Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 2: Deadline extended!

Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 2: Deadline extended!

Hey awesome peeps. So um obviously I did not adequately promote this round of the competition. So far we have received a grand total of 6 entries, not even enough to fill a shortlist let alone provide fair competition. So once again I am extending the submission deadline for another 14 days, and promoting like mad, in the hopes of receiving many more entries. The new deadline will be November the 21st at Midnight AEST. It would be amazing if you could please, please, please spread the word and get more writers involved. It would really help to get this competition through to completion and offer the writers the healthy competition they deserve.

I understand that the $2 entry fee may put people off and whilst I’d love to keep the entry FREE, I’m not sure my bank account will thank me for it. The entry fee helps pay for the prize money, but what’s left has to come from my own pocket, which I’m more than willing to do as it’s a pleasure to hear such excitement from writers when their stories are chosen for a prize and publication. Your very helpful contribution, of a small entry fee, will help me to keep these competitions running and if we get enough from these ongoing competitions, we can eventually make them FREE.

See the original post for details on how to enter HERE

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Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 2: Cash Prizes

Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 2: Cash Prizes

Ok, finally time to get round 2 of our micro fiction writing competition underway. It’s taken a little longer to get things organised around here this series, and as a result the expected publication time for the second anthology will most likely be more toward mid/end of 2022. This month has seen a lot of changes in my life and in an attempt to be as authentic as possible I will admit that I haven’t been coping as well as I would have liked. Life has been busy to say the least, I’ve gone from one casual job to two casual jobs, 50% custody of my little ones to 85% custody of my little ones and consequently have had a whole lot less time for blogging, study and relaxation. Never the less, I am committed to these competitions and to seeing the second Mum Life Stories Micro Fiction Anthology come about.

So let’s get cracking, all the details of how to enter and what you could win, are below.

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Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 1: Deadline extended!

Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 1: Deadline extended!

Unfortunately, although we have received some great submissions for our first round of series 2 of the MLS micro fiction writing competition, it’s not quite enough to justify a fair competition. So we are extending the submission deadline for another 14 days. The new deadline will be September 14th at Midnight AEST. If you can help spread the word, that would be amazing and would help to get this competition through to completion and offer the writers the healthy competition they deserve.

I understand that the $2 entry fee may put people off and whilst I’d love to keep the entry FREE, I’m not sure my bank account will thank me for it. The entry fee helps pay for the prize money, but what’s left has to come from my own pocket, which I’m more than willing to do as it’s a pleasure to hear such excitement from writers when their stories are chosen for a prize and publication. Your very helpful contribution, of a small entry fee, will help me to keep these competitions running and if we get enough from one competition, we can make the next one FREE.

See the original post for details on how to enter HERE

Micro Fiction Writing Competition, Series 2, Round 1

If you’d like to be reminded when the competition is ending and when a new one begins please sign up to our mailing list below. You’ll also be kept up to date with all our latest news, stories, and promos including giveaways and writing competitions, plus receive a FREE Ebook exclusive to email subscribers.

Alternatively, go to our COMPETITIONS page for info on the latest competitions!

This page contains affiliate links which may earn me a small commission (at no extra charge to you) should you click through and make a purchase. For more information please visit our privacy page. Affiliate links are how I keep this blog running, thank you.


Get your FREE Ebook

Accomplish more IN a fraction of the time

The pace and intensity of our lives, both at work and at home, leave many of us feeling like a person riding a frantically galloping horse. Our day-to-day incessant busyness — too much to do and not enough time.

With this ebook you will learn to approach your days in another way, reducing stress and getting results through prioritizing, leveraging and focus!



Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 1: Cash Prizes

Micro Fiction Writing Competition S2 Round 1: Cash Prizes

We’re Back! The time has finally come for series 2 of our micro fiction writing competition. The last series was pretty special, being not only our very first micro fiction writing competition, but our very first writing competition, period! I’m hoping this series will be even bigger and better than the first.

