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Short Stories: Results 2017

Neel Mukherjee, judge of the Fish Short Story Contest 2016

Neel Mukherjee,
judge of the Fish Short Story Contest 2016/17

Here are the results of the 2016/17 Fish Short Story Contest, judged by Neel Mukherjee. Neel’s comments on each story are included. The eleven stories will be published in the 2017 Fish Anthology. It will be launched at the West Cork Literary Festival in July ’17.

First prize is €3,000 and a place at the short story workshop at the West Cork Literary Festival.

Second prize is €300 and a week in residence at Anam Cara Writer’s Retreat.

Third prize is €300.

There is a brief biography of each of the winning authors, below the results.

 

seanlusk-700x700FIRST PRIZE: “Dead Souls” by Sean Lusk. (Dorset, UK.)

A bookish soul’s touristy whizz through Russian literary history that culminates in a fine, unexpected sense of existential dread. ‘Dead Souls’ has the magic surplus of meaning that characterises fine examples of the form. 

 

SECOND PRIZE: “Black Toe” by Bron Burgess. (London, UK)

Deliciously depraved story about a strange, horrifying fetish, told as if it were the most ordinary thing in the world.

 

Philippa HollowayTHIRD PRIZE: Neel has awarded third prize jointly to: –

“Undetermined” by Philippa Holloway (Lancs. UK)

and

Photo“What Green Tastes Of” by Lindsay Fisher. (Glen Garth, Scotland)

Impossible to choose between the two. The first is a story of an unusual problem, with an ending that is at once funny and full of foreboding, the second a tight, intense, synaesthetic story of unarticulated desire.  

 

HONORARY MENTIONS:

“Schoolgirl Crush” by Ruth Lacey. (Israel/Australia)RuthLacey

A gorgeous young teacher (young Brad Pitt lookalike, natch) + a middle-aged woman who is his senior in a kibbutz school + a school full of teenage girls (and boys) … what could possibly go wrong? Gripping story of desire and jealousy that doesn’t put a step wrong. 

 

Neil Bristow“Debt Collector” by Neil Bristow. (Ireland/Germany)

Another tight, precisely and admirably plainly written story about how a mother’s difficult moral choice is also a ticket out for her. It reads like a miniature thriller.

 

“Salvage” by Miriam Moss. (Sussex, UK)Miriam Ross

A restrained, elegantly written story of secrets and what is withheld in a marriage, with agapanthus flowers providing a nice metaphorical underpinning. 

 

Rick Williams“Safe from Harm” by Rick Williams. (Brighton, UK)

Tense story about Foreign Office mandarin devoured by his work and his talented pianist daughter giving the biggest concert of her career.

 

David Knight-Croft“This was Rapture” by David Knight-Croft. (Oxford, UK)

Interesting and beautiful story of an ultra-religious father and his teenage daughter living in isolation until a young man appears. 

 

“In the Dark” by Sam Sanders. (London, UK)

Precisely observed and cleanly written story of a forbidden relationship.

 

Roz DeKett“The Adonis Effect” by Roz DeKett. (Philadelphia, USA)

Beautifully and precisely written, if misogynistic, story about adultery and the end of a marriage. 

 

 

Biographies 2017.

Sean Lusk loves short stories, aimless travel and Nikolai Gogol (hence the title of his story in this year’s anthology). He has been writing full-time for the last couple of years, since winning the Manchester Fiction prize in 2015. He is currently working on a novel set in the 1750s in Constantinople. He lives in Dorset, England and dreams of Greece, though when he finds himself in Greece he dreams of Dorset.

Bron Burgess was born in Leeds. She has a BA in Modern History from Oxford University, and an MA with distinction in Creative Writing from Goldsmiths, University of London. Bron has worked at the Guardian’s New Media Lab, and Film Four. She has also acted in film and television. Black Toe is her first short story. She is currently completing her novel The Shape Inside – a psychological thriller set in Leeds.

Philippa Holloway has been a zombie in a b-movie, once brought someone back from the dead, and recently visited Chernobyl’s Exclusion Zone for her Creative Writing PhD research. She has curated a special feature for the New Welsh Reader on artistic responses to Wylfa nuclear power station and landscape, and has challenged herself to get published on every continent, so far achieving literary success in the US, Australia, Africa and Europe. She teaches at Edge Hill University.

Lindsay Fisher is not who he is unless he is writing. Even when he’s writing he’s not sure of who he is exactly. He is most pleased that one of his stories appears in the collection‘Stories For Homes’, an anthology sold in aid of Shelter, a UK based charity for the homeless. He is pleased to think of this doing some good in the world.

