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Bridport Prize 2007 - Short Story Prizewinner's. Judge :- Tracey Chevalier

Judges short story report
.
1st Prize £5000 Graham Mort, Carnforth, Lancs. "The Prince"

Click to listen to the winning story 'The Prince' by Graham Mort
Graham Mort lives in North Yorkshire and lectures in Creative Writing at Lancaster University where he directs the Centre for Transcultural Writing and Research. He has worked extensively in Africa, designing and implementing literature development projects for the British Council; this work has taken him to Uganda, Malawi, Kenya, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Ghana and South Africa in recent years. He has published 8 books of poetry and won a number of literary prizes for his work. His short stories have appeared in many anthologies and literary magazines and he is currently planning a collection of short fiction.
www.graham-mort.com
Graham Mort
2nd Prize £1000 Vanessa Gebbie, Ringmer, East Sussex. "I can Squash the King, Tommo...."
Vanessa Gebbie Vanessa Gebbie lives near Brighton with her family, but spent most of her formative years in Wales. She studied French at Exeter University, and wrote a dissertation on a theory that the short story might have been used as political propaganda in late eighteenth century France.
She has been a journalist, a researcher for the MoD, HR Manager in engineering companies and run her own marketing consultancy. She started writing seriously in 2003. Her awards in 2007 include First Prizes in The Daily Telegraph Novel Competition and Exeter University?s Paddon Award and Second Prize in the Fish International Short Story Competition.
She teaches Creative Writing and is Assistant Editor of the UK small press literary magazine, Cadenza. She runs an online collective for writers, The Fiction Workhouse.
Her story is taken from her novel in progress.
www.vanessagebbie.com
3rd Prize £500 Liza Wieland, North Carolina, USA. "Slip, Out, Back, Here"
Liza Wieland grew up in Atlanta, Ga, and was educated at Harvard University (BA 1981) and Columbia University (PhD 1988). She has taught at several colleges and universities in the US, most recently East Carolina University, in Greenville, NC. She lives near Oriental, NC with her husband and daughter.
www.lizawieland.com
Liza Wieland