When I launched the competition back at the end of 2019, I wasn’t at all sure how it would work out. Mum Life Stories was still a relatively new blog (which has become more like an online magazine) and our reader base was not on the larger side of large, but after a bit of a rocky start, it took of like a toddler at the playground.

Series 2 marks the next chapter in the continuation of a competition trend that I hope will be a permanent part of MLS for years to come. It’s up to all of you to make it happen though. We need your brilliant stories…your creative prose…your inspiring words. All that and a bag of chips, or as most of us would prefer…a bar of chocolate. So spread the word, share this with your friends, your competition, even your enemies because the more entries we have, the greater the pressure to perform and we all know how diamonds are formed, right?

So let’s get cracking, all the details of how to enter and what you could win, are below.

Micro Fiction Writing Competition

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If you fancy yourself a bit of a writer and enjoy telling a tale then why not have a go at this micro fiction writing competition. You could score yourself $50 (AUD) for first place or $20 (AUD) for 2nd or 3rd place, plus the top 10 shortlisted stories, including the 3 winners (from 6 competitions, so 60 stories in total) will be featured in an anthology to be published early to mid 2022.

SERIES TWO

This competition will be the first of 6 micro fiction writing Competitions run over the next 6 -12 months, ending with an anthology publication sometime between March and June 2022 (exact dates will be known closer to the time). Each competition will have a slightly different theme but revolve around the idea of ‘The Stages of Motherhood’. They can be interpreted any way you like, from any perspective as long as they include a mother of some kind.

Themes

The 6 different themes are:

  1. Pregnancy
  2. Infancy (birth to 2 years old)
  3. Early childhood (3 to 8 years)
  4. Middle childhood (9 to 11 years)
  5. Adolescence (12 to 18 years)
  6. Empty Nest

The comps will be run in this order and competition start and finish dates will be released at the end of each preceding competition. Competitions will run for 2 weeks (unless extended), judging for 2 weeks, at the commencement of which, the winners will be announced!

Meet the Judges

So once again I will be a judge, along with an amazingly talented writer who had not one, but 4 stories published in the first MLS Micro Fiction Anthology, as a result of being shortlisted in 4 rounds of series one. Here’s a quick bio for the both of us.

Jo Caddy

An aspiring writer/author/blogger residing in Townsville, Australia. Jo is a single mother to 5 children aged 18, 18, 16, 5 and 3, and has been a stay-at-home mum, a business woman (4 business in total) a videographer, photographer & decor creator. She has in the last few years completed a Diploma at Bible College, and is currently studying business and social media management, thinking about whether or not to continue a degree in creative writing. She recently decided to return to her childhood passion of writing, and has written and produced a short film, a documentary, and won a flash fiction competition on the writing and publishing platform sweek.com (you can read her winning story here). Her stories have been published in anthologies like Sweek Flash Fiction Book – Part 3Adverbially Challenged Vol 5, and will appear in the upcoming Adverbially Challenged Vol 6 and Sensorially Challenged Vol 4.

She has a passion for storytelling and supporting mums in the career of Motherhood. Her strengths and weaknesses make her the writer that she is and her adventures and trials through life and motherhood are the inspiration that has driven her to write and to create this platform for Mothers around the world to share their stories and share ‘in’ the stories of others.

You can follow Jo through FacebookInstagram or Twitter.

Laura Besley

Laura Besley is a talented writer/author who has recently been listed by TSS Publishing as one of the top 50 British and Irish Flash Fiction writers with her story ‘On Repeat’ (Reflex Fiction) and her talent with the 21st-century pen has been noted in many online publications, including Fictive Dream, Spelk and EllipsisZine, as well as in print (Flash: The International Short Story Magazine), and in various anthologies like Adverbially Challenged, Another Hong Kong, and Story Cities. Her debut flash fiction collection, The Almost Mothers, was published in March 2020, and her new book 100neHundred was released in May (2021). You can read our interview with her HERE.

