Archive for the ‘Places to Publish’ Category

Short Story Competition

The Short Story is a new website designed to showcase the best short stories from around the world. They’re currently running an open submission competition to find the best story of 2011. Three cash prizes will be awarded. The deadline is Sept 15.

More info on how to submit work from The Short Story website.

Saturday 18 June, New Cross: Poetry, Music, Art…

To celebrate the publication of their first book, the Clinic are hosting a night of live music, poetry readings and an exhibition at The Amersham Arms, New Cross on Saturday 18th June. The Clinic anthology features new work from from Luke Kennard and Ross Sutherland, as well as Faber New Poets Toby Martinez de las Rivas and Jack Underwood, Stop Sharpening Your Knives stalwarts Nathan Hamilton and Matthew Gregory, and winners of clinic and IdeasTap’s poetry competition.
There will be readings from the poets and music from Dead Red SunTubelord and Chapter 24. Both anthology and the new Dead Red Sun EP will be available to buy on the night at a special discounted price. See here for more information on the launch.

2011 Impress Prize deadline 17 June

 

Next week is the closing date for  a prize for unpublished writers that is beginning to develop quite a reputation for launching careers. Roshi Fernando, whose novel Homesick won the Impress Prize For New Writers in 2009, will now be published by Bloomsbury in the UK and Commonwealth, and in the US by Knopf, an imprint of Random House. Ginny Baily’s debut novel Africa Junction, which was shortlisted for the Impress Prize in 2007, has been published in 2011 by the Random House imprint Harvill Secker.

Roshi Fernando was also shortlisted for the Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award this year.

More information about entering the prize here: Impress Prize

V S Pritchett Memorial Prize: closing date 30 June

The Royal Society of LiteratureThe VS Pritchett Memorial Prize was relaunched in 2009 in association with Prospect magazine to honour the memory of one of Britain’s most prolific masters of the short story form. The winning story, which must be unpublished, receives a  prize of £1,000 and publication in Prospect. The entry form for the 2011 competition is now available from the Royal Society of Literature website.  The deadline for entries is 30 June.

Myriad Editions launches graphic novel competition

Brighton-based publisher Myriad Editions has launched a competition for a first graphic novel in progress, with a view to working with the winner to complete and publish the title. The judging panel includes author Ian Rankin, Guardian cartoonist Steve Bell, author and cartoonist Ed Hillyer, graphic novelists Hannah Berry and Bryan Talbot, and Myriad Editions creative director Corinne Pearlman.

Entrants are asked to submit a one-page synopsis and between 15-30 pages of a graphic work in progress. More information from the Myriad Editions site.

Call for entries: Wasafiri New Writing Prize

Wasafiri, the quarterly magazine of international writing, is now seeking entries for its third annual New Writing Prize. The competition has three categories:  PoetryFiction or Life Writing; £300 will be awarded to the winner of each category and winning entries will be featured in Wasafiri magazine. The prize is open to anyone worldwide who has not published a complete book.
This year’s judges are: Susheila Nasta MBE (Chair) – Editor of Wasafiri and Professor of Modern Literature at the Open University; Brian Chikwava – Award-winning writer and recipient of the Caine Prize for African Writing in 2004; Jackie Kay – Celebrated prose writer, poet and playwright, awarded an MBE for services to literature in 2006; and Daljit Nagra – Critically acclaimed poet, winner of the Forward Prize (2007) and ACE Decibel Award (2008).
For more information and entry forms visit the Wasafiri website or email Nisha Obano at  n.a.obano@open.ac.uk. Closing date for entries: 5pm, 29 July.

Literary agents move into digital publishing & POD

Bedford SquareThis week, ‘super agent’ Ed Victor announced that he is setting up a new digital and print on demand publishing venture, Bedford Square Books, which will release six titles by authors his agency represents this September, with another six planned for January 2012. Authors’ royalties will be 50% as opposed to the 26% traditionally on offer from publishers for ebooks.  Now, The Bookseller reports that agencies Curtis Brown and Blake Friedman are planning to follow his example. Agent Sonia Land has already made 100 of Catherine Cookson’s out of print titles available as e-books, apparently frustrated by the lack of interest from the traditional publishers. She reacted to the news of Bedford Square Books by warning publishers to “rethink their legacy operation”.

In July last year, US literary agent Andrew Wylie (AKA ‘the Jackal’), created an imprint called Odyssey Books and struck a deal with Amazon to make a number of classic titles by some of his extremely famous clients –  for example, Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint, Nabokov’s Lolita – available on Kindle. Random House reacted furiously by declaring that it now regarded the the Wylie Agency as a direct competitor. In the end Wylie was forced to scale down his plans, although books like Brideshead Revisited and The Naked and the Dead are still available on Odyssey.

As yet, Ed Victor’s move has not attracted such ire. The CEO of the Publishers Association, Richard Mollet, wished Victor luck and added that he “hope[d] he would consider joining the PA”.

Inspired by Tagore

Sampad, a Birmingham-based organisation promoting south Indian art and culture, is celebrating the 150th anniversary of the birth of  the hugely influential poet Rabindranath Tagore with an international writing competition. The competition is run in partnership with the British Council. Any writer from the age of 8 onwards, with an interest in South Asian Culture, can enter.

More information from the SAMPAD website.  The closing date is 31 January 2012.

First Mslexia Women’s Novel Competition

 

Mslexia Magazine has launched a  new competition for novels in any genre for adults or young adults written by previously unpublished (female) authors. Entries should be the first 5,000 words of the novel, which must already have been completed and must total at least 50,000 words. Closing date: 30 September

Entry fee: £25. First Prize £5,000

See the Mslexia website for more information about how to enter.

3 awards in a week for indie publisher

 

Heartening to see that  independent Brighton-based publishers Myriad Editions scooped three awards in one week.  The Spider Truces by Tom Connolly  was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott PrizeLondon Triptych by Jonathan Kemp won the Authors Club Best First Novel prize and Elizabeth Haynes’ Into the Darkest Corner won the first round of the Amazon Rising Stars prize for 2011.

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