Showing posts with label October Deadline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October Deadline. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 October 2017

Coast to Coast Magazine Submissions

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Issue 3 of Coast to Coast Spring issue is open for submissions

Deadline October 22nd

Coast to Coast journal is designed and created by writer Maria Isakova Bennett, and edited by herself and poet Michael Brown. an A6 stitched journal, a piece of art work and a poetry publication. Each issue is produced as a limited edition, and will contain the work of twelve poets selected during submission periods. 
Maria has combined stitch and text to create a journal which is different to conventional poetry journals and magazines that you subscribe to, resulting in a publication which is a small piece of art in itself.

Email, up to 3 poems of no more than 24 lines both as a doc and in the body of the email to Coast2journal@gmail.com Include a 50 word max bio and address for your copy.

All poets will hear the outcome of their work by November 6th.

Issue 2 of to Coast to Coast to Coast includes a wonderful list of poets. More info here 

Sunday, 1 October 2017

Troubadour Poetry Prize

Judged by Imtiaz Dharker & Michael Symmons Roberts
Prizes: 1st £2,000; 2nd £1,000; 3rd £500
plus, with thanks to leading poetry magazines & troubadour coffee-house,
  • 1 two-year subscription to the manhattan review
  • 5 one-year subscriptions to poetry (from poetry foundation)
  • 3 one-year subscriptions to poetry ireland review
  • 2 one-year subscriptions to the rialto
  • £100 troubadour restaurant gift voucher
  • bottle of troubadour champagne 
  • quickest turnaround - just 5 weeks from deadline (Oct 16th) to contacting winners (Nov 20th, a week before prizegiving), tying up your poems for the shortest possible time
  • fairest judging - our judges read all poems submitted, no sifters, no shortlisters
  • read at the Troubadour - the chance to read alongside Imtiaz Dharker, Michael Symmons Roberts & 2017 prize-winners at our Poetry Prize Celebration (Nov 27th), a gala event with music from classical duo, Aisling & Julie-Anne Manning
  • winning poems are forwarded to prestigious Forward Prize for Best Single Poem 2018 (see Forward Prizes)

Fees: Entries must be accompanied by fees of £6/€7/$7.50 for 1st poem & £4/€5/$5 for each subsequent poem in same submission 

Enter by e-mail or post, full details on website, by Mon 16th October

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

Hanna Greally International Literary Awards 2017

Image result for beneath western skies
Deadline: 10th October 

The Hanna Greally International Literary Awards happen in conjunction with SiarScéal Festival, held in Roscommon every year since its inception in 2007. This year's 10th anniversary festival takes place over two days: Friday and Saturday, 20-21 October at Roscommon County Library in Roscommon Town, from 10am to 4.30pm on each day. The full programme of events has been announced and is posted online (also available to download in handy brochure format).

Winners in this year's Hanna Greally International Literary Awards will be announced and prizes presented as part of the formal proceedings that follow the Official Launch. The Overall Winner will take away the prize of seeing his or her book published professionally and formally launched at the following year's SiarScéal Festival (dates to be announced). The estimated value of this prize, which is sponsored by The Manuscript Publisher, is put at €2000. Full details of what the winning author will receive are outlined here.

In addition to the Overall Prize, there is also a First Prize – a cash prize of €700 – with trophy prizes for Highly Commended entries in the various categories of poetry, prose/short stories. The Ger Hanily Memorial Cup will be awarded to the best local entry received.

Day One of the festival, is entirely devoted to the Student Awards presentation, including a Student of the Year Trophy. This event is sponsored by Allied Irish Bank. The following day, Saturday 21 October, will see the presentation of awards in the other categories, including Overall and First Prize winners.

Mary Melvin Geoghegan, who is the adjudicator of this year's awards, will be the guest speaker. She herself is an award-winning poet. To date, four volumes of her poetry have been published, the most recent being, Say It Like a Paragraph (2012).

Entries may consist of poetry and/or prose compositions, previously unpublished, on the theme of Beneath Western Skies.

