Competitions Come Good

Like many aspiring writers, I’ve been busily entering my writing into competitions over the last couple of years. There are pros and cons, of course, with some arguing that it’s a good way to build your reputation as a writer (if you win) and to develop your skills (even if you don’t).  While I agree with both these arguments, for me there are even more practical reasons to enter.

  • A focus for my writing

The focus of a particular competition allows me to minimise the distractions of another idea or another story.  Such distractions look much easier to write at the very same moment that the work in-hand starts getting harder.  With the competition in sight, I can tell myself ‘later’.

  • A deadline

There’s nothing like a deadline to make you finish something.  Inevitably, I can see ways to improve what I’ve written in the minutes, hours, days after submitting it.However, then I console myself with the thought that just means it’ll be available for revision on another occasion.

And, drum roll . . .

In 2017, I submitted work to two local competitions without success. But in 2018, I ramped up my productivity and submitted to five national competitions and one international competition.  

Holding my copy of Seniors’ Stories, Volume 4

One of these, the Seniors Card Short Story Competition, doesn’t declare a winner, but they do publish the top 100 in book—and in 2018,my story ‘The Upside of Funerals’ made it into the book. As a government-sponsored competition, they make a lovely fuss so, with the other senior writers, I got to have lunch at NSW Parliament House in Sydney, listen to speeches and have my hand shaken with our local MP. The book, Seniors’ Stories Volume 4, will be available in hard copy in libraries through NSW and online.

2018 Scarlet Stiletto Awards (…must have missed the dress code memo!)

I also made it onto the Shortlist for the Scarlet Stiletto Awards for 2018. This is an exceptionally entertaining competition run by Sisters In Crime, to encourage and promote women crime writers. They also hosted a stellar Awards night in Melbourne at the Thornbury  Theatre at which I received a ‘Special Commendation’ certificate for my story ‘Fragments of Meaning’.  The nine top Award winners’ stories are available in ebook, ‘Scarlet Stiletto: The Tenth Cut’, from Clandestine Press.

It was a great way to finish the year and an inspiration to start thinking about what ‘crimes’ I can commit to paper next year!

Author: Alison Ferguson

Back in the 1970s, Alison Ferguson completed one of the first Bachelor of Arts degrees in Professional Writing and then went on to qualify as a speech pathologist, working as a clinician and academic for over thirty years. As well as writing research-based book chapters and papers for international refereed journals, Alison authored two scholarly books (published by Plural Publishing, and Palgrave Macmillan). Now retired, Alison is pursuing her long-standing fascination with story writing in both non-fiction and fiction.

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