The Eastern Writers Group

The Biggest Little Short Story Competition 2007

Report from the judges

With hundreds of stories submitted this year, the competition judges (fifteen of them) each had to read many stories, many of them more than once.

This is how they went about it.

During preliminary judging, each story was read three times by different readers. Eventually, 34 stories were selected for a final judging session. Each of these shortlisted stories was again read three times and after much discussion three stories were chosen to take the prize-money and two were given a special commendation.

As in previous Biggest Little Short Story competitions, the judges agreed that most stories were well written and carefully considered, which made final evaluation a difficult task.

The 500-word story seems to be harder to write successfully than the usual short story of 2000 words or more. This year, there was no shortage of excellent writing – but many of the pieces submitted hardly qualified as stories. There were slices of life, character studies, anecdotes, reminiscences, musings, articles and even poems. Other stories were more like extended jokes than stories. Many stories had excellent beginnings but did not reward the reader with a satisfactory ending. Some failed by giving away the end of the story half way through. A frequent fault was an excess of description, much of it excellently done but out of place in a short-short story.

Some authors seemed to believe that a story firmly founded on fact - a "true" story - was interesting simply because of that. Such stories tended to begin with a statement such as "This really happened . . . " Many of them were excellently written, but none of them made it to the short list. Stories that did make it didn't beat about the bush. They kept to the point, which they often drove home with an accumulated sense of inevitability. Their authors demonstrated creative imagination and skilled execution in a difficult form.

The winners

Take me - I'm yours

by Jim Murphy

Here's a story that's topical without being too breathlessly up-to-date. The author manages in 500 words to show how those who think all the elderly are demented may themselves be confused.

Chooser

by Maggie Clarke

What do you do with a husband who's gone bad? This is one woman's solution that is grimly satisfying - but not to the husband.

I forgot

by Johan Luidens

This tale is set in Alaska where, as everyone knows, it's cold, so cold that absent-mindedness can be lifte-threatening.

Highly commended

These authors did not win prizes but their stories are to be published on this website mainly because of the amount of comment and discussion they gave rise to.

Quasimodo's paradox - a mathematical love story

by Michelle Lopert

Too cocky by half

by Maria Quinn