Ruth Lacey grew up in Australia and began her career as a lawyer. After moving to a small kibbutz community, she earned her MPhil in Creative Writing from Glamorgan University (South Wales) and completed a Postgraduate Semester in Writing at VCFA. Her short stories have appeared in Litro Magazine, The Best of Carve Anthology and Overland, among others. Ruth is currently working on a collection of her short fiction and an exhibition of her artwork. She lives in Israel.

Neil Bristow is a writer, teacher and translator. He has an MA in Creative Writing from UCD. His short fiction can be found in the Honest Ulsterman, Nottingham Review and Ex-Berliner, and as a playwright he has worked with, among others, the Abbey Theatre.

Miriam Moss is a writer of picture books, novels and short stories. She also works creatively with young children, teenagers and adults in schools, libraries and prisons in the UK and abroad.  Her recent novel, Girl on a Plane, was inspired by being hijacked in the Middle East aged 15. Her next one is set in Africa. Her creativity is skewed by her triangular workspace and by an increasing need to be outside.  www.miriammoss.com

Rick Williams’s short stories have been shortlisted for several competitions and he was runner-up in the 2015 Hilary Mantel International short story prize. After several years living abroad, he returned to England and became a journalist. He lives in Brighton with his family and works as an editor for the Guardian in London, the train journey providing the perfect opportunity to write. He has just finished a novel and is working on a collection of interlinked stories.

David Knight-Croft leads a glamorous life working as a civil servant. In 2014 he took a career break, travelled for a year, and hasn’t quite been the same since. He studied English Literature at Leeds University and the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada. He is currently studying for the Creative Writing MA at Birkbeck, and has been published in The Mechanics’ Institute Review. He occasionally writes about travel at www.elsewhereunderwritten.com

Sam Sanders grew up in the South-West of England and now lives in South London with his wife and three kids. They put up with his occasional radio plays, erratic guitar playing and repetitive cookery.  He’s very happy to have his story in the Anthology, and his wife and three kids are very happy to hear him going on about it. Honestly.

Roz DeKett lives, works, and writes in Philadelphia, USA, although she is English. Previous publication includes creative non-fiction in the English journal York Literary Review and the American children’s magazine Cricket. Roz loves theatre as much as literature and is on the board of Philadelphia’s Azuka Theatre. She’s a former BBC radio and newspaper journalist and is a graduate of the University of Leeds, UK, with a degree in English Literature and History.

 

 

 

Launch of 2016 Fish Anthology

Fish Anthology 2016

FISH ANTHOLOGY 2016 LAUNCH

The Fish Anthology was launched at the West Cork Literary Festival on 20 July by Dave Lordan, who judged the Fish Poetry Prize. Dave’s exhuborent, off-the-cuff and upbeat speech kept us on our toes as his words raced to keep up with his thoughts. Despite his general scepticism about competitions, he was admiring of Fish writing contests and those like them for the focus on the writers, and the publication of quality work. He applauded the graft the writers in the anthology had put in to hone their work into something of quality and literature. 

Of the 39 writers in the Anthology, 16 made it to the launch to read their winning story, memoir, flash or poem. For we here in Fish, it is a fitting and fine conclusion to the year’s endeavour to meet the writers and listen to their work being read to an appreciative audience.

I want to thank the writers who came along – Aengus Murray, Ciaran O’Rourke, Ellie Walsh, Vivienne Kearns,  Deirdre Daly, John Killeen, and Eileen P. Keane from different parts of Ireland; Gwen Sayers, Anthony Dew and Julie Netherton from the UK, Cait Atherton who came from Thailand, and Sarah Tirri, Diane Simmons and D. G. Geis from the USA. For those who couldn’t make it, and a especially for Thomas M. Atkinson who made it to Ireland from the USA but due to circumstances beyond his control could not make it to Bantry for the launch, we hope to meet you another time.

In accordance with Fish tradition, we all repaired to the bar after the event in an attempt to get to know each other, swap addresses, buy each other a drink and tell lies about our lives. Some of the writers went onto the nightly Open Mic session that has been a festival tradition for over 15 years.

The 2016 Fish Anthology is for sale. The short stories were selected by Kevin Barry, the flash fiction by Nuala O’Connor, poems by Dave Lordan and short memoirs by Carlo Gebler.

 


 

CREATIVE WRITING WHILE SAILING WITH ADAM WYETH 

Adam will be on board a 65 foot yacht from 3-10 October ’16 sailing around the Balearic Islands, combining sea, sailing and teaching creative writing. Time is short so book early here

Adam teaches the Fish online Poetry Writing Course

 


 

ALUMNI NEWS

Mary-Jane Holmes, Chief Editor at Fish, has had another successful Flash publication in The Best of Small Fictions

New book by Fish writer Richard Scarsbrook.