Supplementary Prizes (alphabetical order) - £50 Each :-
Judith Allnatt, Upper Weedon, Northants. "The Sand Monster"
Judith Allnatt Judith Allnatt was born in Stafford and studied English at the University of Manchester. She writes poetry and fiction and teaches creative writing at the University of Leicester and the Open University. Her first novel, A Mile of River will be published by Transworld (Doubleday/Black Swan) in March 2008. She lives in rural Northamptonshire with her husband and two children and is currently working on her second novel for Transworld.
Jackie Beacham, Forest Row, East Sussex. "And that's all there is to it"
I was born in Sydney, Australia in 1956, came to the UK two years later, and grew up on the Sussex coast and in the wilds of Cornwall. In 1998 I went to the University of Sussex, surfacing five years later with a degree in English and an MA in Creative & Critical Writing, passed with distinction. My final dissertation was based on a close reading of Freud’s essay, ‘On the Universal Tendency to Debasement in the Sphere of Love’. ‘And that’s all there is to it’ is my first short story win and my first published work. I live in rural East Sussex with my partner, our teenage son and a senile dog.
Jackie Beacham
Photograph by Wolfie Wright
David Grubb, Henley-on-Thames, Oxon. "The Fire Child"
David Grubb has published fiction and poetry for many years.His latest poetry collection is It Comes With A Bit of Song (SALT 2007) and his story The Fire Child is the opening chapter of a novel in progress.He has also written short radio plays and is tutor in Creative Writing at Reading University, Henley River and Rowing Museum and Norden Farm Arts Centre.
John Haggerty, California, USA. "Ghost Lights"
John Haggerty is a pale, emaciated man who has spent the majority of his adult life confined to a cubicle, typing instructions into a computer. This seems to have rendered him nearly hairless and invisible to most members of the opposite sex, conditions for which he long overcompensated by engaging in a series of pointlessly risky hobbies.
Before all of this happened, he attended Stanford University. This was nice enough at the time, filling him as it did with an oddly lofty sort of narcissism. Subsequent events, however, especially the frenetic victories of, it appears, every single member of his graduating class aside from him, have almost entirely destroyed this unwarranted sense of well being. Mr. Haggerty now views success as a sign of a grasping and dangerous neurosis. Except for the Bridport Prize, which is different.
On the positive side, he has a lovely and graceful wife, a peculiarly non-violent dog, and skin almost entirely free of disfiguring rashes.
Huw Lawrence, Aberystwyth. "Keeping On"
Huw Lawrence was born in South wales and studied at Manchester and Cornell. He has spent most of his life teaching English. He won a prize in the Rhys Davies short story competition in 1999 and has published poems, stories and articles in magazines such as The Critical Quarterly, Acumen, Planet, Poetry Wales, The New Welsh Review and others. He is currently working on a novel.
Toby Litt, London. "The Fish"
Toby Litt Toby Litt was born in 1968. He is the author of Adventures in Capitalism, Beatniks, Corpsing, deadkidsongs, Exhibitionism, Finding Myself, Ghost Story and Hospital. His new novel, I play the drums in a band called okay, will be published by Hamish Hamilton in March 2008. He is a Granta Best of Young British Novelist.
www.tobylitt.com
David A Mcilroy, Brussels, Belgium. "Peas and Pictures"
Educated in London, Paris and Beijing. He has lived since 1994 in Brussels as a cultural project manager, researcher and journalist. He has written a great deal for English language theatre in Brussels, but only started writing full time in 2007 and has had some small successes this year, including;
- Short listed for the Francis E McManus Short story prize by RTE for 'Osama in China'
-Story 'Osama in China' was broadcast by RTE in June, read by actor T.P. McKenna
- Winner of the 2007 Channel 4/One World Radio Radio Play competition with 'The Interpreter'
- Short story ?Tigers? was published in the Bulletin August 2007
- Commissioned to write a play for the Irish Theatre Group ?Some Blue Horizon? to premier in June 2008
- Commissioned to write a play for the 100th anniversary of the English Language Theatre in Belgium. ?The Girl who loved Hitler? will premier in March 25009
Andrew's key theme is contemporary China (he graduated in Chinese studies from Louvain-La-Neuve in 1997) and the above stories are all taken from his collection 'Horse'. He is currently writing a novel about China, sex and the ex-patriate community. Hs dream is to find a good agent and an engaged editor!
Damcil Roy
Kevin Parry, Seaford, East Sussex. "Next to Godliness"
Kevin Parry Kevin Parry was born in Umtata (now Mthatha), South Africa, but has lived in England since 1979. He was educated in both countries and holds a BA in History and History of Art from the University of South Africa, and an MA in Education?(Language, the Arts and Education) from the University of Sussex.

He is, by instinct and artistic conviction, primarily a short story writer and has two completed collections of short fiction (neither of which has yet been published). However, he has also written a novella, radio plays and prose poems. He now writes full time and is currently working on a novel which, like one of the story collections, is set in his native South Africa.

He has won prizes/publication in Stand Magazine, twice in the Bridport Prize, and twice in Ireland's Fish Publishing short story competitons. His stories have also been published in the political and cultural journal,Soundings, and in the post-colonial journal, Kunapipi.
Stuart Tallack, Felpham, West Sussex. "How doth the little Crocodile?"
Stuart Tallack is a supply teacher working all round Sussex, Surrey and Hampshire. "I am really an English specialist, but have become a Jack-of-all-Trades and worry a little about being master of none. Having cajoled reluctant teenagers into believing they could write, I am now telling myself the same. I was a runner-up in this year's Fish Short Stories and also in Fish Short Histories. I am now hooked and will go on writing. It is nearly fifty years since I wrote in a notebook, "Forever reading, never to be read." I have finally taken the implied advice."
Michael Wherly, Wallasey, Merseyside. "Golden Retriever"
Michael Carson Born in New Brighton in 1946. Spent twenty years teaching English in various parts of the world. First published in 1986, and have had nine novels and a collection of short stories published since by Gollancz, Black Swan, Doubleday and Poolbeg. I also had around fifty stories broadcast on Radio Four's 'Short Story' slot.
I now write, and teach creative writing. I've lectured at John Moore University, and tutored the Crossing Borders programme for African writers, and the Distance Learning M.A. for Lancaster University. I work as a summer lifeguard on the Mersey estuary. I've also been trying to get the name of New Brighton's great novelist, Malcolm Lowry, better known in the area.
Getting a mention in the Bridport prize means a great deal to me. I've been out in the cold for a number of years, and it bucks me up greatly to know that all those hours spent filling drawers with orphan manuscripts were not as crazy and hopeless as they often appeared to be.
Today's news was a lifebelt thrown to someone who, though waving chirpily, felt sometimes as if he were drowning. Thanks for that.


