Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Maria Edgeworth Flash Fiction Competition


A reminder for all you flash fiction writers. Maria Edgeworth Flash Fiction Competition’s closing date is Monday 23 March 2015

RULES

Max 300 words on any topic
Fee is €5 per entry. Three for €10
Judge Alan McMonagle
Prize: Deirdre Purcell Perpetual Cup and  €100
2nd Prize:  75. 3rd Prize: €50

Send entries to: 
Edgeworthstown Development Office
Old School House
Ballymahon Rd
Edgeworthstown
Co Longford

They can be also be emailed too to edgelocdev@eircom.net


The usual rules apply. Double-spaced original, not broadcast or published anywhere. 
Name, address and contact details must be on a separate sheet
Payment is by PO/ Cheque made payable to Edgeworthstown Development
Or if you wish to pay by Paypal  go to on WWW. edgeworthstown.net


So get writing and the very best of luck

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Short Story Workshop at Anam Cara Writers' Retreat



Whose story is it anyway?

I am delighted to be facilitating a week-long short story workshop from Saturday 5 to Saturday 12 September, 2015 in the stunning setting that is Anam Cara Writers’ Retreat Centre on the Beara peninsula in west Cork, Ireland.


By its very nature, the literary short story is character-driven. It is about landing your protagonists in a predicament and watching how they will free themselves from it. What happens to them as the story progresses depends solely on what you discover about them as you go along, how you bring them and your readers from a state of ignorance to a state of awareness.
It is up to the writer to select the right character for readers to invest their interest in, as well as the most appropriate person to tell the story. They are not always the same thing and it is the specific method of revealing the characters you are writing about that allows the reader to see and hear what is going on in the narrative. Therefore the right voice is crucial to its success.

 
 
This residency will address the basic difficulties faced by beginners and more experienced writers in the understanding of the importance of building a strong, memorable character that captivates the reader. An identifiable point of view is also crucial to the development of the main protagonist and his/her inevitable epiphany.
Each day a different element will be explored in order to build on the previous lesson that will support you in completing a draft of your story to include:         
  • Beginnings: How to grab your reader by the throat.
  • Whose story is it anyway?
  • Characters: What makes them breathe?
  • Dialogue: What role does it play, if any? How does it move the story along?
  • Epiphany, endings: As important as beginnings. Does every word earn its place on the page?
  •  
Using various prompts to liberate ideas, each morning session will explore one of the above elements as well as in-class exercises. Afternoons will include one-to-one sessions and review of work.
Day by day, you will add to your previous learning experience, rewriting where necessary to fill out the narrative, thus moving the story forward. As a writer it is crucial to know these elements and in rewriting, ascertain which areas work and which do not; to learn the importance of layering; to know the pulse of a story. By the end of the week you will have produced a story full of craft and risk-taking.


 For further information go to:

Geraldine Mills Biographical Note

Geraldine Mills is a poet and short fiction writer. She has had two collections of poetry published by Bradshaw Books, Unearthing your Own (2001) and Toil the Dark Harvest (2004) Arlen House has published her short story collections Lick of the Lizard (2005) and The Weight of Feathers (2007) for which she was awarded an Arts Council Bursary.  She is a recipient of a Katherine Kavanagh Fellowship for her third poetry collection An Urgency of Stars published by Arlen House in 2010. Her most recent short story collection Hellkite was published by Arlen House in 2014. 

She has won numerous awards for her fiction, including the OKI Award, the Moore Medallion and the RTÉ Guide/Penguin Short Story Competition.  . She was the Millennium winner of the Hennessy/Tribune Emerging Fiction Award and the overall winner of the New Irish Writer Award for her story ‘Lick of the Lizard’.

In 2011 she toured the United States where she launched a poetry collaboration with New England poet, Lisa C. Taylor, titled ‘The Other Side of Longing (Arlen House 2011) and presented the prestigious Gerson Reading at the University of Connecticut. Her short story collections have been taught at the University of Connecticut and Eastern Connecticut State University. 
She is a fiction mentor with NUI Galway and is an online tutor in the short story with Creative Writing Ink. The Arts Council awarded her a second bursary in September 2014 to work on short fiction. Her first children’s novel Gold will be published by Little Island in 2016.