The Third Ring, which was published in the FISH Anthology in 2011, is now the first chapter in the novel Rockets Versus Gravity (Dundurn, September 2016). www.richardscarsbrook.com

Fish Anthology Extracts

Read Extracts from Fish Anthologies.

Select the genre:

 



 

Fish Anthology Extracts to Read:

Short Stories  – 

 

Fish Anthology 2018: Clippings  by Helen Chambers

Fish Anthology 2017: Dead Souls by Sean Lusk

Fish Anthology 2015: The Pace of Change by Chris Weldon

 


 

Fish Anthology 2017 – Extract from Winning Short Story

Dead Souls by Sean Lusk

It was at the Tolstoy house where we met. Rustling through the rooms I was conscious of the plastic bags covering my shoes. These were less a device to preserve the Tolstoy family’s carpets, which must have worn away long ago, and more a winter requirement to prevent the treading about of snow. My progress through the house was therefore accompanied by a noise which I found unaccountably embarrassing. Though I could see no other visitors, an amplified voice filled every space. A symposium was underway, a lecture on some aspect of Tolstoy’s life or writing, I assumed. Approaching the place from which the voice came I found myself in a large room where row after row of middle-aged Russians listened with solemn attention to a lecture being given by a professor. Her steely hair, pinned and buttressed into a small tower, tilted first one way and then the next as she spoke, as if she were a chess piece on an uneven board. None of them, I noticed, had plastic bags over their shoes.

Despite the walls lined with pictures, the sculptures of the author at work, despite his books, despite even the glass case with the ruby ring he had given Countess Sophia for transcribing and editing Anna Karenina, Leo was not there, and I found it hard to believe he ever had been. He had not liked his house in the city, had lived there on sufferance, and perhaps this accounted for his vacant spirit. I couldn’t read many of the Russian names below the photographs. After a day of museums the Cyrillic had worn me down. In the corner of each room a single panel about the size of a chopping board stood on a stand, carrying an explanation in English for what the room contained. I found myself competing for it with a woman in her late thirties. “I’m sorry, go ahead,” I said, gesturing towards the stand.

She took the board and smiled. She had short red hair and a cheerful confidence, as if she had known that the board was hers all along.

“Where are you from?” I asked.

“Germany.”

We went from room to room, once or twice taking an interest in the same object. After a while, exhausted by incomprehension and the rustling of my own feet I went down into the basement to collect my coat and scarf from the sombre cloakroom lady. The street was cold but welcoming. Turning I saw that the German woman was behind me, that she must have left just a moment after me. I considered slowing down, starting a conversation, even wondered if that was what she wanted. I glanced back once more and this time caught her eye, yet for some reason my recently liberated feet quickened their pace along Prechistenka Street in the direction of the Pushkin Museum.

The next day I found that I had the Gogol house to myself. Again, not a word of English was spoken, but here the burly women who guarded the door, looked after the coats and who dispensed tickets seemed eager to talk to me, heedless of my inability to understand anything they said. Once I had put plastic bags over my shoes I was ushered enthusiastically into the first of Gogol’s rooms, a vestibule where his or some other overcoat, perhaps Akaky Akakievich’s, hung. If it was poor Akakievich’s then it was a fiction, a coat that he had saved-up for so fervently that it had cost him his life. I reached out and brushed my hand across the wool, thinking how much less real it was than the imagined cloth. The warden touched my arm and spoke to me intently, her Russian words hovering in the air, waiting to be understood. She encouraged me onwards, into Gogol’s parlour, inviting me to sit on his chair. She pressed a switch and the lights dimmed. A sound of distant bells filtered into the room, and flames appeared to dance in the fireplace.

 


 

 