Full details of how to enter (including how the facility to enter online), terms and conditions, rules of entry are available from SiarScéal.

Friday, 14 October 2016

Bare Fiction Prize

International awards for Poetry, Flash Fiction, and Short Story.
Now in its third year, the Bare Fiction Prize has given new and old writers alike an equal chance to win big cash prizes and publication within each of the three categories offered. In 2015’s Bare Fiction Prize, first place in the poetry competition (judged by Jo Bell) went to Astra Bloom – a complete newcomer to the UK literary scene. Each entry is judged anonymously by our judges, with the poetry and flash fiction category judges reading every single entry and our short story judge reading a longlist selected by magazine editor, Robert Harper.

POETRY JUDGE: Helen Mort

FLASH FICTION JUDGE: David Gaffney 

SHORT STORY JUDGE: Courttia Newland 

PRIZES (IN EACH CATEGORY)

1st Prize: £500 
2nd Prize: £200 
3rd Prize: £100 
2 x Highly Commended Award: £25
1st, 2nd & 3rd prize winners will be published in the Spring 2017 issue of Bare Fiction Magazine and on the website, with the prizes to be awarded at the launch reading in London in Spring 2017

FEE

Poetry (max 40 lines):
Flash Fiction (max 500 words):
Short Story (max 3000 words):

£5 / £3 for subscribers
£6 / £4 for subscribers
£8 / £6 for subscribers

You can subscribe during the submission process if you wish.

Payment can be made by Credit/Debit Card, PayPal or by Cheque (GBP Sterling).


Deadline 31st October

Wednesday, 12 October 2016

The Stony Thursday Book

The Stony Thursday Book is seeking submissions from local, national and international poets for its next issue, to be published in December 2016.

The Stony Thursday Book is one of the longest-running literary journals in Ireland and celebrates its 41st edition in 2016.

This year's Editor of the Stony Thursday Poetry Book is poet and writer John Davies.

How to Submit:

  • Each poet should send no more than 6 poems. 
  • Submitted poems must be previously unpublished. 
  • Each poet should submit a short bio (max 100 words) 
  • Submissions are being accepted by email and by post. 
  • When submitting poems by post please write your name on each page. Please mark envelopes: The Stony Thursday Book 2016. 
  • When submitting by email please reference TSTB 2016 in your subject line and please attach all poems in a single file attachment (pdf or doc).

Send poems to:
The Stony Thursday Book 2016, Limerick Arts Office, Limerick City and County Council, Merchant’s Quay, Limerick
Or
by email to: artsofficesubmissions@limerick.ie

Deadline: Friday 28th October 2016

About the Editor:
John Davies
Born and raised in Birmingham, England, John Davies now lives in Brighton. His published work includes the full collection Shedman, Our Storeys – Art and Poetry in Healthcare, co-written with artist Sue Ridge, and the pamphlets Glove Poems and The Nutter in the Shrubbery. His work has been published in The Echo Room, Poetry South East, The Stony Thursday Book, The Guardian and the Irish Examiner amongst others, as well as online. A New and Selected is forthcoming in 2017.

He was director of THE SOUTH Writers' Network from 2002-2008, which promoted poets in Sussex and developed a longstanding connection with the CUISLE Poetry Festival in Limerick. At the same time he ran Pighog Press, which specialised in publishing Sussex (and Munster) poets. The Pighog list was transferred to US publisher Red Hen in 2014.

John is perhaps best known as Shedman, the itinerant poet in a shed who has appeared at numerous festivals and events since 2002. As Shedman, John’s commissioned work has included poems engraved into the windows of a learning centre on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, a poem for the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and a series of poems for the atrium at North Middlesex University Hospital.

www.johndavies.net

The Stony Thursday Poetry Book is funded by The Arts Council & Limerick City & County Council.

Tuesday, 4 October 2016

The Flambard Poetry Prize

First prize: £1000

Second prize: £250

The Flambard Prize is awarded annually to the best group of five poems submitted by a poet who has not yet published a single-authored pamphlet or collection. Each poem should be no longer than 40 lines.

