Showing posts with label Writing Contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Contest. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Flash Fiction Contest Winners!

Today, I'm posting our Second Place Winner in the Upstate Fellowship of Christian Writers Flash Fiction Contest! Not certain what's going on? Read Friday's post here and get up to date!

Soraya
by Marcia Moston



Soraya Rasheeb closed her mind to the metallic stench of blood and raw meat that settled on her hair and lined her nostrils. She plunged her latex-gloved hand into the cavity of the chicken and tugged at its innards before the conveyor belt delivered the next clammy carcass.

“Listen, Sugar, this isn’t exactly the fine jewelry department at Macys. I ain’t gonna get my black butt fired cuz of you. Yank them things out of there and get goin’.”Sweat beaded on Latisha’s smooth dark skin. She was one of the women from the shelter who was thankful to have landed a job, even if it was at the chicken factory. Next to her was Lori. Both were rebuilding lives that had been shattered by drugs, men or misfortune.

Soraya nodded and pushed the chicken down the line. She remembered a time when strands of fine jewelry had slid through her fingers, when someone else cooked her meals and washed her clothes, a time when … she pushed the memory away. It was best forgotten. They were all refugees of one sort or another now.

A commotion snapped her out of her reverie.

“Hey, whatcha doin? You okay?”

A silver-haired woman stumbled away from her spot in line. Her slurred words incoherent. She swayed and then fell onto the conveyor belt, her hand catching in the rollers before the emergency switch shut down.  Blood squirted from her wrist as she lay unconscious.

A yelled, “Someone Help her!” failed to mobilize the shocked group standing there in their white paper jackets and hair nets. “Can’t somebody do something?”

Slowly, like an emerging photo in dark room, a memory surfaced, took form, propelled Soraya Rasheeb, gifted doctor from Kabul Afghanistan, to action.

“I can.”

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Thursday Review—A Writing Contest Could be Your Big Break!


A writing contest could be your big break!
A guest post by Marcia Moston

Blue Ridge Mountains Christian
Writers Conference
Three years ago I attended my first writers conference, Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference. Today I received my first advance check from Thomas Nelson—think I’ll just stare at it awhile!

This quick journey to publication wasn’t because I walked away from the conference with an agent in my pocket or an editor on the line, or because I had written the Gone with the Wind of the twenty-first century. But it was, in part, because the confidence I gained by entering and placing in the Blue Ridge competition led me to enter the Women of Faith/WestBow Press competition—a contest with connections to the Big Guys.

This year could be your turn. Once again, Women of Faith and WestBow Press are offering a writing contest. Prizes include generous publishing packages. The Grand Prize winner not only has the possibility of being picked up by Thomas Nelson, WestBow’s parent company, but also of being promoted at Women of Faith Conferences around the country.

Imagine my surprise while at the Women of Faith conference this year, someone tweeted that I was in the program. I had actually thrown it away, but there I was in a full-page spread right after Lucy Swindoll and Sheila Walsh!

Photo courtesy of Mary Denman 
My book, Call of a Coward won the competition and was published by WestBow. But I had no idea Thomas Nelson was looking at it until a month after it came out, I received a simple email, sitting there in my inbox alongside the bill and blogs, offering me a contract. (And I didn’t even have to write a proposal!) So after a few months on the market, Call of a Coward will be pulled and re-released next summer by Thomas Nelson.

You just don’t know what God will do when you give Him something to work with.

This was my great opportunity; perhaps next year it will be yours.

For information about this year’s contest and a video of my story, go to WestBow Press.com