Laura is a full-time mum to two young boys and squeezes her writing time into the bookends of her day. Having lived in Holland, Germany, and Hong Kong, she now lives in landlocked central England and misses the sea. Laura writes short (and very short) fiction in the precious moments that her children are asleep

You can follow Laura on:

Twitter: @laurabesley
Instagram: @besley_laura



ROUND 1: Pregnancy

The first round of micro fiction writing competitions is themed ‘Pregnancy’ and it can be interpreted any way you like. You don’t have to include the word ‘Mother’ but it must be clear your story is about a Mother (biological, adoptive or otherwise). It can be written from any perspective, i.e. first person, the mother (of the mother), the partner, the friend, etc.

We didn’t receive quite as many sales on the first micro fiction anthology as I’d hoped so we will have to continue with the $2 entry fee to try and subsidise the prize money a little. Hopefully after the second anthology is published and we have 2 books in the marketplace, we will be able to do away with the entry fee.

Please read the competition rules below and then follow the link to our competition T & C’s where there will be an entry form to fill in with your story. Good Luck!

Prizes

1st Place – $50 (AUD), published on mumlifestories.com & in anthology + a printed copy of the anthology + digital copy of anthology.

2nd Place – $20 (AUD), published on mumlifestories.com & in anthology + digital copy of anthology.

3rd Place – $20 (AUD), published on mumlifestories.com & in anthology + digital copy of anthology

Shortlist (Top 10) – Published in anthology + digital copy of anthology



Micro Fiction Writing Competition Rules and Guidelines

Competition Dates: Tuesday 17th August 2021 – Tuesday 31st August 2021 (Extended to the 14th of September) @ midnight AEST. Judging will commence on Wednesday the 1st of September 2021 (Extended to the 15th of September), with the shortlist announced on the 14th of September 2021 (Extended to the 29th of September) and the winners announced on the 15th of September 2021 (Extended to the 30th of September).

Open to: Worldwide (but must be written in English), 16 years or older.

Rules:

  1. 500 words or less.
  2. Narrative Fiction (no poetry please), any genre (except horror and erotica)
  3. Must be about a Mother (biological, adoptive, Foster, etc).
  4. No gratuitous violence, sexual content, blood & gore or profanity.
  5. Must agree to the T & C’s.
  6. Your story must not already be published anywhere else.

Submission:

  1. Story to be typed in a doc, docx, pdf, rtf or txt formatted document.
  2. 12 point, Times New Roman or Georgia Text.
  3. Title of story should appear at the top of the document and in the file name.
  4. Your name should not appear on the document (submissions will be read blind so if your name is on the doc it will not be accepted).
  5. Your entry fee must be paid through Paypal to mumlifestories@gmail.com before the competition closing date, for your story to qualify.
  6. Click HERE to go down to the form where you can attach your story file, make sure you’ve read the T & C’s page first.

Judging:

There will be 2 judges, myself and Laura Besley

  1. Stories will be read ‘blind’ without author names attached so as to avoid bias.
  2. We will not be giving feedback on stories at this point in time, apart from general opinions on the winning entries that will be published on the blog.
  3. While our opinions and personal taste will play a small role in the judging, we will be looking at the structure, form, originality and storytelling technique of each submission.
  4. We both have different tastes but will work together, discussing all elements of the story to come up with 10 stories for the shortlist and then 3 winners.
  5. All decisions are final and will not be open to discussion.


Submit

Ready to submit your story to our micro fiction writing competition? Fill in the entry form below and attach your story.

Please make sure you have read the T & C’s before you submit!

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Happy Birthday: A Short Story

Happy Birthday: A Short Story

I would like to thank S.A. McKenzie for her short story submission “Happy Birthday”, a touching true story based on the events of the week when her mother passed away.