The 2016 Flambard Poetry Prize, which continues to honour the achievements of Flambard Press and the inspiration of founders Margaret and Peter Lewis. Between 1990 and 2012, Flambard Press published an acclaimed range of poetry and fiction, helping to nurture many emergent and established writers regionally and nationally. It was recognised as one of the finest small independent presses in the UK.

Fee: £5 per group of five poems.

Deadline:  31st October 2016.

Entries will be judged by Linda France and Andrew Forster.

Entries can be made via the Newcastle University WebStore or by posting hard copies to: 
Newcastle Centre for the Literary Arts, 
Percy Building, 
Newcastle University, 
Newcastle Upon Tyne, 
NE1 7RU

Link here

Saturday, 1 October 2016

The London Magazine‘s Short Story Competition

The London Magazine has published short stories by some of the most well-respected literary figures over the course of long history. Our annual Short Story Competition seeks out new voices to join them. Established to encourage emerging literary talent, the award provides an opportunity for publication and recognition, as well as rewarding imagination, originality and creativity. 
The London Magazine is looking for unpublished short stories under 4,000 words from writers across the world. The story that wins first-place will be published in a future issue of The London Magazine. The second and third place stories will be published on our website. Prize winners will also be invited to a reception in early 2016.
Entry fee: £10 per short story (there is no limit to the number of entries you can submit)
Closing Date: 31st October 2016
First Prize: £500
Second Prize: £300
Third Prize: £200

Judges: Erica Wagner, Max Porter, Angus Cargill
Read The London Magazine’s interviews with the judges here

You can enter by Submittable, link from here

Tuesday, 6 September 2016

The Blue Nib

www.thebluenib.com is accepting submissions of poetry, fiction, essays & short stories.

Submission URL thebluenib.com/submissions/

Poems: Please submit a minimum of 3 and a maximum of 10 pieces of work, ensure that you have
edited and formatted as you wish to see your work published

Fiction: The Blue Nib will publish new fiction of up to 10,000 words, please submit no more than one piece at a time.

Short Stories: Please submit a minimum of three and a maximum of 5 pieces of work, please ensure
the work has been edited and that spelling and grammar have been checked.

Essays: original essays of no more than 5000 words.

The following contests are also open and finalists in each category will be included in the Winter Anthology which will be published on-line and as a download in December 2016

International Original Fiction Contest. €250.00 Prize Fund
The contest is open to original fiction of no more than 12,000 words

International Essay Contest. €150.00 Prize Fund
The contest is open to original essays of no more than 2000 words

International Short Story Contest. €150.00 Prize Fund
The contest is open to original short stories of no more than 3500 words

International Poetry Contest. €150.00 Prize Fund
The contest is open to poetry in all forms other than extreme brevity

All Open to all writers over the age of 18 years as at 1st November 2016

Deadline: 31st October 2016

Entry fee for each is €5.00

Thursday, 25 August 2016

Resurgence Poetry Prize 2016 - Ecopoems

Do you have a true ecopoem or two?
The Resurgence Poetry Prize is the world’s first major ecopoetry award. Three prizes will be awarded each year for original and previously unpublished ecopoems in English (or any dialect of English). Poets may submit as many poems as they wish but each poem must not be more than 54 lines in length..  
Poems do not need to address a specific theme, but to be eligible a poems will in some way – thematically, structurally, linguistically or formally – investigate the interrelationship between human culture and the natural world.  A poem’s spoken quality – its suitability for being read and recorded aloud – will form part of the judging criteria. 
All details are on the Rules page.
With a first prize of £5,000 for the best single poem embracing ecological themes, the award ranks amongst the highest of any English language single poem competition. Second prize is £2,000 and third prize £1,000.
Deadline: 1st October
Head Judge: Jo Shapcott. The judges will read all eligible poems
The previous year's winners are on this page where you can also navigate to how to enter.

