The 2013-14 Sudden Prose module has had its first publication success! Congratulations go to Collette Lord, whose short-short story from the
module, "The New Dog," will appear on the National Flash Fiction Day's
FlashFlood website, http://flashfloodjournal. blogspot.co.uk/, between one and two a.m. on National Flash Fiction Day (the 21st).
Showing posts with label Bath Spa University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bath Spa University. Show all posts
Friday, 20 June 2014
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
First Years' Fifty-Word Flashes
In my taster lecture last week for students taking the first-year creative writing core module, I talked about what makes a piece of writing a story, showed them some fifty-word stories, and then asked them to write their own. I promised to post the best story I received, and out of over fifty entries, I've chosen one story and my partner has chosen another as the winners.
Here's my selection, untitled, written by Hannah Crouch:
She carefully removed the bag from the box, shifted aside the dirt and measured the hole.
She wasn't quite sure. Maybe she should have discussed this with her husband. But he didn't know anything about the other plants. He would be annoyed.
The baby was so small. Tree on top.
I can't say I understand everything that's going on in this story, but I understand enough, and what isn't entirely clear intrigues me.
Here's the special judge's selection:
"One Dog and His Duck" by Ben Halford
The dog came home one day with a duck in his mouth--a dead duck, but still a duck. I wondered how he had caught it so quick--the lake was ten miles up the road. I asked the dog walker, "Where'd he get that?"
"From the butcher's," he replied.
Honorable mentions, in no particular order, go to Laura Kite, Scott Varnham, Duncan Drury, Bethan Reynolds, Trudy Williams, and Lucy Bushell.
Here's my selection, untitled, written by Hannah Crouch:
She carefully removed the bag from the box, shifted aside the dirt and measured the hole.
She wasn't quite sure. Maybe she should have discussed this with her husband. But he didn't know anything about the other plants. He would be annoyed.
The baby was so small. Tree on top.
I can't say I understand everything that's going on in this story, but I understand enough, and what isn't entirely clear intrigues me.
Here's the special judge's selection:
"One Dog and His Duck" by Ben Halford
The dog came home one day with a duck in his mouth--a dead duck, but still a duck. I wondered how he had caught it so quick--the lake was ten miles up the road. I asked the dog walker, "Where'd he get that?"
"From the butcher's," he replied.
Honorable mentions, in no particular order, go to Laura Kite, Scott Varnham, Duncan Drury, Bethan Reynolds, Trudy Williams, and Lucy Bushell.
Sunday, 8 July 2012
And the 2012 Bath Spa University Flash Fiction Prize goes to
Annie Campbell and Georgia Seabrook, co-winners in both writing excellent flash fictions. Here's hoping this encourages them to continue writing in the form!
Sunday, 17 July 2011
The Bath Spa University Flash Fiction Prize
Bath Spa University has just instated a number of prizes for undergraduate students across the various schools, and I'm heading up several in creative writing. The one relevant for this blog is the Bath Spa University Flash Fiction Prize, for the best flash fiction portfolio from an undergraduate, and the winner for 2011 is Adrian Berg. Congratulations, Adrian!
I hope next year to add a Prose Poetry Prize--stay tuned!
Labels:
Adrian Berg,
Bath Spa University,
Flash Fiction,
prize
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