Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize

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The Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize, formally known as the Wet Ink Short Story Prize, was an annual literary award given by the magazine Wet Ink for Australian short fiction. Only Australians are eligible for the award. The Wet Ink Short Story Prize was first awarded in 2011 for works written during 2010. The award was discontinued following the closure of Wet Ink with 2012 being the final year the prize was awarded.

Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize
Awarded forExcellence in short story fiction
CountryAustralia
Presented byWet Ink
First awarded2010
Last awarded2012
Currently held byClair Aman
WebsiteOfficial site

History

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In March 2010 the Australian magazine Wet Ink announced the creation of the Wet Ink Short Story Prize to mark their five years of publication.[1]

The 2010 prize was open for entries until August 31, 2010.[1] Entries must have met certain criteria including having been written by a writer who is living in Australia, the story must have never been previously published nor be under consideration by a publisher, magazine or for any other prize. The short story doesn't have to follow any set style or theme but must be 5000 words or less.[2] The 2010 prize was judged by Wet Ink's fiction editors Sally Breen and Emmett Stinson, and guest judge Peter Goldsworthy.[1] The winner was announced in January 2011. "The Development Drip" by David Jagger won first prize [3] of $3000, a year's subscription to Wet Ink, as well as the story being published in the March 2011 issue of Wet Ink.[1] Two highly commended entries received a prize of $200, publication in the March 2011 issue, and a year's subscription to the magazine. Mike Ladd's "Ken" and Sam Twyford-Moore's "Everything We Did in a Different Order" were the two highly commended entries of the 2010 prize.[1][3] All shortlisted entries received $150, publication in the 'Shortlist issue' [June 2011] of Wet Ink, and a year's subscription to the magazine.

In 2011, after receiving funding from the Copyright Agency Ltd Cultural Fund, Wet Ink renamed the prize 'The Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize' and increased the value of its prizes to $3000 First Prize, $1000 each for two Highly Commended entries, and $250 for each shortlisted entry.[2][4] In addition, each of these entrants will be published in Wet Ink and receive a year's subscription to the magazine.[2]

In 2011, the Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize will be judged by Wet Ink's fiction editors Sally Breen and David Sornig, and guest judge Brian Castro. The 2011 prize was won by Sarah Klenbort for her work "Sale Victoria" while J Anne de Staic and James Klousia received the two high commendations.[5]

Wet Ink closed in late 2012. Despite this, the Short Story Prize for 2012 was published online at www.wetink.com.au in April 2013, and prizes were awarded and paid. The Wet Ink website was maintained until June 2013 with details of the winners and the shortlist. The winner of the Wet Ink/CAL Short Story Prize was Claire Aman with two runners-up, Rebekah Clarkson and James Halford.[6]

Winners and nominees

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In the following table, the years correspond to the year of the story's eligibility; the ceremonies are always held the following year. Each year links to the corresponding "year in literature" article. Entries with a blue background have won the award; those with a white background are the nominees on the short-list.

  *   Winners and joint winners
  *   Commendations
  *   Runners-up
  *   Nominees on the shortlist

Year Author(s) Short story Ref
2010 David Jagger* "The Development Drip" [3]
2010 Mike Ladd "Ken" [3]
2010 Sam Twyford-Moore "Everything We Did in a Different Order" [3]
2010 Pamela Baker "Something to Tell You" [3]
2010 Maggie Betts "French Kissing" [3]
2010 Christopher Burns "Lonely Leather" [3]
2010 Jacinta Butterworth "Fence" [3]
2010 Arthur Chaffey "East" [3]
2010 Rebekah Clarkson "Barking Dogs" [3]
2010 Lynne Deperas "Stick" [3]
2010 Liz Gallois "My Bald Head" [3]
2010 Mark Liston "Les’s Mudflats" [3]
2010 Kirk Marshall "Validation" [3]
2010 Janine Mikosza "In the First Place" [3]
2010 Lois Murphy "Out of their Depths" [3]
2010 Susan Paterson "Flowers for a Dry Land" [3]
2010 Pavle Radonic "Grattan Street" [3]
2010 Pavle Radonic "The Romance Influence" [3]
2010 Joanne Riccioni "Lightning and Phosphorescence" [3]
2010 Ann Shenfield "For Sylvia" [3]
2010 Ben Sorgiovanni "The Fire" [3]
2010 Amy St Lawrence "Percy" [3]
2010 Alexander Symonds "Civil War" [3]
2010 Emma Waters "Caged Rabbits" [3]
2010 Dave Wilkinson "Breaking the Surface" [3]
2010 Sean Wilson "By the Pond" [3]
2011 Sarah Klenbort* "Sale Victoria" [5]
2011 J Anne de Staic "Fire Jump" [5]
2011 James Klousia "Toy Soldier" [5]
2011 Cassandra Atherton "Drufock's Lover" [5]
2011 Antonia Baldo "A Real Man" [5]
2011 Sophia Helen Barnes "Tsoi" [5]
2011 Jacinta Butterworth "Zombies" [5]
2011 Clinton Caward "The Stars" [5]
2011 Elva Darnell "The Bite" [5]
2011 Barbara Eather "3pm Anzac Day" [5]
2011 Liz Gallois "What Happens at Home" [5]
2011 Craig Garrett "Magpies" [5]
2011 Susan Holoubek "Always by You" [5]
2011 Patricia Jones "The Rebel and his Ruin" [5]
2011 Tim Lucas "Slow Wave" [5]
2011 Aaron Mannion "Notice Me Take My Hand" [5]
2011 Lois Murphy "Troy" [5]
2011 Adam Narnst "Blue People" [5]
2011 Adam Narnst "Insult" [5]
2011 Maureen O'Shaughnessy "Rubber" [5]
2011 Joanne Riccioni "Hero" [5]
2011 Martin Slattery "Mexicans" [5]
2011 Rohan Wightman "Faggot" [5]
2011 Rohan Wightman "A Ride with Death" [5]
2012 Clair Aman* "The Day You Thought of Fortunatus" [6]
2012 Rebekah Clarkson "The Apex Club" [6]
2012 James Halford "The Counterfeit General" [6]
2012 Gillian Britton "Beautiful Girl" [6]
2012 Sophia Barnes "Brilliance" [6]
2012 Beth Yahp "Dogs in Love" [6]
2012 Jennifer Mills "The Last Anthropologist" [6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Middlemiss, Perry. "Wet Ink Short Story Prize". Middlemoss.org. Archived from the original on 2011-03-16. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  2. ^ a b c "Entry Form" (PDF). Wet Ink. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "2010 Prize". Wet Ink. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  4. ^ "Projects supported by the Cultural Fund". Copyright Agency Ltd. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "2011 Short Story Prize". Wet Ink. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2012-02-19.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Edmonds, Phillip. "Wet Ink Short Story Prize Issue". Wet Ink. Archived from the original on 2013-04-28. Retrieved 2016-02-13.
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