Thursday, 4 August 2016

Writing for Mslexia magazine

Mslexia is a great writing magazine committed to promoting women writers. So yes, you have to be a woman to submit.

Mslexia magazine was recently redesigned to widen the  range of submission opportunities. Whether it’s just one sentence about your life, or an entire 2,200-word short story, a rollicking rhyme to read aloud to children or a carefully-crafted villanelle, there's lots in the list below to choose from.

All submission slots are completely free to enter, and they welcome work from both published and unpublished women writers.

Here’s what we’re seeking for our December 2016 issue:

OPEN SUBMISSIONS
The following opportunities are open to all women writers, regardless of whether you subscribe to Mslexia (though subscriptions work out at just £2 per month, posting to a UK address). Except where stated, they pay (modestly) for everything they publish.

Secret fantasy
This is the next theme of the special ‘Showcase’ section – pages dedicated to stories up to 2,200 words and/or poems up to 40 lines, this time on the topic of erotic passion. Requited or unrequited, chaste or salacious, enacted or simply longed for, take a walk on the wild side of your romantic imagination. (Deadline: 5 September 2016)

Rhyme story
Many picture books for children have, at their heart, a narrative in the form of a rhyming text. Send rhyming texts of up to 200 words (preferably fewer), that tell a story to read aloud to a small child. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

First page surgery
Please submit the title and first page of your novel (any genre, up to 300 words). Our guest industry expert will comment, in the magazine, about how it might be changed to catch an agent’s or editor’s eye. If you’re feeling shy, you’re welcome to use a pseudonym. This is an unpaid slot. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

Confession
A memoir piece about something you were (or are now, in retrospect) deeply ashamed of (up to 300 words). (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

Pitch perfect
Send a ‘pitch’ (pithy description) for a writing project you’re planning to submit to an agent, editor or producer. The project might be a novel, memoir, biography, theatre play or screenplay, but your word limit is 100. The guest industry expert will suggest ways of making it spark the interest of the people you need to impress. If you’re feeling shy, you’re welcome to use a pseudonym. This is an unpaid slot, but the most recent pitch featured in the magazine resulted in the author finding an agent. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

Life sentence
One sentence only, of no more than 25 words, describing an interesting (or poignant, or bizarre, or traumatic, or uplifting) event your recent writing life. There’s publication, and a credit, but no payment for these. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

D is for
A piece of creative non-fiction inspired by an alphabetic prompt (e.g. ‘H is for hawk’). Up to 300 words. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

Self-publishing survivors
Do you have a tale to tell about your self-publishing experience? We want to interview people who are prepared to share their triumphs, trials and tribulations – and their advice for fellow travellers. Please send a brief outline. We will contact you directly if we decide to interview you for the magazine. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)

Hindsight
Up to 200 words, in second person, of advice to your younger self, based on your later experience of creativity and life – that might benefit fellow writers today. (Deadline: 11 October 2016)


To submit your work, visit our website and use the online form, or email submissions@mslexia.co.uk

Monday, 1 August 2016

The Poetry Society’s annual National Poetry Competition

The Poetry Society’s annual National Poetry Competition is for previously unpublished single poems.

Ten prizes

First prize: £5000
Second prize: £2000
Third prize: £1000
Seven commendations: £200 each
Winning poems are published on The Poetry Society website, and the top three in The Poetry Review. Winners are invited to read at events and festivals all around the country, including Ledbury Poetry Festival. Up to 150 longlisted entrants will also be offered discount on selected activities from The Poetry Society, and one of our competition partners the Poetry School.
Judges: Moniza Alvi, Gerry Cambridge and Jack Underwood.
Deadline: 31 October 2016
  • All poems must have a title and must not exceed 40 lines in length (excluding title).
  • The first poem submitted costs £6.50. Subsequent entries in the same submission cost £3.50 per poem. Poetry Society members (including those joining at time of submission) get a free second entry, with subsequent poems at £3.50.
Link here

Sunday, 18 October 2015

Banshees in Print

Banshee is open for submissions until the 31st October.