S.A. McKenzie lives at the bottom of the world on one of the better-looking islands of New Zealand, in the earthquake-ravaged ruins of the city of Christchurch. After surviving more than 12,000 aftershocks she has become adept at estimating the exact magnitude of any quake based on the amount of coffee spilled. She mostly writes offbeat and blackly humorous science fiction and fantasy stories featuring time travelling rabbits, carnivorous unicorns and man-eating subway trains. While she was once a stepmother, she is currently childless and between cats. Find her online at www.hedgehogcircus.com

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Going Short by Nancy Stohlman: A Mum Life Success Story

I must say I’m very excited about this particular Mum Life Success Story. I’ve had the pleasure of featuring some truly beautiful, amazing and inspiring Mums through these Mum Life Success Stories and each one of them has had a unique and special story to tell, but never have I featured someone as well-known and accomplished as Nancy Stohlman.

I have to admit that when I received an email from her publicity manager, about promoting her new book Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction I didn’t actually know who she was. That is due more to my lack of time to read and search out great authors (because I’m busy with work, family and this blog) than it is about Nancy’s reputation. Once I googled her name, and announced the upcoming interview on twitter etc, I realised that Nancy was fastly becoming a household name.

After just a little research I discovered that Nancy was not only a talented performer, writer and professor, but that she was juggling it all with motherhood and so naturally, I had to request an interview for the next ‘Mum Life Success Story’ feature. Nancy happily obliged and answered all my probing questions about life, success and family and how she navigates it all. I was truly inspired and knew without a doubt that all of you would be inspired too. If by some off-chance you don’t know who Nancy Stolman is, let’s start with a bit of backstory direct from her publicity manager.

This page contains affiliate links which may earn me a small commission (at no extra charge to you) should you click through and make a purchase. Affiliate links are how I keep this blog running, thank you.


Who is Nancy Stohlman?

Nancy Stohlman

Nancy Stohlman is the author of four books of flash fiction including Madam Velvet’s Cabaret of Oddities (a finalist for a 2019 Colorado Book Award), The Vixen Scream and Other Bible Stories (2014), and The Monster Opera (2013). She is the creator of The F-bomb Flash Fiction Reading Series and FlashNano in November. Her work has been anthologized in the W.W. Norton New Micro: Exceptionally Short Fiction, Macmillan’s The Practice of Fiction, and The Best Small Fictions 2019. Her craft book, Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction, is forthcoming from Ad Hoc Fiction in 2020. She teaches writing and rhetoric at the University of Colorado Boulder.

When she is not writing flash fiction she straps on stilettos and becomes the lead
singer of the lounge metal jazz trio Kinky Mink.  She lives in Denver Colorado and dreams of one day becoming a pirate.

Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction

Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction is Nancy’s latest contribution to the world of literature. Writer and Teacher Kathy Fish describes it as “The definitive, and appropriately concise book on the flash fiction form”. I have read some of the book myself and I can say Kathy is right, If you’re a writer (as many of my readers are) or want to start writing, Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction is a resource you want to have on your bookshelf.


Mum Life Success Story

With Nancy being the seasoned writer that she is and needing no help from me to tell her story, I decided to publish this feature in interview format rather than the story form I usually employ. First I asked Nancy to tell us a little bit about her family.

Tell us a little about your family?

I have two kids—Maiya is 22 and just got her first apartment; Felix is 15 and just got his learner’s permit (yikes!). My partner Nick and I have been together almost a dozen years. We’re all creatives: Nick is a classical pianist and Maiya is a visual artist, so I’m proud to have passed down a family value of artistry. My own parents were also creative; I remember musical jam sessions, a lot of clowning in my household growing up.

When did your love for writing begin?

