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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Unpublished Guy Blogs

Fiction Panel Discusses Franz Kafka the Complete Stories

Posted by: Unpublished Guy on 12/7/2009

Unpublished Guy Fiction Panel (left to right): William Blake, Dr. Zaius, Mrs. Butterworth

Unpublished Guy Fiction Panel (left to right): William Blake, Dr. Zaius, Mrs. Butterworth

Each month, more or less, the Unpublished Guy Fiction Panel discusses a novel or short story. This week: Franz Kafka the Complete Short Stories.

William Blake: Kafka, Kafka. burning bright. In the fiction of the night; What existential void. Could dissemble thy inexplicable asymmetry?

Dr. Zaius: To paraphrase this fiction collection's dust jacket flap, I would describe reading this tome of nearly five hundred pages as both an agonizing and liberating process. This man, Kafka, seems to have a keen insight into the depraved and utterly useless nature of man. A man changes into a disgusting beetle that is rightfully reviled and despised, as it is the internal reality of man. However, it is apparent that Kafka is insane when the death of the beetle is mourned instead of celebrated.

And then there is the piece of fiction, A Report to an Academy, a deviant story about an ape that becomes a man. In this story the narrator is addressing a herd of men and describing how he had formerly been an ape. He had been captured by hunters and subjected to despicable treatment, locked in a cage so small that the bars cut into his skin. To escape his cage he imitates the behavior of his captor, becoming a man. I abhor the treatment of the narrator and the manner in which his simian rights are violated. In the contrary view, I am witnessing the rise of the simian to a the civilized master and protector of the world.

In all of the stories there exists a level of ambiguity that disturbs me. I frequently feel the frustration of the characters in Kafka's stories, but the short stories are often so nonsensical that the stories proceed as if they are grounded in tapioca pudding. As Minister of Science and Defender of the Faith, I demand tangibles and absolutes that are completely lacking in the fiction of this Kafka.

Mrs. Butterworth: In this collection of short stories, I most enjoyed In the Penal Colony. What a delightful read! The Harrow, the diabolical machine that enforces discipline in the prison, reminds me of an integrated marketing campaign. Just as the machine's cogs and wheels move the needles to lightly slice and dice the name of the prisoner's infraction into his bare skin before sending him into a religious ecstasy and executing, the cogs and wheels of an integrated marketing campaign communicate the message of the book promoter through well executed email, direct marketing, online video, and advertising campaigns.

I could really relate to the part where the officer submitted to the Harrow, and it malfunctioned, grinding and cracking, jabbing the officer with the needles until he was a bloody mass impaled on the Harrow's needles. I've been part of a few marketing campaigns that felt quite a bit like that.

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