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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Unpublished Guy Blogs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 Metamorphosis Rewritten by a Happier, Second Millennium Franz Kafka

Posted by: Unpublished Guy on 9/15/2009

How might Franz Kafka, today, with access to psychoactive medications rewrite his best known short story, The Metamorphosis? It might start something like this if he had also developed an appreciation for theories of web usability.

As Jakob Nielsen awoke one morning from pleasant dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a beautiful, beautiful butterfly. He was nestled in his soft, as it were gossamer, wings and when he lifted his head a little he could see his slender brown belly divided into three segments on top of which the bed quilt could hardly keep in position and was about to slide off completely. His numerous legs, which were elegantly thin, nicely complementing the rest of his petite body, waved gracefully before his eyes.

What has happened to me? He thought. It was no dream. His room, a regular human bedroom, spacious and pleasant, lay quiet between the four familiar walls. Above a desk on which a collection of eye-tracking heatmaps, which had been printed on an inkject printer, were spread out—Nielsen was a web usability expert—hung the photo which he had recently downloaded from Flickr and tacked it to the wall with reusable adhesive. It showed a female athlete, with a crash helmet and wearing roller skates, rolling toward the spectator with her forearm stretched out, smashing into the face of another roller skating woman!

Jakob's eyes turned next to the window, and the bright sky—one could feel the sundrops dancing on the window sill—made him quite exuberant. What about accepting all this nonsense and getting up, he thought, but it could not be done, for he was unduly preoccupied with his present conditions he could only marvel at himself. However he focused on spreading his wings and emerging from his warm quilt cocoon he was continually distracted by his legs. What a marvelous example of usability he thought at least a hundred times, watching his filament legs, and only desisted when he could taste something that a leg might have brushed up against. I can taste with these things, thereby saving the time required to evaluate tasty foods. I eliminate the need to transport a single portion of food to my mouth or attempt to evaluate it by look alone. I can taste multiple things simply by reaching out and touching it.

Oh God, he thought, what a rewarding job I've picked on! Deciding what's good and what's not on the Web. Traveling about to this conference and that, speaking with people, day in, day out. It's much more satisfying work than doing actual business in an office, and on top of that there's the ease of constant surfing, evaluating Tweets for usability, writing articles in major print publications, reading emails from casual acquaintances that are always interested in high page rank links. He felt a slight tingling on his back; slowly he spread his wings, pushing himself up and out of his bed. A warm tingle ran through him ascended to a higher plane of usability in his butterfly form.

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