Saturday, 28 February 2009

Unheardwords seeking writing

Unheardwords are looking for pieces of writing that will appeal to their writers/readers/visitors. They are seeking truly interesting, thought provoking pieces that embrace fresh perspectives and new thoughts and ideas.

You will need to write a 1-2 thousand word essay, article, piece, etc on a topic that will appeal to the readers/writers who visit or contribute to Unheardwords. Do check out some ideas for topics on the page:
http://www.unheardwords.co.uk/freelanceuw.htm

Contributors can also use their own creative imaginations to come up with suitable/appealing topics. For example, Unheardwords are working with a writer on a piece about migration.

Submitted contributions will be subject to review / approval and if they are accepted Unheardwords will pay a small fee and publish the piece on their site.

If you do want to get involved, you may want to submit some outline ideas prior to embarking on the whole 2K words.

This is a relatively new scheme for Unheardwords, which has for the past 5 years encourged contributions from those who would like their work considered for posting on the site. It is hoped that the freelance approach will give experienced writers and newcomers a platform and incentive to get their work acknowledged. Also that it will attract fresh, vibrant and innovative writing.

Sunday, 15 February 2009

Creative Works Competition

The Aesthetica Creative Works Competition

Win £500

Three categories: fiction; poetry, artwork

The national arts magazine, Aesthetica, is looking for undiscovered talent. They are running a creative works competition and are looking for entries of fiction, poetry, artwork and photography.

Submit now to win this prestigious prize.

There will be three winners, one from each category, each receiving £500. The runners-up will be published in an anthology that will be available nationwide from Borders stores.

Closing date: 31 August 2009

For more information visit: http://www.aestheticamagazine.com/

Wednesday, 11 February 2009

The Map of Me


The Map of Me – true tales of mixed-heritage experience is the 3rd Decibel Penguin Prize Anthology, which includes 14 true stories of mixed heritage from new writers living in the UK. These true personal accounts range from ‘being Irish and Muslim; German-Liberian; half-English, half-Pakistani; Chinese-Brummie; Middle-Eastern-American; Canadian-Zimbabwean; and many more.’

The rear cover text states: ‘Chosen by a panel of judges, which includes author Kate Mosse and Shami Chakrabarti from Liberty, these stories represent the very best writing about the personal experience of being both one thing and another.’ I didn’t like the last sentence: ‘…of being both one thing and another.’What exactly does this mean?

This reminds me a bit of something my cousin Roger said to me many years ago, sometime in the 80’s, which I believe would have been more to the point than ‘…being both one thing and another.’ He said ‘It’s ok for you – you have the best of both worlds.’ Of course now I understand much more of what my cousin was getting at, although when I heard him say it, I didn’t really believe it was my reality at that time.

Maybe it said more about my cousin and how he felt he only had a white perspective of the world and that he couldn’t easily navigate the ‘black’ world – and he perceived that I could and did enter into the ‘black’ world and blended in nicely! I like that now 20+ years later, I am exploring this concept – the world is full of black and white people with a lot of ‘greyness’ that seems to fall by the wayside.

Oops that was a bit of a side track – back to my book review. One more thing that was surprising and disappointing - there was no introduction, which is a missed opportunity, since I would have liked to know how many stories were submitted, how the judges made their selection of the 14 stories, etc.

I found the stories were very well-written and my favourite was Audience by John A Pitts whose biography read, ‘I enjoy the challenge of trying to transfer thoughts through words, music and photography, and then sharing them in a way that helps other people connect with my view of the world. While my writing is a very personal, almost self-indulgent journey, my goal is to use it to make the rest of the world want to hitch a ride with me every now and then!

John was ‘born on a council estate in Sheffield, north England. My father was an African-American soul singer who came to Britain in the 1960s a member of a soul group. My mother, a working-class white girl from Sheffield, fell in love with him when he was on tour and the rest is my history.’

John’s ‘journey’ towards a black identity is interestingly portrayed using his audiences:

My Audience, Aged 8
CHRIS: My best friend with the cool straight hair who all the girls had a crush on.
EMMA: The white girl who was going out with Chris and who I, and most of the boys in my year fancied.
BROS: The famous pop duo who sported the fashionable ripper-jeans look.
MOM: Who, in her all-encompassing, deeply loving way, might as well have been called God.

My Audience, Aged 15
NATHAN, JUNION, MARCUS, LESTER and a plethora of black youths who had a fearsome reputation in my area.
2PAC and BIGGIE: Two talented black musicians who died at the hands of gun violence aged twenty-five.
O-DOG: The coolest character in the film Menace II Society who ‘just didn’t give a fuck’.
EMMA: Chris’s ex, who I was now seeing on the down-low.

My Audience Now, Aged 26 (where John stops acting)
JOHN: A TV presenter, writer, journalist and former youth worker for Sheffield Council. He likes long train journeys, playing football on a Sunday and crispy duck pancakes.

‘And with the end of the performance, I began to stop acting. To stop allowing other people’s needs and ideas of who I should be make me who I am. Whether they saw me as an ‘almost white’ boy who was ‘allowed’ into their club or, with this misguided perception, as a ‘dangerous black man’, I started to understand that the only audience I had to find in my life…
…was myself.

The Map of Me is published by Penguin Books (2008)

Saturday, 7 February 2009

Remembering Bob




Yesterday - 6th February - would have been Bob Marley's 64th anniversary! It's hard to imagine where he would have reached in his excellent music career had he been alive today, but I know in my heart he has inspired and influenced us all with his musical genius and continues to do so.

I have wonderful memories of Bob, as he was before, and near to the time he passed. I have always been a Marley fan, since his debut album Catch a Fire and made sure I saw him in concert twice in the 70's. Whenever I travel to Jamaica, Bob Marley's music is played wherever you go, so he lives on in our hearts and in our souls.

For more on Bob visit:

http://www.bobmarley.com/

Tuesday, 3 February 2009

Writing Competitions

My first writing goal for 2009 has been met – I am pleased to say I have submitted a short story called The House that Rose Built (first time for me) of just under 2,200 words to Mslexia’s Short Story Competition (closing date: 23/01/09). I have to first give credit and thanks to Patsy Antoine who encouraged, or rather talked me into it, and secondly thanks to Christine Collymore, my writing buddy, who I encouraged and who kept up the necessary dialogue of the craft and its challenges and who submitted no less than 2 stories in the end. So my next challenge, which was also agreed with Christine, is to go for it yet again. So I’ve chosen two competitions as follows:

Write a Story for Children Competition is for stories of up to 2,000 words that are suitable for children of any age group. Prizes: £2,000; £300; £200. Entry fee: £2.70. Send entries to:

ACW, Competition Entry,
PO Box 95,
Huntingdon
PE28 5RL

http://www.childrens-writers.co.uk/

Closing date: 31 March

Mslexia Women’s Poetry Competition is for poems of any length and in any style. Judge: Ruth Padel. Prizes: £1,000, £500, £250, 22 @ £25. All winning poems published in Mslexia. 0191 261 6656.

http://www.mslexia.co.uk/

Closing date: 23 April