There are just a couple of weeks left before the deadline for this year's Bridport Prize. Anyone can enter and there are some big money prizes to be won alongwith the chance for your work to be read by a top agent. I have never entered this particular competition as I've always been a bit intimidated by it - so I'd be interested to hear readers' opinions on it.
The Bridport Prize International Creative Writing Competition was founded in 1973 and now attracts many thousands of entries from over 80 countries. You can now enter online or via the post using the application form which can be printed off from the website.
There are two categories - short stories up to 5,000 words and poems 42 lines maximum both with a top prize of £5,000.
Second prize is £1,000 and third £500 with ten supplementary prizes of £50 each and the top 26 stories and poems will be published in the Bridport Prize 2008 anthology. All 26 winners are invited to a Prizegiving Lunch at the Town Hall in Bridport, Dorset. An additional £100 and a perpetual trophy is awarded to the best local (Dorset, UK) winner or runner up.
The winning stories and shortlist will be read by London leading agents with a view to representing writers.
Helen Simpson will judge the short stories
Short stories will be judged by writer Helen Simpson who said: "The short story form is intrinsically witty, adrenalised, quick--not restful. It encourages concision. VSPritchett described, 'How did the story change as I rewrote it, perhaps four or five times, boiling down a hundred pages into twenty or thirty, as I still do? Story writing is exacting work.' I'll be looking for stories which show imaginative pleasure in meeting the demands of the form."
The Bridport website explains: "In many cases a win in the Bridport Prize has led to further successes and helped to launch new writers. Kate Atkinson (a short story winner in 1990) said that it was very important, confirming that she had found her "voice". Her short story went on to become the first chapter of her novel, "Behind the Scenes at the Museum", winner of the 1995 Whitbread Book of the Year. She returned to judge the Short Story section in 2001. Other noteworthy names include Helen Dunmore (also a 1990 winner) whose "Spell of Winter" won the Orange Prize for Fiction in 1996; Tobias Hill, a winner in both categories (poetry 1994, short story 1996) and Tess Biddington, a winner in 2000, who made it onto the short list for The Forward Prize and gained an agent for her forthcoming novel, plus many others."
The Prize is open to anyone, including non-UK applicants,over 18 years. Entries must be entirely the work of the entrant and must never have been published, self-published, published on any website or broadcast. Closing date is June 30th 2008. Each entry costs £6.
More details from www.bridportprize.org.uk
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Okay, so only one person commented on my SmartLinks post (Thanks, cloudscome!). But a number of you signed up for a SmartLinks widget, and they're returning the love.
Meet Fraser, their programmer. Here's his blog again. Ain't he cute? I love geeks (yeah, okay, so I'm old enough to be his crazy auntie). And he worked his tush off to make this for us:
If you think this is purdy, check out this one:
Gorgeous, huh? Want one? Well, do ya?
Super easy to install
Go to this page and follow instructions. Even I, total techno-klutz, managed not to electrocute myself.
You can play with how it looks, or pick among all eight Cybils categories. (You may need to play with the width--I found the standard 200 pixels too wide).
Make money!
You can install your own Amazon ID, or Powell's, B&N or BookSense. Or, ahem, you can install our codes and help us earn a few bucks. Here's our IDs:
Amazon: cybils0c-20
(note those are zeroes)
BookSense: thecybils7
You'll open a little box thingee for putting in the IDs. Don't be like me--close the box afterwards! Otherwise the affiliate IDs don't load and you're stuck repeating the whole thing. Gah.
Spread the word
This is a pretty big favor Fraser did for us. I told you I drove him batty.
You can help by posting your favorite category in your sidebar--right next to the lovely one JacketFlap did for us too, if you like.
Check out the YA one in the center column here. Awesome!
--Anne Levy, editor