Short Story Longlist

(in no particular order)

Title Writer
The Cemetery Mario Petrucci, Enfield, Essex
The Zebra. Mbidzi Heather Mulkey, Cobham, Surrey
Daydream Believer Suzanne Ahern, Waterlooville, Hants
Casualties John Bakewell, Droitwich, Worcs
Fulcrum Martin Cooper, Blandford Forum, Dorset
Triangle Stephanie Norgate, Midhurst, W Sussex
ear of the Pig Penelope Randall, Altrincham, Cheshire
Hard Luck Story Andrea Owen, London
Wake Andrea Owen, London
Underworld Wayne Price, Aberdeen
The Newlyweds Wayne Price, Aberdeen
Chess Pippa Gladhill, Bath
Stew Jenny Knight, Tasburgh, Norfolk
Trash Faeries Cath Ferguson, Edinburgh
The Proper Kind of Stones Eve Thomson, Edinburgh
Bandstand in the Rain Huw Lawrence, Aberystwyth
The Hallelujah Moment Nichola Bendall, Chichester, W Sussex
Visible Creases Frances Merivale, London
The Forgetting Layla O"Mara, Dublin
Grey Area Matthew Wright, Shetland
Dumb Noise Adrian Dorris, Oregon, USA
Our Patch of Sky Jon Bauer, Victoria, Australia
The Lexicographer Guinevere Glasfurd-Brown,Elmswell
Our Mr Kent Andrew Bridgmont, London
Missing Jess Powell, Broseley, Shropshire
My Stone Sister Stacey Hamilton, Wellington, New Zealand
Starling Karen Onojaife, London
My Lord Above David Brown, Aukland, New Zealand
House Rules Rob Pateman, London
That Time of Year Terence Young, Victoria BC, Canada
Young Man Zoe Bishop, Sydney, Australia
Insignificant Paul Duffy, Dublin
The Annunciation of Charles Spears Fred McGavran, Ohio, USA
Faults Jo Lloyd, Oxford
Smokers Anne Bronston, California, USA
The Taking Part Glynis Charlton, Hull, E Yorks
Sweet Potatoes Alison Irvine, Glasgow



Bridport Prize 2007 - Poetry Prizewinner's. Judge : - Don Paterson

Judges poetry report

1st Prize £5000 Christopher Buehlman, Florida, USA. "Wanton"

Click to listen to the winning poem 'Wanton' by Christopher Buehlman

Christopher Buehlman Christopher Buehlman is a playwright, poet and comedian from St. Petersburg, Florida, who plays taverns, clubs and renaissance festivals across the United States as Christophe the Insultor, a verbal mercenary people may hire to insult their friends ( www.insultor.com). His poetry has appeared in The Atlanta Review and other literary and university publications; he has been short-listed and won honorable mentions or runner-up positions in various contests, though none so prestigious as the Bridport. He recently completed a full-length play, "Hot Nights for the War Wives of Ithaka," and is the author of a novel he will seek representation for this winter. He has seen a number of his short plays produced, and has written and performed a one-man show about Christopher Marlowe.
2nd Prize £1000 Caroline Price, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. "The boy who could lay eggs"
Born in Middlesex in 1956. Studied Music in York and London; has worked as violinist and teacher in Glasgow, London and now Kent, where she currently teaches violin for Kent Music. Has been writing both poetry and prose for some 25 years; poems have won a number of prizes during that time and been published widely in magazines and anthologies. Has worked as co-editor on an anthology of women's poetry, and has published 2 collections, with a third one due to appear in 2008. Has also studied French, and earlier this year was awarded a month's residency at the Villa Marguerite Yourcenar, a centre for European writers in northern France. Caroline Price
3rd Prize £500 Kate Rhodes, Ipswich, Suffolk. "Wells-next-the-sea"
Kate Rhodes was born in London in 1964. She has taught English at British and American universities and now works as an educational consultant. In 2003 Kate was shortlisted for Poetry Review's Geoffrey Dearmer New Poet of the Year award. Her first collection of poems "Reversal" was published in 2005. The title poem of the collection was shortlisted for the Forward Prize in 2006. Kate's second collection of poems, "The Alice Trap" will be published by Enitharmon in 2008. She has received a number of writing fellowships in recent years, including a Hawthornden award. Kate has just completed her first novel.

