20
Tips For Winning Writing Contests
by Guest Author
This is a guest post by Diana Thurbon. If you want to write for Daily Writing
Tips check the
guidelines here.
http://www.dailywritingtips.com/20-tips-for-winning-writing-contests/
Submitting stories to writing contests can
be quite lucrative if you know the tricks of the trade. At the same time it is
easy to make an avoidable mistake and miss out.
Many books published now use single
quotation marks for speech. I followed this format for an entry in an American
contest. After the contest I received an email from the main judge which said: You
may have done well in this contest but for the fact that I could not get past
the abominable use of apostrophes instead of quotation marks.
Don’t let this happen to you. Worse, you
will probably never know why you
were not among the winners.
Tip 1. Always adhere to
traditional standards of correctness (see above). A contest is not the time to
throw the rule book away. This applies most strongly in writing contests which
are run by universities or colleges.
Tip 2. If it says Literature
contest, that’s what it means. They are looking for subtlety,
depth, a subtext, creativity, and clever (even poetic) use of language; an
emphasis on interesting often dark characters, and setting rather than plot.
Tip 3. If it says Writing
competition, well written popular fiction is what will win. Now
your emphasis must be on plot. You need a great opening line and an absorbing
plot. Plot follows your main character’s conflict. Give this person an
interesting difficult tussle of some kind. Your story ends when your character
has resolved the conflict against all odds.
Tip 4. If it states a
particular theme in
the rules, then that theme must be intrinsic to your story.
Tip 5. Whatever kind of
work you are writing, title is everything. The title is the judge’s first
impression of your work. Spend time thinking of something relevant to the story
that is eye catching and appealing.
Tip 6. Use your delete
key. Read and reread your work. That paragraph you really like that you spent
hours over. Does it advance your story? No? Then delete it. Does your story
only get going on the second page? Delete page one.
Tip 7. Short stories work
best from a single point of view. Don’t confuse the judge.
Tip 8. Does your entry
use the right tense? Present tense may be fashionable but it doesn’t work for
every story. If your story is immediate and all is happening now, use present
tense. If it spans a time period coming up to the present use past tense.
Tip 9. Strive for active
rather than passive voice.
Tip 10. Do not use real
people for your characters. Real people in fiction are boring. Your main
character should be larger than life yet still believable.
Tip 11. Do not use
exclamation marks except possibly for a single word exclamation such as “Ouch!”
Tip 12. Beware of clichés.
It is easy to use one without noticing.
Tip 13 Use strong verbs rather than adverbs. Likewise avoid
strings of adjectives and NEVER write “suddenly.”
Tip 14 . Try to write something DIFFERENT. Think of the poor
judge reading hundreds of stories set in her home country; then she gets to a
well written entry set in Antarctica .
Tip 15. If you know who
the judge will be, read his work; try to read the entries of previous winners.
Do everything you can to fit your entry to the contest.
Tip 16. Use the entry form for all your details. NEVER put your
name on the manuscript.
Tip 17. Font: Use 12 point
Times New Roman or Arial unless the rules ask for something else.
Tip 18. Some contests give
you a choice between paper or online entry. Choose paper whenever you can and
pay the postage. Emailing submissions (unless as a Word attachment) can play
havoc with your careful formatting.
Tip 19. Please do not
decorate your manuscript or add that nice picture of your pet dog or the photo
of yourself. All that work to end up shredded. Don’t add a cute little note for
the judge (Yes some people do).
Tip 20. Proofread,
proofread and do it again. If entering online print out to check your work.
Read it out loud to yourself. If judges can’t decide between two entries and
one is missing a comma or has a word spelled incorrectly and the other has been
submitted perfectly set-out without typos; guess which one will win?
Good luck!
Good tips. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteGlad to help when I can :)
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