Benefits of Writing Competitions

At the end of January Morton S. Gray celebrated the publication, by Choc Lit, of her first novel, The Girl on the Beach. The Girl on the Beach by Morton S GrayMorton’s success was the result of dogged perseverance and the culmination of a series of competition successes. Not surprisingly, she is now a great advocate of writing competitions and she’s here today to tell us how they helped her on the road to success:

Innocently entering a writing competition caused me to take my writing seriously! In 2006, a friend started a fledgling publishing business (sadly no longer trading) and she held a short story writing competition to raise the profile of the company. I entered, primarily to support her, and unbelievably won with my story “Human Nature versus the Spirit Guide”.
It was a wake-up call for me. I’d had a baby and not been well for a couple of years, so I was looking for a new direction. The competition win made me look at writing as a serious option for the future and it was relatively easy to combine with a small child still taking naps in the afternoon. I started to take courses to learn to polish my work. I entered several competitions and began to get shortlisted.

In 2008, I entered a Mills and Boon novel competition, the forerunner of their SYTYCW competitions. I quickly decided I wasn’t a Mills and Boon writer, as it is a particular way of writing and much harder than people might think to keep the focus on the main protagonists throughout a novel. However, the competition introduced me to several people with whom I’m still in contact.

Competitions give you a framework within which to work. They give you the discipline of a deadline and a word count. Not as many people enter these competitions as you may imagine, especially the smaller local ones. I’ve been involved in running a local competition and I was surprised not only by the relatively few number of entries, but by the fact that sixty percent of the entries were essentially the same story. Tip – think around the set theme for a while and don’t go for the obvious. Your entry will stand out if it is different.

Morton S. Gray

Morton S. Gray

I continued to get shortlisted for flash fiction, poetry, short story and novel competitions. In 2013, I came second in the Romantic Novelists’ Association conference competition for the first chapter of a novel and that resulted in an appearance on the Tammy Gooding show at BBC Hereford and Worcester Radio. All good experience. Later that year, I shortlisted in the New Talent Award at the then Festival of Romance, with another first chapter. I met a different group of writers, many of whom I’m still in contact with in real life and online.

These encouraging signs for my writing kept me going. It is easy to get despondent when writing, as it can be a very solitary occupation. Don’t spend your life thinking no one will want to read your work, imagining that it’s rubbish, not up to scratch, not worthy of anything but the bin. Been there, done that! Keep going, keep writing and get your work out to competitions, send it to magazines, publishers, agents. Writing is a constant learning process and is generally about persistence. You need an imaginative spark, yes, but you also need to be willing to check your work over time and again to make it the best it can be. What is the point of a manuscript in a drawer?

I joined the Romantic Novelists’ Association New Writers Scheme and made sure I submitted a novel for critique every year. I also made a promise to myself to take part in the annual novel writing challenge NaNoWriMo and I’ve managed seven years running to write 50,000 words in November. One of these novels, when edited and passed through the RNA NWS critique service, I sent off to the Search for a Star competition run by a publisher I’d admired for many years, Choc Lit and I won! My debut novel, The Girl on the Beach was published on 24 January 2017.

I suppose the messages here are keep writing, learn your craft, polish your work and get it out into the world. My novel could so easily still be in that drawer under the bed. Competitions are a way of assessing how you are progressing, hopefully you’ll meet friends along the way and who knows, you might win a publishing contract like me.

I love Morton’s encouraging message and I love the blurb for The Girl on the Beach – the novel is now sitting on my Kindle hankering to be read. I think it might tempt some of you too:

When Ellie Golden meets Harry Dixon, she can’t help but feel she recognises him from somewhere. But when she finally realises who he is, she can’t believe it – because the man she met on the beach all those years before wasn’t called Harry Dixon. And, what’s more, that man is dead.
For a woman trying to outrun her troubled past and protect her son, Harry’s presence is deeply unsettling – and even more disconcerting than coming face to face with a dead man, is the fact that Harry seems to have no recollection of ever having met Ellie before. At least that’s what he says …
But perhaps Harry isn’t the person Ellie should be worried about. Because there’s a far more dangerous figure from the past lurking just outside of the new life she has built for herself, biding his time, just waiting to strike.

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  1. #1 by juliathorley on February 2, 2017 - 8:10 am

    Very captivating blurb! I’m a big fan of competitions, because they give me a deadline and, often, a theme. I’ve had some modest success, too, but nothing like that of Morton. As it happens, I’m off to the awards evening of the H E Bates Short Story Competition this evening. I was winner of the Northamptonshire Writer prize last year, which is why I’ve been invited; I’m not expecting to come home clutching a prize. My tip would be to come up with an intriguing title to catch the judge’s eye.

    • #2 by Sally Jenkins on February 2, 2017 - 1:42 pm

      Julia – I’d call that more than modest success! Have a lovely evening and thanks for the tip.

  2. #3 by Bobby Fairfield on February 2, 2017 - 11:14 am

    Reblogged this on Writing, events, competitions and the occasional personal musing and commented:
    A follow on from a recent post reblogged on this site, this time solely an argument for, written in a persuasive manner which hopefully helps anyone as yet undecided on this matter.

  3. #5 by susanjanejones on February 2, 2017 - 12:37 pm

    Brilliant advice, thanks, Sally and Morton. I’d like to read that story as well. Will have a look. I entered the Search for a Star a couple of years ago. after meeting a lovely lady at a RNA meeting in Leighton Buzzard where I was on the shortlist. She asked me to enter. Also I won the Emerald writing competition, Sally you put details on your blog. Remember Eddie Walsh? And as you say, I wrote a story so different I knew as soon as I put the final full stop on it that if it didn’t win it would stand out. Well done on your writing, and as I’ve joined the RNA recently, hope to hear more from you.

    • #6 by Sally Jenkins on February 2, 2017 - 2:04 pm

      Yes, I remember Eddie Walsh, Susan – I liked his comps, they felt very ‘friendly’. I guess your pocket novels gave you RNA entrance?

  1. A New World | Morton S. Gray – Author

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