Showing posts with label Raymond Carver Short Story Contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raymond Carver Short Story Contest. Show all posts

Friday, April 24, 2020

Writing while marooned on a desert island

It seems as if the pandemic quarantines have marooned each of us on our tiny islands, far from shore and friends. But writers are luckier than most—we can write anywhere! Give us a computer, paper and pencil, a stretch of sand and a stick, and we’re good. But we’d be even better if we could share that writing with others, get some recognition, maybe even cash. (Hey, coconuts aren’t free!) 

And though I’m picking my way carefully through the Texas-centric coconuts that have dropped, cancelled by COV-19, there’s still a lot of online fruit, conventions, contests, even parties, to keep us busy through the summer. 

Conferences. I’m treading warily here. Some favorites, including the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference, have already been cancelled, but others are still open—or have gone online:

May 2-3: The Austin SCBWI 2020 Writers &Illustrators conference on children’s books goes online with breakout sessions for writing, professional development and illustrations, critiques, pitches and more. Nonmember prices from $110-$200. See the site for details.
Julius Silver from Pixabay

June 26-28: 2020 Agents & Editors Conference of the Writers League of Texas is still up and running, at the Hyatt Regency Austin, 208 Barton Springs, in downtown Austin, Texas. Panels and workshops, networking, plus one-on-one conferences with agents for writers with finished manuscripts. Registration: $529 nonmembers, $469 members. See the site for details.

August 7-9: ArmadilloCon may be the best little conference for writers of science fiction, fantasy and horror. At the Omni Southpark Austin. Its writers’ workshop covers a wide range of topics, with small group, instructor-led breakout sessions to exchange critiques. Workshop participants must present a writing sample of speculative fiction. Cost is $95, which includes membership for the entire conference. The due date for submissions is still to be determined as of this writing, but from past experience will probably be mid-June. Write like the wind!

Contests:

May 4 – June 13: DL Hammons’ WRiTE CLUB runs on schedule, despite the cancellation of its sponsoring DFWCon conference. As one of this year’s slushpile readers, I’m scrambling to submit my top 30 picks from the scores submitted by this year’s contestants before the bouts begin in this readers’ choice contest. Writers are pitted anonymously each week, hoping for enough votes from readers to advance to the next week’s round. Leave a brief critique for the contestants and you, too, may be eligible for prizes.

May 4: Early bird deadline for the annual writing competition of Writer’s Digest. The competition's nine categories offers chances for cash prizes, interviews and a paid trip to the Digest’s 2021 conference in New York City. Early bird entry fees: $15 per poetry entry, $25 per manuscript entry. See the site for details.

May 15: Dallas-based Carve Magazine’s annual Raymond Carver Short Story Contest offers chances for publication across five writing formats. Cash prizes and publication of prizewinners in the magazine’s October issue. Up to 10,000 words. Entry fee: $17 (online), $15 by mail. See the site for details.

May 31: The Masters Review Flash Fiction offers a $3,000 cash prize for the best story under 1,000 words, plus additional cash prizes for second and third-place winners. Prolific author Sherrie Flick will select the finalists. Entry fee is $20 (allows for two story entries), and all stories are considered for publication. See the site for details and submission portal.

June 4: #PitMad is the Twitter party where writers tweet a pitch for their completed, polished, unpublished manuscripts to agents and editors. 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. EDT. Free. See the site for details. 

July 31: The theme of the 2020 Ageless Authors contest is “Coping with Crisis.” Cash prizes available in categories of creative nonfiction (essay), short story, and poetry. But take care—writers must be at least 50 years old to qualify! Entry fee is $20 per prose or poetry entry. See the site for details and submission guidelines.

July 31: Christopher Fielden’s to Hull & Back contest for any style of fiction—with humor! (This item from Ralan.com caught my eye after I read some of the amazing humor submissions from the WRiTE CLUB slushpile.) See Ralan’s contest page for details, entry fees and prizes.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

April lit fests, classes & contests – no foolin’

North Texas literary events increase as the weather warms up. Even more have popped up since I blogged earlier this year about spring events, workshops and contests, so here’s a spring-fresh roundup!


April 1: Brush up on your dialogue-writing skills at the Writers Guild of Texas Spring Workshop, The Language of Dialogue: How to use your characters’ voices to amp up your story. 9 a.m. – noon, at the Richardson Civic Center, 411 W. Arapaho Road, in Richardson, Texas. Texas writers Melissa DeCarlo (The Art of Crash Landing) and Rosemary Clement-Moore (Texas Gothic, and more) provide a crash course in effective dialogue for fiction. Cost: $35, $25 for WGT members. Register here.

April 1-May 15: Carve Magazine’s annual Raymond Carver Short Story Contest offers $2500 in prizes for literary fiction. Cost: $15 by mail per story; $17 for online entries. Literary stories only, no genre fiction. This year’s guest judge is Pinckney Benedict (Dogs of God). Winning stories will be read by three literary agents. Mail entries to Carve Magazine/Raymond Carver Contest/PO Box 701510/Dallas, TX 75370. See the site for online entries and complete rules.

April 4-July 18: Dallas Arts and Letters Live continues, with children’s authors Erin and Philip C. Stead opening April events, April 4, 11:30 a.m., at the Dallas Museum of Art , 1717 N. Harwood, Dallas, Texas. The Steads speak 3:30-4:30 p.m. Tickets $8, $5 for DMA members.

April 6: African Diaspora: New Dialogues with Tyehimba Jess. Award-winning poet Jess (leadbelly and Olio) speaks at two events: Richland Literary Festival, Richland College, 12800 Abrams Road, Dallas, Texas from 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.; and 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. at the South Dallas Cultural Center, 3400 S. Fitzhugh Ave., Dallas, Texas, sponsored by Wordspace. See the site  for details.

April 8: WORDfest, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. This one day, all-you-can-meet festival of writers groups from across North Texas, was originally scheduled for March, but postponed due to technical difficulties at the venue. Luckily, the delay allowed for even more writers groups, classes, and programming to be added. At Tarrant County College’s Northeast Campus, Student Union Building, 828 N. Harwood, Hurst, Texas. It’s free, but register here to secure a place.

April 15: North Texas Book Festival, 7 a.m. – 3 p.m., Patterson-Appleton Arts Center, 400 E. Hickory St., Denton, Texas. Meet dozens of Texas authors at this free festival, and hear guest speaker Nancy Churnin, author of The William Hoy Story: How a Deaf Baseball Player Changed the Game. Free. See the site or the festival's Facebook for additional information.

April 29: Dallas Book Festival, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m., shares headline authors with both the Dallas Festival of Ideas and the Dallas Museum of Art’s Arts and Letters Live. Top authors will give TED-style presentations at Dallas City Hall, then cross the street for Q&A sessions at the Dallas Public Library’s Central Branch, 1515 Young St., Dallas. See the site  for details. The events are free, but at last year’s festival, the library’s parking garage was reserved for authors and presenters. Prepare to park offsite, or take public transportation.

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I’m still awaiting word on the 2017 Big D Reads programs for April, and the short story and young authors writing contests for the 2017 FenCon science fiction/fantasy convention, which should be open. I’ll post those separately as they become available.