'LOVE ON THE ROAD 2013'
- CONTEST -
G'day
guys,
I was
recently invited to be one of a few judges in a special writing contest - 'Love
On The Road 2013', organised by a former guest on this blog - Sam Tranum.
So, all of you budding writers out there might want to enter.
What is
it?
Love on
the Road 2013 will be
an anthology of stories about making connections, from heartfelt ones ending in
weddings, to less high-minded ones ending in beds (or wherever). Half the
stories will be about travelers meeting someone far from home, and the other
half about people meeting travelers passing through.You can submit your
5,000-word story to us between January 1, 2013 and March 31, 2013, along with a
$10 reading fee. We will choose the best 12 stories for publication
and send them to our judges. They will pick the stories that
will win the cash prizes of $200, $100 and $50.
Do you
hang around the tourist district in your city, hoping to pick up a
good-looking traveler? Did you fall in love with your mountaineering instructor
in an ice cave in the Himalayas while on vacation? Are you still dreaming about
that visiting English teacher you had years ago? Did you meet and marry your
soulmate while doing development work overseas?
We want funny stories, tragic stories, dangerous stories and sweet stories. We will accept both fiction and non-fiction, but not poetry. We hope to include tales from all over the world, and from a wide variety of perspectives, including from LGBT writers. There's more information here about how to submit your story.
Submissions:
So, drag
out those old short stories or start penning a great yarn, then click on this
link and get started.
About the organisers and judges:
Lois
Kapila is from
the Fenlands of east England. She holds a BA in Russian from Oxford, and an MA
in comparative politics from the London School of Economics. She has
written for the Times of Central Asia, Washington City Paper, the
Caspian Business Journal, Russian Life, the Christian
Science Monitor, and Literary Traveler, among other places. She
was a trainee defence investigator for the Washington DC Public Defender
Service. She is now working as an editorial consultant for The Statesman newspaper
in Kolkata. When she is not writing, she enjoys playing the guitar and
singing with an affected Southern drawl, and investigating crimes for defence
attorneys.
Sam
Tranum is from
Massachusetts in the United States. He holds a BA in social and global studies
from Antioch College, and an MA in international relations from the University
of Chicago. As a reporter, he has covered government and politics for the Charleston
Daily Mail and the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, and the nuclear
energy business for Nuclear Intelligence Weekly. He edited at The
Statesman newspaper in Kolkata. He served as a US Peace Corps
Volunteer in Turkmenistan, and published a book about the experience, Daily Life in Turkmenbashy's
Golden Age. He taught journalism at the
American University of Central Asia in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan and published a book
with his students, Life at the Edge of
the Empire: Oral Histories of Soviet Kyrgyzstan. He has also written a novella, U is for Murder, about a killing at a nuclear
conference.
Anisha
Bhaduri, who has
spent more than a decade in journalism, is deputy news editor at the The
Statesman newspaper in Kolkata. In 2009, she won first
prize in a national literary contest for women writers organized by the British
Council in India. In 2012, one of her stories, "Other People's
Lives," was included in the MSN-Random House anthology She Writes: A
Collection of Short Stories. She was the first Indian woman to become a Konrad
Adenauer Stiftung Fellow,
and has written book chapters on contemporary Indian journalism and
politics for the foundation.
Jennifer
Ciotta is
a Contributing Editor (formerly Editorial Director) at Literary Traveler. She has lived and traveled
extensively throughout the West Indies and Eastern Europe, the latter as a
Peace Corps volunteer. Additionally, she is the author of I, Putin: A Novel, winner of Honorable Mentions at
the New York Book Festival and Hollywood Book Festival. Currently, she
holds an MA in creative writing and Russian studies from NYU, and she is an
independent book manuscript editor at Pencey X Pages.
Lucas Hunt studied English and journalism
at the University of Iowa, where he wrote for The Daily Iowan, and attended the
Poetry Writer’s Workshop. He studied in the MFA program at Southampton College,
published his first volume of poetry, Lives, and won a John Steinbeck Award.
Hunt is a rights manager at the Philip G. Spitzer
Literary Agency. His
professional interests are literary fiction, travel, and creative nonfiction.
His second volume of poetry, Light on the Concrete, was published in 2011 to
critical acclaim.
Clancy Tucker writes young adult fiction. He
is a photographer of some merit, publisher, occasional poet, daily blogger for emerging writers, mentor to
aspiring Australian writers and a lecturer to members of the University of The
Third Age (U3A). Clancy is also a social justice activist and human rights
campaigner, has lived in four countries, traveled widely and speaks three
languages. He’s been short-listed, ‘Commended’ and ‘Highly Commended’ in
writing contests, won three awards in the Australian National Literary Awards
and had short stories, poetry and photographs published around the world.
Clancy does not sing too often and, sadly, has forgotten how to play the guitar
and trumpet. However, he does speak with a fluent Australian accent.
Email: loveontheroad2013@gmail.com
Clancy's
comment: I'm pleased to be involved. Get cracking, folks. Who knows? Gotta be in it to win it, eh?
I'm ...
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