Friday, November 22, 2019
25 Writing Competitions You Should Enter
25 Writing Competitions You Should Enter  25 Writing Competitions You Should Enter  25 Writing Competitions You Should Enter                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  Have you completed one or more short stories, poems, or nonfiction pieces? Perhaps youââ¬â¢d like some motivation  or to take the next step with them. This post lists writing competitions for 2011 that feature cash prizes of $1,000 or more and, often, publication deals for the winner (plus, for many contests, additional prizes for winners and other contestants).  Note, however, that such competitions often require an entry fee (generally $15-$20 per entry), and some require the submitted material to be previously unpublished. Go to the contest Web site for information about costs and other details.  The competition can be fierce, but even if you donââ¬â¢t win, the benefits are valuable:    Completing and submitting an entry helps you develop word-count precision and deadline discipline.   You may not earn a four-figure cash prize, but you could win some honorable-mention mad money or other prizes.   You have a completed manuscript you can submit to other competitions or to agents.    Good luck!  Poetry  1. The Pinch Journal Poetry Contest  Deadline: March 1  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: 1-3 poems  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  2. Normal Prize in Poetry  Deadline: March 4  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: 5 pages or 5 poems  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  3. Boston Review Fourteenth Annual Poetry Contest  Deadline: June 1  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 10 pages  Prize: $1,500 and publication  4. Bellevue Literary Reviewââ¬â¢s Marica and Jan Vilcek Prize in Poetry  Deadline: July 1  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: up to 3 poems (maximum 5 pages)  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  5. Lulu Poetry Contest  Deadline: continuous entry  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: not specified  Prizes: annual $5,000; monthly $250; daily $25  Short Fiction  6. he Pinch Journal Fiction Contest  Deadline: March 1  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 5,000 words  Prizes: $1,500 and publication  7. Sycamore Reviewââ¬â¢s Wabash Prize for Fiction  Deadline: March 1  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 10,000 words  Prize: $1,000 and publication for winner  8. Potomac Review Annual Contest  Deadline: March 1  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: 2 stories of up to 2,000 words  Prize: $1,000 and publication for winner  9. Normal Prize in Fiction  Deadline: March 4  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: up to 10,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication for winner  10. Colorado Reviewââ¬â¢s Nelligan Prize  Deadline: postmarked March 11  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: under 50 pages  Prizes: $1,500 and publication for winner  11. New Rivers Press American Fiction Prize  Deadline: May 1  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: up to 7,500 words  Prizes: $1,000, $500, $250; publication for winners  12. Drue Heinz Literature Prize  Deadline: postmarked May 1-June 30  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: not specified  Prize: $15,000 and publication  13. Carve Magazineââ¬â¢s Raymond Carver Short Story Contest  Deadline: May 15-June 30  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up 6,000 words  Prizes: $1,000, $750, $500, $250; considered by literary agencies  14. Howard Frank Mosher Short Fiction Prize  Deadline: postmarked June 30  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: up to 10,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication, $100  15. Bellevue Literary Reviewââ¬â¢s Goldenberg Prize in Fiction  Deadline: July 1  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: up to 5,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  Nonfiction  16. Michael Steinberg Essay Prize  Deadline: February 28  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 6,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication; publication consideration for runner-up  17. Normal Prize in Nonfiction  Deadline: March 4  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: up to 10,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  18. Creative Nonfiction Anger  Revenge Contest  Deadline: March 16  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 4,000 words  Prizes: $1,000, $500  19. Writers @ Work Writing Competition  Deadline: March 20  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 7,500 words  Prizes: $1,000, $350, $100; publication consideration for each winner  20. Bellevue Literary Reviewââ¬â¢s Burns Archive Prize in Nonfiction  Deadline: July 1  Type of submission: online  Length of submission: up to 5,000 words  Prizes: $1,000 and publication  Multiple Awards  21. Glimmer Trainââ¬â¢s Very Short Fiction Award  Deadline: January 1-31, July 1-31  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: up to 3,000 words  Prizes: $1,200, publication, and 20 copies; $500; $300  22. Glimmer Trainââ¬â¢s Fiction Open  Deadline: March 1-31, June 1-30, August 1-30, December 1-31  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: 2,000-20,000 words  Prizes: $2,000, publication, and 20 copies; $1,000; $600  23. Glimmer Trainââ¬â¢s Short-Story Award for New Writers  Deadline: postmarked March 31, postmarked September 30  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: 3,000-12,000 words  Prizes: $1,200, publication, and 20 copies; $500; $300  24. Glimmer Trainââ¬â¢s Family Matters  Deadline: April 1-30, October 1-31  Type of submission: offline  Length of submission: 3,000-12,000 words  Prizes: $1,200, publication, and 20 copies; $500; $300  Miscellaneous  And, of course, no self-respecting list of writing competitions would be complete without this one:  25. Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest  Deadline: April 15  Type of submission: online or offline  Length of submission: up to about 50-60 words  Prize: ââ¬Å"a pittanceâ⬠  This whimsical contest is devoted to parodying the purple prose of Edward George ââ¬Å"It Was a Dark and Stormy Nightâ⬠ Bulwer-Lytton and his ilk by crafting, as it were, the most absurdly inept opening line from a (fortunately) nonexistent novel. For more information, go to the slightly disheveled Web site and search for ââ¬Å"The rules to the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest.â⬠                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Writing Competitions category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Avoid Beginning a  Sentence with ââ¬Å"Withâ⬠What is Dative Case?Whatââ¬â¢s the Best Way to Refer to a Romantic Partner?    
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