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The Fiction Writing Contest Lottery


On what fiction writing contest should you squander $20? I calculated the return-on-investment (ROI) of several different contests. I have summarized the results in the table below. The return number quantifies the investment in a fiction contest, based on the entry fee, effort to write a story according to contest guidelines, and probability of winning the contest.

Contest Return
ReadMe Publishing What If? Science Fiction Competition (40)
Glimmer Train Very Short Fiction Award (49)
Alligator Juniper’s National Writing Contest (50)
Barry Hannah Fiction Prize (50)
Fish Flash Fiction (59)
Newport Review Flash Fiction Contest (126)
Springfield Writers’ Guild Literary Awards (161)
Inland Empire California Writers Club Writing Contest (409)
Bards and Sages Speculative Fiction Contest (484)
Silver Quill Society Short Story Contest (485)
Cadenza Open Short Story Competition (UK) (487)
Sherwood Anderson Fiction Award (489)
Juked Fiction and Poetry Prizes (490)
Sullivan Prize in Short Fiction (494)
Mississippi Review Prize (494)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Award for Imaginative Fiction (508)
Boston Review Annual Short Story Contest (659)
Zoetrope All-Story Short Fiction Contest (810)
Fish Short Story (819)
Earlyworks Press Open Short Story Competition (UK) (967)
Chautauqua Literary Journal (1134)
Greensboro Review Robert Watson Literary Prizes (1200)
American Literary Review (1294)
 

How should you read this table? Just as you may gain or lose money after investing in a 401K or stock, you can gain or lose your time and money by entering a fiction contest. Basically, you want to avoid contests with a return in red, which represents the effort, expressed in a dollar value, that you lost by writing a story for the contest and paying a fee to enter the contest.

Unpublished Guy Blogs

The Lawgiver’s Seven Commandments of Publishing

Posted by: Dr Zaius on 7/29/2009

The Lawgiver and the commandments of publishing

The Lawgiver is clear. For the fiction writer, there are no publishing shortcuts, only the slow, hard route through a reputable publishing house. The lawgiver issued down eleven seven publishing commandments, which a writer must follow:

  1. Just as a manufacturer designs a product for a profitable target market before a single item is produced, the fiction writer must write for readers that will buy a publisher's books. Who will read your fiction? Will you write for the literary class or the masses? Will you write speculative fiction about an upside down world where man rules ape or a tale of horror about a talking man that preys on ape? Will you write a romantic tragedy of two star-crossed lovers, one gorilla and the other, chimpanzee?
  2. A story must be written to be published. Book publishing is not the Babylonian whore of man, Hollywood. You cannot secure a contract with an idea. Many have an idea. Few have a book or a short story.
  3. Only a foolish ape solicits a multitude of publishers. Discover which publishers publish fiction that is similar to your story.
  4. Focus on the publishers most likely to bear fruit for your labor. Delve further into your publisher research. Find the publishers with the best fit for your fiction, and learn how they are to be approached.
  5. According to the publishers needs, prepare your manuscript. Some guidelines are fairly common among publishers. Be certain that you are following any special requirements expected by each publisher.
  6. Send exactly what the publisher wants; no more, no less.
  7. Wait, but do not be idle. Just as the wheel of the man cart turns and turns, follow the writing-publishing cycle. While the publisher ponders your fiction, write for the next publisher, returning to commandment 1.
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2 Comments

    • Nov 29 2009, 12:10 AM copublishernonfic
    • thanks for a great website and education about publishing. sad that some publishers (PA?) make it sound unrealistically easy to get a book in print. thanks for the warnings and 7 commandments. any ideas where a non fic. writer might get similar community?

    • Dec 03 2009, 8:06 PM Unpublished Guy
    • @copublishernonfic, I would check out www.writing-world.com for some more serious guidance on writing and publishing. It includes both fiction and nonfiction writing.

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