Supplementary Prizes (alphabetical order) - £50 Each :-
Jonathan Asser, London. "Going to Therapy"
Jonathan Nasser Originator of group therapy programme for violent prisoners.
Publisher & list of publications: Outside The All Stars (Arc Publications, 2003); The Switch (Donut Press, 2002)
Emily Berry, London. "Questions I wanted to ask you in the swimming pool"
Emily Berry is 26 and lives in London. She has recently completed an MA in Creative and Life Writing at Goldsmiths College, and her poems have been published (or are forthcoming) in magazines including Ambit, The Rialto, Poetry Wales and Other Poetry. She is working towards a collection. Emily Berry
Marianne Burton, London. "Puff Ball"
Marianne Burton Marianne Burton's pamphlet The Devil's Cut (Smiths Knoll) was the Poetry Book Society's Pamphlet Choice for summer 2007. She was awarded the 2006 Smiths Knoll poetry mentorship and won first prize in the 2006 Mslexia poetry competition.
Rachel Curzon, Andover, Hants. "Exhibit"
Rachel Curzon was born in Leeds in 1978, and was eduacted at Boston Spa Comprehensive School and Somerville College, Oxford. She now lives in a Hampshire village, teaches English at a Prep school and writes whenever she can. Rachel has had poems published in Mslexia and Poetry London. She received an Eric Gregory Award from the Society of Authors earlier this year.
Claudia Daventry, Amsterdam, Holland. "Passport"
Claudia has just swapped a leaky, insect-infested house in Amsterdam for a leaky, insect-infested steading in Fife. She claims to be a serious poet although she has no conscientious objection to slam, performance, rhyme or foreign languages. She has won a few awards and commendations, and has so far performed her work live in the UK, Spain and the Netherlands, and is still reeling from the bright lights of Dutch national radio. Her first poetry collection is a bit more imminent than it was a year ago. Claudia Daventry
Anthony Hughes, New York, USA. "Ephemeral"
Anthony Hughes was born in Sydney, Australia and immigrated to the United States with his parents and sister in the late 1950s where he has resided as a citizen ever since. He grew up around the Western New York area and currently lives in Orchard Park, NY with his wife, Carole, and his infamous dogs, Mattie, a Katrina survivor, and Max, the greatest Australian shepherd on planet earth.
Anthony received his B.A. (English), his M.A. (Creative Writing, Poetry), and his Ph.D. (Film Studies) from SUNY at Buffalo. While working on his M.A., he primarily studied with Irving Feldman but was also fortunate to have worked with Robert Creeley, John Logan, and Carl Dennis as both a grad and undergraduate student.
Anthony is currently an English Professor at Hilbert College in Hamburg, NY where he has taught film, creative writing, and literature courses since 1997. While he has long since graduated in the formal sense of the word, his love affair with language has become a life-long learning process. During this time, he has continued to work with Irving Feldman, who still generously makes time to read his work, and when life permits, he also attends poetry conferences most recently, The Chautauqua Writers? Conference where he studied under Stephen Dunn.
Anthony has published and presented his poems and scholarly articles in numerous publications, poetry readings, and conferences. His book, Fashionable Films and the Endless Cutting Edge, will be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing in the spring of 2008.
Catherine J Ormell, London. "Campaign Desk"
Catherine Ormell Catherine Ormell read PPE at Oxford and worked in the City for three years before training at Haymarket Publishing to become a journalist and going freelance. She wrote features for The Daily Telegraph, The Independent, World Architecture, The Times Educational Supplement, Focus magazine and others. She took a break to bring up her child and rediscovered her early interest in poetry through Michael Donaghy's class and the Troubadour readings. She is a non-executive director of a design consultancy and lives in London with her husband and twelve-year old son.
Wayne Price, Aberdeen. "Late Snow"
Wayne Price was born in South Wales and now lives and works in Aberdeen. He has published short stories and poetry in a number of anthologies and literary journals in the UK, Ireland and America including Stand, Poetry Wales, New Writing Scotland, Shorts: The Macallan Anthology and Carve. He was a runner-up in the 2005 Bridport Short Story Prize and the 2007 Fish Short Story Prize. He teaches literature and creative writing at the University of Aberdeen. Wayne Price
Rodney Pybus, Sudbury, suffolk. "Had I Not"
Rodney Pybus Born Newcastle upon Tyne, he has been a journalist, television writer-producer, university and school teacher. A former co-editor of Stand magazine, he has published several collections of his poetry, which has been translated into French, Russian, Spanish, Czech and Romanian. He now lives in Suffolk.
www.rodneypybus.co.uk
Christopher Stocks, Portland Dorset. "Scott of the Riviera"

