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The White Review Short Story Prize 2022, sponsored by RCW

On Saturday 15 October, at an event in London, we announced the winner of this year’s prize: Jiaqi Kang for ‘Class of 1985’.

 

Thank you to all of those who entered this year’s White Review Short Story Prize, sponsored by RCW. 

 

We’re delighted to announce this year’s shortlist, which is available to read online now:

 

Click on the title to read the story

 

The Professor of Loss by Jekwu Anyaegbuna

 

Under the Paving Stones, the Sofa by Alex Aspden

 

Come Back, Freddy Krueger! by John Christopher

 

Class of 1985 by Jiaqi Kang

 

Galapagos Man, Do You See? by Hannah Jingwen Lee

 

Ruins by Leeor Ohayon

 

Heliotrope by Wiggy Bob Snow

 

Mothers in the Hague by Aparna Surendra

 

We hope you enjoy reading the shortlisted stories as much as we did.

 

This judges of this year’s Short Story Prize are Julia Armfield, Ka Bradley, Rosanna Mclaughlin and Matt Turner. We will be announcing the winner of the prize in October.



The White Review Short Story Prize, sponsored by RCW, is an annual short story competition for emerging writers. The prize awards £2,500 to the best piece of short fiction by a writer resident in Britain & Ireland who has yet to secure a publishing deal, and it is supported by the RCW Literary Agency.

 

This year, the prize will be judged by Julia Armfield, Ka Bradley, Rosanna Mclaughlin and Matt Turner. The judges will be looking for short stories that explore and expand the possibilities of the form. We encourage submissions from all literary genres, and there are no restrictions on theme or subject matter. We would only emphasise that the prize was founded to reward ambitious, imaginative and innovative approaches to creative writing.

 

The winning story will be published in a print issue of THE WHITE REVIEW. Shortlisted writers will have their work published online. 

 

Submissions are open to residents of the UK and Ireland from 4 April 2022, and will close at 17:00 on 9 May 2022.

 

THE WHITE REVIEW will offer 100 free entries to writers on low incomes. If you are a low-income writer and would like to apply for free entry, please read the additional low-income entry guidelines below.

 

Previous winners are Claire-Louise Bennett, Ruby Cowling, Owen Booth, Sophie Mackintosh, Nicole Flattery, Julia Armfield, Vanessa Onwuemezi, Elizabeth O’Connor and RZ Baschir. They have gone on to secure publishing deals with Hamish Hamilton, Picador, Fitzcarraldo Editions, Fourth Estate, Bloomsbury, Boiler House Books and The Stinging Fly.

 

In 2013, the inaugural White Review Short Story Prize was judged by novelist Deborah Levy, agent Karolina Sutton and editor Alex Bowler and won by Claire-Louise Bennett for ‘The Lady of the House’.

 

In 2014, the second White Review Short Story Prize was judged by novelist Kevin Barry, agent Anna Webber and editor Max Porter and won by Ruby Cowling for ‘Biophile’.

In 2015, the prize was judged by novelist Ned Beauman, agent Lucy Luck and editor Hannah Westland and won by Owen Booth for ‘I Told You I’d Buy You Anything You Wanted So You Asked For A Submarine Fleet’.

 

In 2016, the prize was judged by novelist Eimear McBride, agent Imogen Pelham and editor Simon Prosser and won by Sophie Mackintosh for ‘Grace’.

 

In 2017, the prize was judged by editor Mitzi Angel, novelist Joe Dunthorne, and writer and critic Jon Day. The UK & Ireland Prize was won by Nicole Flattery for ‘Track’. The North American Prize was won by Kristen Gleason for ‘The Refugee’

 

In 2018, the prize was judged by novelist Chloe Aridjis, novelist Sam Byers, editor Anne Meadows, agent Sophie Scard, and THE WHITE REVIEWeditor Željka Marošević. It was won by Julia Armfield for ‘The Great Awake’

 

In 2019, the prize was judged by Chris Power, Michal Shavit and agent Sophie Scard. It was won by Vanessa Onwuemezi for ‘At the Heart of Things’.

 

In 2020, the prize was judged by Omar Robert Hamilton, Kishani Widyaratna, and Sophie Scard. It was won by Elizabeth O’Connor for ‘Woman with a White Pekingese’.

 

In 2021, the prize was judged by Preti Taneja, Laurence Laluyaux, Tamara Sampey-Jawad and Skye Arundhati Thomas. It was won by RZ Baschir for ‘The Chicken’.

 

JUDGES

 

Julia Armfield is the author of the short story collection salt slow and the novel Our Wives Under the Sea. Her work has been published in Granta, Lighthouse, Analog Magazine, Neon Magazine and Best British Short Stories 2019 and 2021. She was longlisted for the Deborah Rogers Prize 2018 and was the winner of The White Review Short Story Prize 2018. In 2019, she was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year award. salt slow was longlisted for the Polari Prize 2020 and the Edge Hill Prize 2020 and was shortlisted for the London Magazine Prize for Debut Fiction 2020. She won a Pushcart Prize in 2020.

 

Ka Bradley is an editor at Penguin Press.

 

Rosanna Mclaughlin is an editor at The White Review.

