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Thursday, April 5, 2012

Competitions for Writers

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One of the most important things when writing query letters to agents or publishers is listing your credentials. Most publishers and agents these days want to know where in the writing industry you’ve previously been published, or if you’ve won awards, etc. It’s always better to start small and work your way up in the industry, and what better way to do so than to enter your work into some contests? Contests often award certificates/ribbons for the top 3 pieces of writing, cash prizes, and even publication! They’re a quick way to build up some credentials to add to those query letters and let agents and publishers know that you’ve broken out in the business—even if it’s small at first.



Before you enter contests, however, there are a few things that you should be aware of. The first is the legitimacy of contests. There are many fraud sites out there trying to get writers to enter their contests. What do I mean by fraud? It could be one of many things, including theft of work. However, the most common is a contest which everyone who enters is published, and the hosts of the contest require the “winners” to purchase a copy of the book their work is published in. If you win a contest, you receive a free copy—always remember that! The second thing to be aware of with contests is entry fees. Not every contest requires a fee to enter, but many of them do (especially ones that offer cash prizes to winners). Another thing to remember is that most times, contests only accept works that are previously unpublished. Many times, just like regular publishers, as well, contests which publish work retain rights to your work for a certain amount of time. This means that they are given the rights to first time publication and many times, you need their written permission before getting that work published elsewhere. However, not all contests do this—some give full rights back to the writer so that they can publish their work elsewhere if they wish. Just make certain that before you enter contests, you read all of their rules and regulations and agreement statements before submitting your work.


Now, here is a list of only a few of the many upcoming contests for the 2012 year:
  •  Writers’ Digest Self-Published Book Awards
    • Perfect for those of you who have been daring enough to self-publish a book. This would be a quick way to get your book recognition, money, sales, and even perhaps an actual publisher! It is the 20th year that the Writers’ Digest has been holding this contest, and there have been many wonderful winners in the past. There is one grand-prize winner for this contest, nine first place winners, and honorable mention winners! There are also different categories in which you can enter your book. The grand-prize winner not only receives the recognition I mention above, but also $3,000 and a trip to the Writers’ Digest Conference in NYC! Deadline is April 20th, 2012
  • Writers’ Digest 81st Annual Writing Competition
    • A chance to enter some polished pieces you have that you’ve just been waiting to get exposure on! With 10 different categories to enter, you can choose which best suits your niche. Just like their self-published book contest, the grand-prize winner receives $3,000 and a trip to the Writers’ Digest Conference in NYC! However, they also receive critique/attention from four different editors and agents! Deadline is May 1st, 2012
  • EVVY Awards
    • Held by our very own Emerson, here’s a chance to get some exposure for your work and an award that certainly will shine on your resume and credentials. While we all know that the EVVYs are definitely one of the highlights of the year, what’s better than actually having your work eligible to receive one—in front of a live audience? Not only will you be receiving an award that will push your credentials and resume, but it also gives you a chance to be an EmCeleb! Deadline is April 6th, 2012
    • For more information on this contest, please visit: http://evvyawards.org/evvys/submit/
  • For a list of a bunch of other wonderful contests, you can also check out this site. It lists the deadlines and prizes for them, as well as linking to the sites providing guidelines. These are more for the actual literary awards, so the competition is tougher, but the reward in the end is far greater—especially in your credentials: http://www.be-a-better-writer.com/creative-writing-contests.html
And, remember! Every year, the Writers’ Market always comes out with new books for poetry and short stories where you can find hundreds of contests. All of them are legitimate, so you don’t have to worry about fraud! Be sure to pick up a copy, or look for one at the local library. They usually always have a copy in, so you can browse multiple contests and get your work out there.
Good luck in your contest ventures, and keep that credential list building!




Written by Erin Sinnott

Spring Book Releases


www.ew.com
Sisterhood Everlasting by Ann Brashares 
Looking for some fresh reading material or ready to start shelving some books in preparation for those long summer days? As if there weren’t already enough titles on my to-read list, here are some of what look to be the best new releases in the coming months. For anyone who loved the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, all four girls are back, this time grown up and without their treasured jeans. Get ready for some teenage nostalgia and reflections on growing up.
Paperback release: March 6 (Hardcover version released June 14, 2011)
Publisher: Random House
ISBN: 978-0-385-52123-9




goodreads.com
The Might Have Been by Joseph M. Schuster
A minor league baseball player loses his chance to play for the major leagues, and must live with his regrets until he has the chance to give two young players the opportunities he never had. For sports lovers and those looking for what is sure to be a heart-warming tale.
Release: March 20
Publisher: Random House
ISBN: 978-0-345-53026-4





















litlove.files.wordpress.com
Waiting for Sunrise by William Boyd
A suspenseful page-turner set in early twentieth century Europe. Lysander Rief’s life begins falling apart amid many mysterious events. If you’re looking for a thrilling beach read with just a little more substance than the norm, plus an awesome setting, this is worth checking out.
Release: April 17
Publisher: Harper Collins
ISBN: 978-0061876769