Click to listen to the poem "Scott of the Riviera" by Christopher Stocks
Christopher Stocks was born in Yorkshire, and studied poetry at Manchester with Michael Schmidt. He has worked for, among others, Channel 4, Harpers & Queen, the Evening Standard, the Sunday Telegraph, the Girl Guides, and as a contributing editor to Wallpaper magazine. Most recently he was sacked as gardens correspondent for the Independent On Sunday.
Forgotten Fruits, his book on the stories behind Britain's best-loved varieties of fruit and vegetables, will be co-published by Random House and The Guardian in April 2008. For the last five years he has lived on the Isle of Portland, in a stone house overlooking the sea. He collects perfume and loves swimming off Chesil Beach but hates Swiss chard and light jazz. He is not married and has no children.
www.christopherstocks.com
Christopher Stocks

Poetry Long List

(in no particular order)

Title Writer
Love can be a Spike Alan Stubbs, Carlisle
I will make myself blind Norah Hanson, Hull, E Yorks
The Visitation Mollie Russell-Smith, Beckenham, Kent
After a Fight Justin Naylor, Brighton
Invitation Simone Mansell Broome, Llandusul, Carms
Seen from a Window Diane Tang, Pinner, Middlesex
My client has no wish to prevent you having
contact with your son
Eamonn Graal, Manchester
Filed away Malcom Watson, Hull, E Yorks
18 February 2007 Richard Halperin, Paris
My dear Masha Richard Halperin, Paris
Left Alex Fox, Leeds
A man goes out to steal a horse David Grubb, Henley-on-Thames, Oxon
Untitled E Hinshelwood, Ammanford, Carms
Angel Trudie Shannon, Pleudaniel, France
I saw the end Ryan van Winkle, Edinburgh
A small town Richard Lambert, Bristol
LAC 1831755 Martin Hayden, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
Waking Alicia Yerburgh, London
In Ye Old Cock Chris Woods, Bury, Lancs
Green Chris Woods, Bury, Lancs
What will happen to the neighbours when
the earth floods?
Kathryn Maris, London
The last race Alan Dunnett, London
Bath water Elizabeth Moore, Alton, Hants
I should have got her business card Ian Salkey, Abbots Langley, Herts
Hi from a strangely familiar country Ian Salkey, Abbots Langley, Herts
The Lighthouse VivienneTregenza Reid, Penzance, Cornwall
Otter on the shore Ursula DeYoung, Oxford
Magnolia wallpaper Keith Hilling, Swindon, Wilts
Too late Maryanne Perkins, Richmond, Surrey
As crystal Gerald Turnbull, Guildford, Surrey
Nausicaa in the Zozak P J Merrington, Western Cape, S Africa
The Plot Kate Rhodes, Ipswich, Suffolk
Sea Monsters Heather Richardson, Belfast
Late coming home Kate Miller, London
Becoming woman Pat Borthwick, Sheriff Hutton, N Yorks
Fastening Sandy Fitts, Fitzroy, Australia
Engaged Anna Woodford, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Bee Catcher Anna Davis, Whittinghame, E Lothian
Vermont Firs Lucy Ingrams, London
Going without saying Wendy Klein, Pangbourne, Berks
The Mole-god Victoria Pugh, Reading, Berks
One with nature Stella Williams, Stafford, Staffs
Flat dad Patrick Brandon, London
Close Katherine Anderson, Oxord & New York, USA
In a farm driveway Marianne Burton, London
La Canicule Michael Henry, Cheltenham
