes 30 August 2020
  • Limit 5000 words
  • Prizes up to £5000
  • £12 entry
  • More details here

Yeovil Prize

  • Short story, poetry, novel
  • Closes 30 August 2020
  • Limit 5000 words per story, poetry 40 lines
  • Prizes up to £5000
  • Entry cost: £12 for novel, £7 for short story and poetry
  • More details here

Wexford Festival

  • Various poetry, plays and Colm Toibin short story award
  • Closes 13 May 2020
  • Prizes up to 700 euros
  • Short stories from 1800-2200 words
  • More details here

One comment

  1. Dear Fellow Writers,

    I am a journalist, author and co-founder of https://www.irelandwritingretreat.com/

    I thought your writing club members may be interested in this new, exciting
    writing competition launched in the last few days, which is open to everyone worldwide
    https://www.irelandwritingretreat.com/writing-competition

    3,000 euro worth of prizes for 500 words of prose, including the chance to spend a week on the famous ‘Wild Atlantic Way’ in Ireland, in Paris or along the Black Sea coast. Both flash fiction and nonfiction. Deadline May 31.

    If you think it would be of interest to your members, please feel free to
    pass the information on to them.

    Sincerely Yours,

    Sean Hillen

    PRESS RELEASE

    New Irish writing awards offers 3,000 worth of prizes

    An international writing retreat based in Ireland this week launched a special awards competition to create enjoyment for the many people forced to stay at home due to the coronavirus outbreak – with almost 3,000 euro worth of prizes for just 500 words of prose.

    ‘Ireland Writing Retreat,’ listed among the Top Ten artistic retreats of any kind in Europe by The Guardian newspaper in London, hosts week-long retreats several times every year in Donegal, Paris and along the Black Sea in Romania. It has named its inaugural competition the ‘Wild Atlantic Writing Awards’ (WAWA).

    “We thought such an awards competition would provide an interesting challenge for people who like reading and writing and have no choice but to stay at home for the next few weeks,” said Columbia Hillen, who co-founded ‘Ireland Writing Retreat’ which began five years ago and has attracted participants, tutors and authors from countries as diverse as New Zealand, Sweden, Canada, France, Iceland, the US, Australia and the UK.

    “Our competition has two categories: flash fiction – open to all genres from sci-fi, crime, romance, horror, humor, thriller, mystery to whatever tickles you – and creative nonfiction.”

    Adding spice to the idea, the ‘Flash Fiction Award’ competition has a single central theme.

    “After many hours of debate, we realised the perfect one was staring us right in the face -writing itself,” said Columbia. “For example, one of the characters, human or non-human, could be a writer. Or a piece of writing could play a key role in the story. Participants should let their imaginations guide them how best to integrate writing into their stories.”

    She added, “The winning entry will receive 500 euro in cash, plus 990 euro in the form of free participation to one of our retreats, including all daily excursions, by land and sea, food and drinks tastings, concerts and dance performances, and all writing workshops and author talks.”

    To qualify for the ‘Creative Nonfiction Award,’ participants must write a story of not more than 500 words on any subject – whether in the form of memoir, profile, literary journalism, personal essay, travel food, or any other creative nonfiction category.”

    “With the writer’s permission, the winning entries will be published on the ‘Ireland Writing Retreat’ website, with a short bio and photograph,” Columbia said. “Writers retain all copyright to their work.” For further information, see https://www.irelandwritingretreat.com/writing-competition

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