Banshee is a new print magazine (yes, actual print, not just online) Issue one was well received with some lovely launch events. Its published twice a year, April and September.

They're taking non-fiction essays – personal, cultural, political – as well as short stories, flash fiction, and poetry. The best thing to do is to visit their website at www.bansheelit.com, read ‘about’ us, check the submission guidelines, and follow them.

And they pay a small contributors fee. Yes, actual money.

You can purchase issue #1 or a one- or two-year subscription from the website, or pick up a copy in a number of bookshops, including Waterstones Cork, Hodges Figgis, Books Upstairs, Liberties Upstairs, Blackbird Books, and Dubray Grafton St.

Read the fascinating interview with the 3 editors here on writing.ie

Monday, 28 September 2015

Skylight Journal submissions

Quick one: Deadline 1 October

Skylight 47 is seeking submissions for its next issue.

Skylight 47 is a poetry magazine in newspaper format, and is published twice a year. The next issue will be launched in Autumn/Winter 2015. They are looking for poems and original artwork from Ireland and abroad.

Please send up to four poems, along with a short biographical note (max 60 words), to skylightpoets47@gmail.com.
Send your poems both as a single attachment (.doc, .docx, .txt or .rtf) and in the body of the email.

Works should be previously unpublished.
Poems to be no longer than 40 lines.

Web: http://Skylight47poetry.wordpress.com
Facebook: Skylight Poets
Twitter: @Skylight47Poems
 

Friday, 18 September 2015

Abridged 0 - 43: Lethe Submission Call

We are what we remember. And what we want to forget. We no longer feel comfortable with our own memories even though we say we have no regrets. We see people as reinforcement and justification. The end justifies the means and the present is all that matters. There is always a need to celebrate and memorialise. The selfie is perhaps the endgame of this: ‘See I’m still here.’ We arbitrarily signpost the past as if 10 years is any more relevant than 9, or 99 less significant than 100. It’s capturing the past, cutting off the rough edges and ribboning it: selling it to others and ourselves. Society rounds us up in a collective memory for easy measurement and we cling to tradition like a rock as if it wasn’t something we define by the present. Each world we build we surround by a Lethe, a border-river keeping out the things we’d rather forget we’d done. Scorch the earth and flood the plains.

Abridged is exploring memory and oblivion in its 0 – 43: Lethe issue. 

We are looking for poetry (up to three poems) and art (up to A4 size and 300dpi or above). 

Submissions can be sent to abridged@ymail.com 

Deadline 1st October.
 

 

Saturday, 12 September 2015

Jonathan Swift Creative Writing Awards 2015

The Jonathan Swift Creative Writing Awardsawards are inviting submissions for their annual competitions in poetry and prose.

Fee €4 per poem, or 3 poems for €10, with a max of 6 poems. €5 for prose entry made payable to Jonathan Swift Creative Writing Awards. 

Ms Maria Wallace, Award Winning Catalan/Tallaght Author and Poet will judge the competition.

Winners will be notified seven days in advance and must be prepared to read their work if possible on the awards night at the Heritage Centre in Saggart Co. Dublin at the end of November 2015. 

Deadline: Friday 30th of October 

The work should be the author's original work and not have been published or broadcast previously. 
Poems not to exceed 45 lines and typed in plain font Times Roman point 12 single spacing on plain white A4 sheet, without decoration or illustration. 
Entries may be in Irish or English and entrants name must not appear on the typescript but only on the entry form.

Thursday, 10 September 2015

Rattle Feminist Poets Issue

Rattle are looking for submissions for their Feminist Poets Issue

Deadline:  15 October 2015

While we’re always open to regular submissions of all forms of poetry and artwork, every issue of Rattle includes a special tribute dedicated to some ethnic, vocational, or stylistic group. As always, submissions are free, and payment for publication is $100 per poem. 