I remember I was 10 years old on the bleachers at a soccer game when I announced I was going to become an author. I was a voracious reader, of course. I grew up on military bases overseas, so books were my constant friends through all the moving and the various cultural and language barriers. After my author announcement my mother let me use her electric typewriter and I wrote a musical: Superman, The Musical (ala Christopher Reeve). I felt so important as I sat there clicking the keys, feeding in the paper. I don’t know what happened to the musical, but I still feel the magic when I sit down to write.

What inspired you to write your upcoming publication ‘Going Short’?

I was inspired to write Going Short about 10 years ago, when students and fellow writers kept asking me to recommend flash fiction craft books. I didn’t know what to recommend—there were almost no craft books aimed at this growing genre (nor by women). So I decided to take it on myself. I thought it would be easy, something I could write in a year or two. Ha. It took me almost 8 years! But I’m extremely proud of the result—I hope this book becomes a friend to the writers and readers who fall in love with flash fiction.

Are there any major obstacles you’ve had to overcome to get where you are now?

Oh yes. Self doubt. Fear. Creative deserts. Jealousy. Self-sabotage. It’s not easy to go for your dreams. There’s so much risk. Every step you think you might be crazy. Every step you expose yourself to…all of it. Not everyone is rooting for you, so you have to cheer yourself on no matter what. It’s not always easy. It takes courage and bravery, not just one time but every time. Over and over. So my challenge is to reach deeper and keep finding that courage. It’s either that or give up—which keeps me motivated on the hard days.

Are there any funny, intense, or inspiring stories you can tell us about your experiences in writing and/or publishing?

For years I fantasized of spending “three weeks on an island all by myself just writing.” Sounds magical, right? Then, last year, I decided to do it. I was already in Italy co-hosting a flash fiction retreat (so amazing), and when it was over I found a super remote island in the Adriatic, rented a renovated wine cellar for $150 a week, and went on my own sabbatical. And I wrote every day. Every blissful day. I mean, I woke up, I wrote, I walked to get coffee, I wrote. I ate gelato, I walked to the empty beach. I wrote. It was magical, and I discovered what I call Holy Boredom. And because of it, I finished this book.

What would you say is your biggest challenge with balancing family life with your career? How do you find balance (if you do)?

Funny, but I think this question is part of the challenge—if I were a man I would likely never be asked this question. Because I’m a woman, there’s an expectation (even from myself) that I can and will do it all: be a loving mother, chef, teacher, partner, friend, housekeeper, nurture all my relationships…oh, AND write books, teach on campus, run retreats, and attempt to dream my own inspiration into being. And, because all women are amazing, we do it. All of it. But I like to envision a world where men are asked this question, too.

The short answer of how I balance it all? I fail. I succeed. Then I fail. I do my best. And sometimes I schedule a weekend to myself and that’s important, too.

How does your experience as a Mother help with your writing and vice versa?

Once I had kids I knew the luxury of waiting for the muse, was over. If I really wanted to be a writer, I had to begin now—there was a little person watching me. So I wrote during nap time and in the evenings after bedtimes. I mean, I wrote entire books during nap times, during pre-school. Later I wrote on trains and buses while commuting to campus. I learned to seize THIS moment, imperfect but available, because the perfect moment is just an illusion. So in a very real way my children forced me to get serious and make it happen.

And writing makes me a better mother, too, because I’m honoring that creative part of myself. I’m more present for my family when I’m present for myself. Put on your own oxygen mask before you help others.

What advice can you give to other women (mothers in particular) wanting to chase their dreams of becoming a professional writer?

Just begin. The perfect time, the perfect location, the perfect idea—you could be waiting forever. The real day-to-day of writing is messy—there is nothing idealized about it. And yet, allowing yourself to be creative is amazingly, imperfectly perfect. On a good day, it’s still just as magical to me as that first time at my mom’s electric typewriter.

Plus, the very best thing you can do for your children is to show them what it looks like to not give up on yourself. They will be watching and learning from your actions far more than from your words.


More Mum Life Success Stories…

If you’d like to read more Mum Life Success Stories, simply click on one of the titles below.


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