Welcome to Writers Talkback. If you are a new user, your account will have to be approved manually to prevent spam. Please bear with us in the meantime

Here's the details for the Mail on Sunday novel comp

KazKaz
edited August 2007 in - Reading

Comments

  • Hi Poppy & Everyone,

    Here are those details for the novel writing comp, which I have copied word for word from Sunday's Mail, so I hope it makes sense!

    To enter this year's competition, write the opening lines of a novel - between 50 and 150 words - introducing into the story or setting, the word 'tip': it could be, for example, a tip-off, tiptoeing, the tip of the iceberg - whatever fires your imagination.

    The winner will receive £400 in book tokens and a place on an Arvon writing course; the runners-up will get book tokens ranging from £150 to £300. This year's judges are novelists John Mortimer, Michael Ridpath and Faye Weldon.

    Send your entry with your name, address, telephone number and email address on the same page to arrive by October 15 2007, to:
    The Mail on Sunday Novel Competition,
    PO Box 200, Rochester, Kent. ME1 9AH.

    Results will be announced next summer.

    Luv Kaz

    P.S. Just noticed that last line. Bit of a b-long time to wait, isn't it?!!
  • Thanks, Kaz.
  • thanks Kaz, I've sent one off. Had a sudden inspiration on the word 'tip' due to just getting back from Egypt where everyone expects bakhshish.

    Did you notice if it said anything in the rules about entries only from unpublished writers? I saw that on the Times/Chickenhouse competition (but think I can still enter that as I haven't had a novel published, only short stories). But some of these comps want only unpublished writers to enter.
  • Thanks for that Kaz. Does it say in the rules whether you can send more than one entry?
  • Welcome back, JH. BTW, what's bakhshish?
  • Hi Guys,

    In answer to your queries, I've just read through the blurb in the Mail again, but it really doesn't say anything more than I've already included. There's nothing about being published/ unpublished and nothing about whether you can submit multiple entries - so frankly I'd just go ahead.

    Luv Kaz
  • Thanks for that Kaz, I'm in The Netherlands at the moment and not able to get the papers so it's good to be able to still read about things on Talkback.
  • thanks Kaz. I may submit a few more then! lol.

    Bakhshish is a tip - or it could be giving alms to a begger or a gift to charity. When I was in Egypt you couldn't do anything or go anywhere without giving a tip, even if you'd already paid. Good idea to keep lots of small change on you!
  • Yes, and and many depend on these tips to live. But it can be annoying and gets a bit OTT sometimes.
  • The comment on last year's winning entry was that it had "a plot, a setting, a couple of intriguing characters, a sense of something happening, and we want to know what".
  • 2008

    Marc, this was the 2007 thread about 'tip' - but I don't remember seeing anything about a winner.
  • Thanks Jay. Maybe they don't think its summer yet. What's the point of saying 'in the summer'? when the summer is a season. Did they mean June or August. Why can't they be more precise ie the end of August. Did you enter?
  • Yes. Haven't heard anything.
  • Results and new competition in today's Mail on Sunday, page 11. I'll give you full details later.
  • I can't help wondering what sort of entries they'll get with the new word ...
  • not in the online version from what I could see.
  • Come on, Carol, take a wild guess at the new word. Clue: virtually the opposite of tip. But has certain connotations.
  • [quote=Jay Mandal]Clue: virtually the opposite of tip. But has certain connotations. [/quote]

    now which definition of tip are you using? to tilt something up, a rubbish tip, a gratuity, a hint as in tip on a horse? :)
  • A noun, but not really one you've mentioned. Fairly general.
  • That may be misleading. It can be a verb, but then it's clean. I think. Mind you, what follows may be linked to the dodgy version. Confused? You will be. (Anyone remember Soap? Have I got it right? Anyone know what I'm talking about?)
  • They haven't used 'tw*t' have they? ;)
  • I entered this and I've not heard a peep. I'd actually forgotten about it!
    Maybe with British summer the way it is, they're confused as to when summer actually is!
    :)
  • Carol, please stop swearing - I find that word extremely offensive!
    ;)
  • Sorry! ;)
  • No, but they may not have realized what the word may also mean.
  • I'm sure I'm a big disappointment to Jay- my mind has gone a blank. :(
  • You're pretty close there, Carol. :-) I'll put you (Carol) out of your misery after Coronation Street.
  • Carol was that swear with an a or an i? lol!
  • They haven't? Change the first two letters of blank to another letter?
  • JAY! - Coronation Street must have finished - get out here and explain yourself - I can't believe the word is the one suggested by Carol's last post but I'm totally clueless...and extremely curious ;)
  • No it wasn't.
    And I have to say that even with Jay's clues I would never have got it.
    But it can have other meanings when you think about it.
  • The Mail on Sunday 24th August 2008 page 11

    Winner of the competition with the word ‘tip’ was Isabel Ashdown.

    Her story appears in the MoS.

    I’ll start a new post for this year’s competition.
  • See Members' News page 4 of March 2009's Writers' News for piece about Isabel Ashdown.
  • Couldn't find that, Jay. Am I blind?
    Interested as I also entered.
  • Go to page 18, the next page is the Members' News section, turn to the last of these four sides and it is the column on the right hand side.
Sign In or Register to comment.