writing

FREE-ENTRY Writing Competitions Jan/Feb 2021

FREE-ENTRY Writing Competitions Jan/Feb 2021

Who doesn’t love free-entry writing competitions?

In my last post, I revealed a New Year’s resolution to enter more writing competitions. If that’s also your resolution for 2021, I want to help by sharing some comps for you to have a go at. All the contests in the list are free-entry writing competitions with deadlines this month and next. Prizes vary, but I’ve tried to only include the ones with cash prizes, or that publish in an established journal.

And just a quick note, I’m definitely not against writing comps who charge fees to enter. There’s lots of reasons why they might want/need to, usually because of the work involved in judging the huge volume of entries, and to generate prize money.

The problem is, you often end up spending a chunk of money to send your work into the void and never hear back. With free-entry writing competitions at least it costs you nothing, you can think of them as writing exercises, and you have the piece to try to sell at the end of the day.

Right, I’m off to pen some entries. Who’s with me? Drop a comment below if you’re entering any comps and, of course, let me know how you get on. Happy writing!

Free-Entry Writing Competitions

Competition

Reedsy’s Weekly Writing Prompts – Write a short story of 1000-3000 words. Theme: Snow Day. Email entry. A weekly competition, with a new theme and prompts each time.

Prize

$50 plus online publication

Deadline

Current comp: 23.59 22nd Jan

The Book Collector Short Story Competition – Write a max 1000 word piece on a ‘fantasy banquet for book lovers!’ Your characters can be alive or dead, real or fictional, from any period. Email entry.

£500 cash plus publication

22nd Jan

Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook Short Story Competition – Write a short story for adults of no more than 2000 words. No theme. Email entry.

Writer’s course plus publication

Midnight 12th Feb

National Flash Fiction Day 2021 – Write up to three microfiction pieces of max 100 words each. No theme. Email entry. There is free entry for writers who would find the entry fee a barrier.

£150/£100/£50 cash for 1st/2nd/3rd plus publication and free copy of anthology

15th Feb

Nonsense Writing Challenge – Pen a nonsense tale of max 200 words. No theme. Email entry.

Online publication

Ongoing

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Writers’ Forum Magazine Flash Fiction Competition

Writers’ Forum Magazine Flash Fiction Competition

Are you looking for a flash fiction competition to enter?

If you haven’t come across Writers’ Forum Magazine yet, it’s definitely worth checking out.

Writers’ Forum have contests covering flash fiction, short stories and poetry every month. They offer hundreds of pounds in prizes, for very reasonable entry fees. And if you’re a subscriber to the mag, the fees are reduced or waived completely.

I was thrilled to achieve ‘highly commended’ in their December issue, for my entry to the Christmas-themed flash fiction competition. Entrants were asked to produce cheerful, funny or uplifting stories. But they had to be set this Christmas, in the real world, so no avoiding Covid!

My effort, ‘The Chaos of Christmas Present’, pokes some sardonic fun at the unnamed prime minister, and the decision to lift a fictional lockdown on Christmas Eve. When I wrote it, I should have known I was tempting fate on last-minute changes to restrictions!

One of my writing resolutions for the New Year is to enter more competitions. If it’s one of yours too, pick up a copy of the January issue of WF and give it a go.

Happy Writing!

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Create a Character in 5 Minutes

Create a Character in 5 Minutes

For writers after some inspiration, give this 5 minute exercise a go.

Look around the room you are in right now and pick an object. Pick anything, it doesn’t really matter, but it works best with something that is always there, like a piece of furniture.

Got your object? – Don’t cheat and read ahead, thinking you’ll choose something once you know what the exercise is. (I suspect I would be guilty of this myself and, the problem is, I would then spend so long agonising over which object to pick that I’d never get writing!)

Here’s the exercise: Set a timer for 5 minutes. Write something, even if it’s just a single sentence, from the point of view of your chosen object, as though it were a person in the room.

Hints and Help

Writing in the first person will make it easier to jump into your object’s point of view.

Write about how your object feels or what it thinks. Is it a well-used, well-loved item? When was the last time it was touched or picked up? Does it feel neglected or is it broken?

Write about what the object ‘saw’ today. Maybe they were watching you doing something? Or did they witness something funny? Tragic? Exciting? Scandalous?

Don’t worry about creating a fully plotted story though. If a complete story emerges, brilliant, but this is not the aim. The aim is to use your imagination to access a viewpoint you might not normally utilise.

Here’s mine:

Object: Wool blanket on the sofa next to me.

“I don’t mind telling you, today’s been really boring. Seems like years since I went outside. Yes, I know, it was only on Sunday for the BBQ dinner. But the point is it feels like ages. I’ve scarcely been glanced at, let alone picked up or wrapped around her. And being piled up on top of you is straining my fibres something chronic. I can practically see the stretch marks. Hideous.”

This was written in five minutes, and I seem to have created a rather vain and attention-seeking character. In an effort to appease my blanket, I have featured them in the picture for this article, and hope that will cheer them up.

In all seriousness, though, in just five minutes I have a character voice, which I could develop and use in a longer piece. When I next need to conjure up a character like this, I have one ready and waiting.

What will you come up with? Let me know what your object is and post your piece, or a link to it, in the comments.

Happy writing.

Posted by Rachel in Blog, 2 comments