#51 – SPRING 2016 – FEMINIST POETS

Poetry: This issue will feature a tribute to Feminist Poets. The poems may be written in any style, subject, or length, but must be written by those who identify as Feminist Poets and use poetry to advocate for women’s rights. Please explain how this applies to you in your contributor note. We no longer publish prose essays, but instead use these contributor notes as micro-essays at the back of each issue. The poems themselves don’t have to be about feminism or women’s rights—we want to explore the range of work that contemporary Feminist Poets are producing. 
If using Submittable, please be sure to select the Feminist Poets category.

Sunday, 6 September 2015

Novel Fair

The 2015 novel fair cost has gone up to €45. €45!

Described by The Irish Times as a 'Dragon's Den for writers', the Greenbean Novel Fair is an Irish Writers Centre initiative which aims to introduce up-and-coming writers to top publishers and literary agents, giving novelists the opportunity to bypass the slush pile, pitch their ideas and place their synopsis and sample chapters directly into the hands of publishers and agents.
The Greenbean Novel Fair 2016 submissions period is now officially open with the deadline for applications on 16 October 2015
The Fair itself takes place on 20 February 2016. Take a look at our video of Novel Fair 2015 to get a flavour for just how exciting this event can be! 
Before entering the competition, please ensure that you have read the Terms & Conditions very carefully as the Fair is open to previously unpublished aspiring novelists only. 2016 Terms & Conditions here.

Sunday, 9 August 2015

Dromineer Literary Festival Poetry and Flash Competitions

Details of the 2015 Dromineer Literary Festival competitions. The festival will take place 1 to 4 October, 2015.

2015 POETRY COMPETITION
Judge: Thomas McCarthy.
Maximum Number of lines per poem: 40
Prizes: 1st. Prize €500.00; 2nd. Prize €350.00; 3rd. Prize €150.00
Entry Fee: €5 per poem. Closing date: August 25 2015
Last year's prizewinning poems are here.

2015 FLASH FICTION COMPETITION
Judges: SARAH DAVIS-GOFF and LISA COEN (Tramp Press)
Maximum Number of words per story: 500
Prizes: 1st. Prize €500.00; 2nd. Prize €350.00; 3rd. Prize €150.00
Entry Fee: €10 per entry. Closing date: August 25 2015

Saturday, 1 August 2015

Hanna Greally Literary Awards

From the Women Rule Writer Blog. The theme is puzzling. But give it a go.

Hanna Greally Literary Awards 2015 including the Ger Hanily Memorial Cup

ThemeCentenary in Reflection
Submissions of poetry, prose, short stories on the theme are invited.

Prizes: The Overall Prize Winner will receive a cash prize of €200 Runners-Up prizes will also be awarded in categories that include International Poetry, International Prose/Short Stories, National Poetry, National Prose/Short-Story, Local Winner in both Poetry and Prose/Short Stories categories, prizes for Highly Commended and National Schools.
The Ger Hanily Memorial Cup will also be awarded from the entries submitted.

Competition Rules of Entry:
·         All entries submitted must be the author’s own unpublished work
·         Entries are limited to three entries (poems, short-story or prose) per person
·         Entrant’s name and address contact number, details, must be on a separate page to the written submission

Competition Entry Fee: €5 per entry; €10 for three entries.
You can also enter online. Their Website has details.

Deadline: Friday 23rd October 2015

The Siarsceal Festival is launched Friday 6th November.

Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Bard of Armagh - Competition for humourous verse

Over £3000 in prizes

Visit www.bardofarmagh.com

The poem should be no more than 650 words and should not exceed 9 minutes performance time.
It should be humorous verse, suitable for family audiences and radio broadcast.
Entry fee of £2.00 for each poem.

Entries should be sent to: Mr John Makem, 34 Fergort Rd, Derrynoose, Co Armagh, N. Ireland. BT60 3DN

Deadline: 1st October and competitors will be contacted by mid-October.

Finals will take place in the Armagh City Hotel on Friday 20 November 2015. Tickets for the event will go on sale early September.

More details here where you can also hear some of last year's winners.