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The PBS Kids Writers Contest is an annual art and literature competition for students grades kindergarten to 12 in the United States. The competition was relaunched under the name PBS Kids Go! Writers Contest in 2009 as a continuation from its predecessor called Reading Rainbow Young Writers and Illustrators Contest [1] which was started in ...
In August 2009, the competition started the now popular #WW (Writer Wednesday) hashtag on social networking site Twitter.com. [1] In 2010, the competition partnered with the Yorkton Film Festival, allowing the CSSC to announce the winner of the competition as part of the Golden Sheaf Awards gala. British writer Neil Graham was the first winner ...
The anthology was founded in 2009 by Zachary Cotler, Michael Rutherglen, Olivia Clare Friedman, and Brandon Krieg. Lee Posna joined the editors in 2016. Lee Posna joined the editors in 2016. The anthology has held an annual writing contest since 2011.
Dec. 22—While sifting through nearly 350 entries in this year's Pasatiempo Writing Contest, one thing became clear: Santa Fe — and New Mexico — fosters a strong community of writers. Based ...
In late 2008, Amazon started taking in entries for the 2009 ABNA awards. The judges for the year were announced to be Sue Grafton, Sue Monk Kidd, Barney Karpfinger, and Eamon Dolan. Finalists were announced May 15, 2009. [7] Finalists. Bill Warrington's Last Chance by James King; In Malice, Quite Close by Brandi Lynn Ryder; Stuff of Legends by ...
In 1995, the creators launched the first contest called "Reading Rainbow Young Writers and Illustrators Contest". The annual writing and illustrating competition for children grades K through 3 continued until 2009 when it was relaunched as "PBS Kids Go! Writers Contest". It was renamed to the PBS Kids Writers Contest in 2014.
The annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest was formed in 1982. The contest, sponsored by the English Department at San Jose State University, recognizes the worst examples of "dark and stormy night" writing. It challenges entrants to compose "the opening sentence to the worst of all possible novels."
Dutton then ended the contest. The Bad Writing Contest emerged in an intellectual climate dominated by the fallout from the Sokal affair, [21] [22] in which the alleged opaqueness and obscurity of postmodern writing came in for criticism: Edward Said, for instance, deplored "diminishment and incoherence" in the writings of some of his ...