 

Matt Turner is an agent at RCW.

 

 

 

 

ENTRY

 

 

The deadline for submissions is: 17:00 9 May 2022 (GMT/EST). No entries will be considered if submitted after this deadline. 

 

Please read these eligibility and entry rules carefully before beginning the online entry process. Submission of an entry is taken as acceptance of the entry rules.

 

To enter the Prize, you must first buy an entry from The White Review Shop.

 

STEP ONE – PRIZE PAYMENT ENTRY

 

You must then enter your payment reference number, contained in the payment receipt, into the form below, along with your entry.

 

STEP TWO – SUBMIT YOUR ENTRY – BELOW

 

Submissions are now closed.

 

The shortlist will be announced in August 2022. For any queries not covered below, please email: prizes@thewhitereview.org

 

FREE ENTRY TO LOW-INCOME WRITERS

 

 

The White Review is offering free entry to the Prize for up to 100 low-income writers. If you are a low-income writer and would like to apply for free entry, please follow the below application guidelines. We will receive applications for free entries until 19 April 2022. 

 

Low-income writers applying for free entry should also read the additional guidelines, below the general Terms and Conditions.

 

SEE ELIGIBILITY

Terms and Conditions

  1. The competition is open to unpublished writers residing in Great Britain and Ireland. Writers of any nationality may enter so long as they are residents of Great Britain and Ireland.
  2. There is an entry fee of £15.00. All proceeds go to The White Review (Charity Number: 1148690), which ‘specialises in the publication of artistically or educationally meritorious works of new or emerging artists and writers’, and will help to ensure the future viability of the short story prize.
  3. Entrants, discounting successful low-income applicants, must pay the entry fee of £15 in order to be eligible.
  4. Only submissions received and paid for by 17:00PM on 9 May 2022 (GMT/EST) will be considered.
  5. Entries that are not paid for, incomplete, are corrupted or submitted after the deadline will not be considered.
  6. The entry must be the entrant’s own original creation and must not infringe upon the right or copyright of any person or entity.
  7. Writers who have existing contracts, or who have previously held contracts, with publishers for works of fiction are not eligible to enter.
  8. Writers who have published work in magazines and journals are eligible to enter.
  9. Writers who have published books of non-fiction are eligible to enter.
  10. Entries must be 2,000 words minimum, 7,000 words maximum.
  11. Writers may submit one story only.
  12. The story must be written in English (no translations).
  13. Submissions from literary agents on behalf of their authors are allowed, so long as all the criteria for eligibility are met.
  14. There are no age restrictions.
  15. When submitting, please include a short covering letter including your contact details, your name and the title of your story. The covering letter should be in the same document as your submission.
  16. Submissions from writers residing outside of Great Britain and Ireland will not be considered.
  17. The first page should include the title of the story and the number of words.
  18. All submissions should include page numbers.
  19. Entries will only be accepted via the online entry form. Submissions must be in one of the following formats: .pdf, .doc, .docx, .rtf, .txt.
  20. The story must be original and should not have been previously published anywhere in full or in part. Published work is taken to mean published in any printed, publicly accessible form, e.g. anthology, magazine, newspaper. It is also taken to mean published online, with the exception of personal blogs and personal websites.
  21. Longlisted and shortlisted entrants will be notified by email when they have made the list.
  22. Unsuccessful entrants will not be contacted.
  23. No editorial feedback will be provided to unsuccessful entrants.
  24. The decision of the judges is final and no correspondence will be entered into regarding the judging process.
  25. The White Review will have the exclusive right to publish the winning and shortlisted stories for six months from first publication in The White Review. After six months, the rights will revert to the authors, who may publish the stories elsewhere so long as they appropriately credit The White Review.
  26. Submission to the short story prize is not a condition for publication in The White Review. Writers can still submit their work for consideration via the usual routes.
  27. Submissions should in all cases where it is possible be submitted through the online registration process. If it necessary to submit a paper copy, please enclose proof of payment and contact details with your submission and send it to the editors at: A.103 Fuel Tank, 8 – 12 Creekside, London SE8 3DX.
  28. Only submissions which meet all Terms and Conditions will be considered.
  29. By entering this competition, each entrant agrees to be bound by these Terms and Conditions.

 

 

Free entry terms and conditions

Free entry to the Prize is offered to writers who are on a low-income – for example, receiving benefits such as Job Seeker’s Allowance, Working Tax Credits, Universal Credit, Disability Living Allowance, Carer’s Allowance and Employment and Support Allowance or those who are earning less than the Living Wage.

 

To apply, email prizes@thewhitereview.org, with the email subject line ‘Short Story Prize Free Entry Application’. In the body of the email, please include:

 

  • Your full name
  • Your email address
  • Your postal address
  • A short written statement describing how you are eligible

 

Applications for free entries will be open until 19 April 2022. Eligible applicants will be granted free entry on a first-come first-served basis; all applicants will be informed whether or not their applications are successful by 27 April 2022. Any application submitted after the closing date will not be read. Only one free entry will be granted per applicant. Applicants must wait to see if their application is successful before entering the Short Story Prize; if your application is successful you will be invited to submit your entry via email, not via the form below. The White Review will not grant refunds on already paid-for entries.


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