ECLIPSE

My cnf flash ECLIPSE has been awarded Runner Up in the WOW! Women on Writing Creative Nonfiction Essay contest. Second time I’ve placed in their competitions in six months! The other was for a previously published piece, What Men Want. Have a look at that post to read about this lovely organisation. I will also have another interview up soon. 

I’m in the midst of my first COVID infection which has been awful, so this is a bright light for me at the moment, so grateful. 

Many thanks to everyone at WOW! Women on Writing. What fantastic work you do for women writers!

Image by A Owen from Pixabay

WHAT MEN WANT (again)

I’m super happy that my cnf flash What Men Want is Runner Up in the WOW! Women on Writing Creative Nonfiction Essay contest. I didn’t discover this amazing group until recently. They not only run competitions, but courses and articles, and they also list a number of writing resources on their website. Unusually they accept work that has already been published, which means this piece of mine gets a new lease of life, but more importantly the lovely emails I’ve had back and forth with the organisers were a highlight of the recent months for me – much needed as I’ve been in quite a funk. The emails were supportive, encouraging, personal. Most competitions don’t engage to this level. AND, I have an interview! WOW! asked me questions about the piece, about my writing process, and about the book I was commissioned to write from Story Machine (slated for publication later this year). You can read the interview here

Many thanks to all at WOW! Women on Writing. What great work you do for women writers!

WEIRD WINS

Out Of The Blue – a creative non-fiction flash piece of mine won first place in Discourse Literary Journal’s June competition with the theme of ‘Weird.’ (The link takes you to the Featured Essays page, and my piece is second down). I need to add a warning as this very short piece describes some strange/disturbing things. I wrote it some years ago as part of a daily practice of writing I call ‘A Page a Day’ and then very recently edited it for sending out. I have another short piece coming out in a month, also written some time ago and then recently edited.

That these pieces were buried in a pile of “old” writing and now are being made public somewhat astonishes me, and reminds me how powerful and productive the Page a Day process can be, and how much I wish I had kept at it – each day, every day. Another thing that these publications prove to me is what I so often say – that editing work is MUCH easier the longer you leave the writing in a drawer.

I talk about the Page a Day process in the Story Machines blog here. While this blog was written for those with chronic illness, the practice works for anyone, at any stage of writing.

Over the years I’ve had many short pieces published from this practice, and while I think the meme below is both funny and mostly true, I do know that I feel better, if not happier, when I write, and particularly if what I write speaks to others. 

I promise myself I’ll start a new Page a Day practice, today, but of course I won’t. I’m writing this blog instead. But I’m still promising myself! 

IMG_0887

KARAOKE GIRL WINS

So Karaoke Girl which I entered into a little competition where you record yourself reading a flash piece, won first place. Thank you everyone who helped make this happen! Funny little competition, but always nice to be ‘a winner’! To listen, go here (YouTube).

Photo on the YouTube version by Tony Wan on Unsplash

On Writing First Pages

I planned on posting about this interview with me on the day it was published, in the hopes of getting the word out about this fantastic competition before the deadline, but then I had an M.E. relapse. Well, the First Pages Prize IS a fantastic competition, and now you have a year to plan to enter the next round! I wrote about my experience in 2019, and since then the Prize has gone from strength to strength. The prizes are exceptional, a substantial cash award, partial developmental edit, and consultation with an agent. So… sign up to their newsletter so you recieve news of when they are open for submissions again (they also now have an additional prize for creative non-fiction).

As I say in the interview:

For me, entering competitions is always worth it, even if I don’t place. It encourages me to look at my writing with a different eye, the eye of a reader. It encourages me to polish and edit.

And, I find deadlines extremely useful in getting me to the desk and working. I’m not sure I ever would have written as much as I have if I hadn’t sought out competitions to enter (and literary grant applications to complete!).