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Hi, Brian!
Here’s the copy for the Feb contest for Raconteur
magazine. We're running a contest per month, so check back on the Contests page
here.
Cheers,
Emily Potter
Shorter-story contest.
Submit your very best short story for a chance to win $50
cash. You only have (up to) 500 words to do it. Capture our attention, make us
laugh, make us cry – do it quickly. Winners will be selected by our panel of
international readers, who are themselves also writers. Good luck! Have fun!
Prize Pot: 1st prize: $50; 2nd Prize: 1 year e-mag
subscription; 3rd Prize: 1 year e-mag subscription
Deadline: Not specified, but the winner will be announced Feb 28,
2020, at noon– so before then! Full guidelines here.
Besides
their monthly contest, Racounteur also accepts submissions:
Fiction & non-fiction
submissions under 2000 words.
Poetry submissions under 500
words.
“We may consider slightly
longer entries if they are exceptional – but we tend to frown on submissions
that don’t follow the guidelines.”
Pays Fiction & Non-fiction: $10; Poetry: $5
Deadline: Ongoing. Guidelines here.
Cricket Media seeks submissions for Faces
world culture magazine for children aged 9–14 on theme of birds – deadline March
9, 2020 – and on the theme of New Zealand – deadline April 13,
2020.
Wants feature articles 700 – 800 words;
supplemental nonfiction 300–600 words; fiction up to 800 words; activities up
to 700 words; word puzzles, mazes and picture puzzles that relate to the theme.
Guidelines here.
See full range of submission guidelines for Cricket’s 9
magazines for children aged 6 months to 14 years here.
Every Day Fiction is seeking flash fiction up to 1000 words. There’s no such thing as too short for them – if your story works in 50 words, go for it. Pays $3.
Deadline: March 28, 2020. Guidelines here.
Better Than Starbucks is a bi-monthly
magazine of prose and poetry published out of Florida.
Pays author of Featured Poem (publisher’s choice) $20
(US); author of Featured Poem (editor’s choice) $20; authors of
Features Three, Four, and Five (poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction) $20.
They’re unable to pay for other pieces.
Always
open for submissions. Guidelines here.
Burlington
Public Library Teen Writing Contest
Open to students in
grades 7-12 in Burlington, Ontario
Explore your world
through storytelling and show off your creative talents. Tackle themes that are
important to you, such as love, war, relationships, sexuality, relocation,
isolation, poverty, illness, death. Teen Writing Contest is an open forum for
young writers to express their ideas and creativity.
Contest judges,
themselves published writers, provide feedback on your stories, poems, and
comics. Get contest details and the official entry form at your local branch or
download online February 1 to March 20..
At a special
celebratory event in May, family and friends of all contest participants have
the opportunity to hear these creative young people read from their original
works at our annual Teen Writing Contest Coffeehouse.
Our judges for 2020
are Jennifer Mook-Sang, Tomy Bewick and Christopher Chamberlain.
Jennifer
Mook-Sang grew up with a book in each hand in
Guyana. While reading bedtime stories to her two sons, she decided that writing
a book for children would be the best thing ever! Her humorous middle-grade
novel Speechless (Scholastic) was nominated for a slew of awards. It was named
a ‘Best Book of the Year’ by the CBC. Jennifer lives in Burlington and loves to
read, and cook (and eat), and talk about writing.
Tomy
Bewick has been writing and performing since
2004. Having competed on national and international poetry slam stages, he
started the Burlington Slam Project (BSP) in 2008. Tomy has featured across
Canada, self-published several books of poetry, released 2 CDs of spoken word,
and won the 2016 Ontario International Poetry Slam. He continues to facilitate
writing workshops for youth and produce commissioned works.
Christopher
Chamberlain is the co-creator of the comic Kid
Robo, the illustrator of “How Aubey & Big Al Became Mascots” and the chalk
painter of the mural you can see in Burlington’s the Hood Restaurant. His
licensed and creator designed trading cards have been published by Perna Studios,
Island Dreams, 5Finity, Cryptozoic and others. You can find him facilitating a
Creating Comic class at the library, or giving an Intro to Drawing class
at the Barnschool . His art has been featured in gallery hangings around the
world and he is often commissioned as an artist.
- Entrants must be a resident of Burlington or attend a school in Burlington.
- Short story, maximum 1,500 words: Grades 7 to 9; 10 to 12
- Poem, maximum 25 lines: Grades 7 to 9; 10 to 12
- Comics, maximum 8 pages: Grades 7 to 9; 10 to 12
- 1st and 2nd prize winners are selected for each category.
Deadline March 20, 2020. Contest details here.
See Brian Henry’s schedule here, including writing workshops,
weekly writing classes, and weekend retreats in, Bolton, Barrie, Brampton,
Burlington, Caledon, Collingwood, Georgetown, Georgina, Guelph, Hamilton,
Jackson’s Point, Kingston, Kitchener-Waterloo, London, Midland, Mississauga, Oakville,
Ottawa, Peterborough, St. Catharines, Southampton, Sudbury, Toronto, Windsor,
Woodstock, Halton, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York Region, the GTA, Ontario and
beyond.
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