Herodotus de nos Jours Michael Henry, Cheltenham
Awake John Kay, Bournemouth
St Bartholomew's Well John Kay, Bournemouth
Steppenwolf by Rannoch Moor Christopher Southgate, Chagford, Devon
What holds you like a sister Jemma Borg, Rusthall, Kent
Near the railings on Tuesday Ian Starsmore, Wood Dalling, Norfolk
At the old house Clare Best, Lewes, W Sussex
Falling Angel Howard Wright, Portadown, N Ireland
Casting the Dead Stephen Duncan, London
Above and beneath the river Clyde Jackie Galley, Caerlaverock, Dumfries
A Gun John Hubbard, Bournemouth
China Town Adele Davide, London
A seventy-fifth Katherine Pierpoint, Harbledown, Kent
A feeling between the toes Howard Sargeant, Falkirk
Inertia S Terrington, Middlesex
Five o'clock shadow Giles Ford, London
Maistaettenrohr Phil Poole, London
The branding David Price, Reading, Berks
Baltic journey in Winter 1992 Pru Kitching, Co Durham
The Twelfth of July John Richmond, London
Car wash John Richmond, London
After the rains Paul Julien, London
African Martin Reed, Malvern, Worcs
New Years Ann Sansom, Sheffield
Winter Let, Cornwall Robert Powell, Wakefield, Yorks
babel 6 Agnes Lehoczky, Norwich
Water off a duck's back Pauline Keith, Lancaster
Papastratos No 5 C M Dunhill, London
String Theory Robert Butler, Bexleyheath, Kent
Building Stairs Barry Dempster, Ontario, Canada
An Apple for John Clare David Krump, USA
traffic Claudia Daventry, Amsterdam
Armadillos Lydia Macpherson, Babraham, Cambs
Unterlinden Lydia Macpherson, Babraham, Cambs
afternoon commute Jonathan Hadwen, Queensland, Australia
Barracuda Russell Jones, Much Wenlock, Shropshire
The things we see more clearly Julian Zytnik, Hahndorf, S Australia
Manboy Fiona Stevenson, Co Kildare, Eire
Wife Sarah Simpson-Enock, London
In the very middle Maria McMillan, Wellington, New Zealand
The Pythia Floyd E Batchleder, AL, USA
Sloe Gin James Sutherland-Smith, Belgrade, Serbia
Poem with a boy on the bus Roger Mitchell, New York, USA
Santa, and sand flea Graham Clifford, London
Don't worry, be happy Jonathan Asser, London
Expecting rain Caroline Bird, Hampton, Middlesex
Carp Jacqui Rowe, Birmingham
An Elk visits my Garden Pippa Little, Cramlington, Northumberland
Shedding Suzanne McArdle, Leeds
Postcard Rachel Curzon, Andover, Hants
Kalle Metro Graveyard Andrew Slattery, NSW, Australia
Beached Mark Jermy, Evenly, Northamptonshire
Autumn Dish Eoghan Naughton, Co Galway, Eire
Day of the Dead Casey Jones, London
Berlin Tim Kenny, Bury, Lancs
Flood Sarah McGarry, Exeter, Devon
Chainsaw Anthony Hughes, New York, USA
Weight Anthony Hughes, New York, USA
Allegro Appassionato Benjamin Morris, Cambridge
Room Cristina Newton, Swindon, Wilts
Central Reservations Cristina Newton, Swindon, Wilts
The Bone Fire Adam Crothers, Belfast
weekends in Shavonne Johnson, Indianapolis, USA
Deap Sea Fishing Hilary J Murray, Leeds
Brussels Midi Station 2005 Kevin McGimpsey
A Bruising on the Bone Liz Gallagher, Gran Canaria, Spain
Wake Claire Collinson, London
by extension Laila Farnes, Nittedal, Norway
The Angel Watch Sarah Darby, Kidlington, Oxon
Heads or Tails Veronica Gaylie, Vancouver BC, Canada


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