dearphotograph.com


Dear Photograph by Taylor Jones
A picture book, in all senses of the word. The book is based on the website dearphotograph.com where people write letters to old photos. Sometimes sad, and sometimes funny, and definitely worth a look through.
Release: May 8
Publisher: Harper Collins
ISBN: 978-0062131690




goodreads.com
The Other Side of Normal by Jordan Smoller
Ever wonder if what you do is actually normal? This book promises to get to the bottom of normal vs. abnormal human behavior. For anyone interested in psychology or the way the mind works, this looks to be a thought-provoking read.
Release: May 8
Publisher: Harper Collins
ISBN: 978-0061492198






goodreads.com
Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson
A young-adult novel about Taylor Edwards who goes back to her childhood vacation home with her dying father and the rest of her family and finds out that while some things have changed, some haven’t.
Release: May 8
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
ISBN: 978-1416990673






booksmith.com
I Suck at Girls by Justin Halpern
A collection of essays by the author of Sh*t My Dad Says. If this is anything like his hilarious and not-at-all-politically-correct tweets, this is a must read.
Release: May 15
Publisher: Harper Collins
ISBN: 978-0062113375








Sources:
http://www.harpercollins.com/Book/Upcoming_Books.aspx
http://comingsoon.simonandschuster.com/
http://www.randomhouse.com/




Written by Miriam Avila

Book Review: The Call by Yannick Murphy


www.tower.com
I spent about an hour scouring the “newly released” section/shelf of my local library for anything with a synopsis that didn’t read like a Lifetime movie. Yannick Murphy’s third novel, The Call, not only fulfilled this requirement, but also enticed me with its cleanly designed cover (not exactly a great judge of a book’s quality, but I was desperate, having forgotten to leave enough space in my suitcase for winter break reading materials) and copyright page boasting an excerpt’s appearance in McSweeney’s #29 [Murphy’s work is also featured in the current issue of McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, #39—a coincidence which I find amusing mainly because I am bored].

Of course, The Call is good: I wasn’t going to force myself to read something unsatisfying or dull during my short break from psychology textbooks and literary theory. And it’s good despite the fact that it’s about a veterinarian, taking calls to heal horses and cattle in a small, mountainside town.

Wait, that description enticed you? Is the last book you read Misty of Chincoteague? Or was it maybe something from the Animal Ark series? I mean, that’s fine, but then you shouldn’t read this book.

The Call is a novel about more than the immature themes of “family, community, [and] the human bond with animals,” which Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks applauds Murphy for tackling. Although we’d all love a book about animal activism because, hey, bunnies have feelings too, this one wasn’t written by Jonathan Safran Foer. If you look closely enough (I’m talking eighth-grade-analysis level), it’s about human interdependence. It’s about the decay of American subsistence farming and waning attitudes of self-sufficiency in a country proud of its DIY fetish and rebellious heritage. It’s about aging and losing and slipping away.


We watch David, the protagonist whose name really is unimportant, forgettable, fail to save the animals he’s paid to treat. But instead of focusing on the image of a stillborn calf’s carcass being torn in half as David tries to pull it from its pained mother’s uterus, an image Murphy relays with a disturbingly clinical affect, we are struck by the character’s reaction (or lack thereof) to the blatant display of annihilated innocence: “THOUGHTS ON DRIVE HOME WHILE PASSING RED AND GOLD LEAVES ON MAPLE TREES: Is there a nicer place to live?”

This is a book of reactions; most of the time, conversations—about a comatose son, a sperm donation, a crime unsolved—aren’t even dictated to us. Murphy, instead, presents us with a slew of David’s silent regrets and desires, and, from them, we feel him straining against piles of problems unresolved.

Composed of thoughts categorized and labeled by their subject, The Call is a novel that pushes the notion of a first-person perspective to the extreme. Consider the “meta” trend that is enhancing/destroying contemporary art: The Call embraces the fad, going so far as to announce David’s unreliability as a narrator each time he offers up snippets of dialogue by explaining that these are words filtered by the ears of a distressed/crazed/vengeful/homicidal mountain man. It seems that even mainstream authors (because someone published in McSweeney’s can hardly be considered “underground”) are experimenting with post-modern techniques in addition to shrouding their work in dramatic post-modern attitudes.

Does The Call prove that hipster isn’t hipster anymore? Maybe. That is a topic for discussion in an essay to be written for an Emerson literature course.

But if you are suffering from an existential crisis and would be pleased with the ability of a contemporary author to capture crushing despair in a book structured like a medical log, you should stop reading when the section entitled “Still Winter” comes to a close. What follows is the emergence of an unforeseen springtime cure, which sprinkles its magical fairy dust along the creases in David’s crumpled life. Oh, spring and it’s stifling aura of rebirth.

The change in season renders the world a calming place where the character’s tense muscles are kneaded into a sugary cake iced with vanilla familial love.  Maybe the intrusion of positivity in Murphy’s exhaustingly depressing novel is merely an indicator of her optimism for the human condition. But David’s decline is preferred to any neat-and-tidy ending fraught with clichĂ©s and excess sap.

I guess I failed to avoid the Lifetime novel, after all.



Written by Ellen Duffer