Fish Anthology 2015 – Extract from Winning Short Story

The Pace of Change by Chris Weldon

Brendan soothed the horse by stroking under its jaw and the huge animal opened its mouth, allowing him to slide the bit in to the back of its teeth. He pulled the bridle over the ears and held firm on the reins as the horse jerked his head upwards. After a few moments it became still and then lowered its head to munch on the grass. 
‘Come up,’ said Brendan gently. ‘Come up out of that.’ 
He rubbed the horse’s nose and leant forward to buckle the bridle.  Taking the reins again he led the horse across the field towards a five bar aluminium gate. Set in a gap in the hedge, it offered a view across a narrow road and beyond to an oak lined avenue, the tree tops blurred by the Westmeath morning mist. He stopped and listened and the horse listened too, its ears moving like radars trying to pick up the direction of the sound, the sound of a motor car. It’ll be Kit Lee, thought Brendan. Kit was the only man he knew who owned a motor car, an old black one. 
At that time it was the only car around those parts, not that it was around that much. Kit spent an average of two out of three days at home in bed, convinced he had a fatal illness. One illness or another, it didn’t matter so long as it was fatal. When the due date for his death would pass Kit would get up and go about as if nothing had happened, which, of course, it hadn’t.  Brendan never tired of telling the story of the day when Kit stood at the counter in Briody’s shop in the village. 
‘“Twenty Sweet Afton is it, Kit?” says Mrs. Briody, reaching behind her to where the cigarettes were stacked on the shelf. “Ten,” says Kit.  “Ten?” says Mrs. Briody.  “The doctor gave me three feckin’ days to live and there’s two of them gone by already,” says Kit. “Ten will see me out, Mrs. Briody.”’ 
And Brendan would look around the bar to see who was laughing and to see if there was anyone who hadn’t heard it before.  Once a man had said that he had heard the same story down in Kerry but no more was said about that. 
There was a name for Kit’s condition but it kept slipping Brendan’s mind. Lots of things were slipping his mind these days: names, lots of things. He’d never married; said he hadn’t time enough for himself never mind a wife. 
The car went past, visible only for the second it took to pass the gate. It wasn’t Kit’s car. It was red and newer looking. Brendan had never seen it before and wondered who it could be. One of them fellahs down from Dublin, he thought. There were more cars in Dublin where they didn’t need them, of course, than anywhere out in the country. 
But it wouldn’t have been Kit, in any case, because Kit had taken to his bed the morning before with his latest fatal illness. Brendan had seen Tommy McCormack, the doctor, in Mullingar later that afternoon. He had taken the bus in to look at some cattle for Mr. Hope who owned the farm where Brendan worked when he was needed. The doctor was leaning against the top rail of the cattle pen in the street where the market had been set up. 
‘What’s up with him this time, Tommy?’ Brendan had asked. 
‘He has the plague,’ the doctor answered 
‘The plague?’ said Brendan. ‘We’re all doomed, so.’ 
‘I’d say we are,’ said Tommy. ‘I’ll just go in there, now, to the Bar and Grill, and take my last glass of Guinness. Will you send for the priest?’ 
‘I will,’ said Brendan, ‘after I’ve had a look at these heifers.’ The doctor walked across the street to the bar. As he opened the door the strains of ‘Heartbreak Hotel’ emerged and mingled with lowing of the cattle and the shouts of the farmers bargaining in the market.  Brendan shook his head and moved away down the street. 
Kit had never married either so, there they were, two old batchelors going about together, whenever Kit was about, anyway. Brendan with his weather beaten face, lean and wiry: Kit tall and pale, his jet black toupee perched on his head ‘Like a cat on a mantelpiece,’ said Mrs. Keogh in the post office. Brendan was older than Kit. He had been drawing his pension these three years and Kit still had a year before he could draw his. 
‘I’ll never get there,’ he would say. ‘I’ll never see the day.’ 
The only time their friendship was ever strained was that time twenty or twenty-five years before, he had lost track, when Brendan went over to England for the work. Kit’s older sister, Maggie, was living in Sheffield with her husband and Kit had written to her asking if she could find room in the house for Brendan so he could earn a bit of money on the roads over there. Maggie had written back and said she could but not for too long now, as her husband wasn’t too happy about it at all. So Brendan took the mail boat over to Holyhead and caught the train to Sheffield, changing at Crewe. Maggie had moved her two sons into one room and given Brendan the small bedroom. After he had laid his case on the bed he came downstairs to the cramped sitting room where Maggie’s husband Dermot was hunched in an armchair with his pipe and a paper. 
‘Good man,’ said Brendan. 
‘Mmmuhh,’ said Dermot without looking up. 
Dermot was from County Cork. Stocky and short, he either said nothing or spoke so fast, so passionately and for so long that he exhausted you. Over the weeks that Brendan was there he made the effort to break the ice with Dermot but he generally got the silence or, at best, the grunts.  He felt for Maggie. She was a handsome woman, a good mother, funny and warm. Any man would be glad of her but Dermot didn’t seem to have any appreciation of her at all. 
One afternoon Brendan was in the kitchen with Maggie. He couldn’t get a start on the roads that week and Maggie had offered to cut his hair. There was more of it then and it was a kind of reddy-brown. 
‘It’s falling in your eyes,’ said Maggie. ‘Sit down there and I’ll cut it for you.’ She leant over from behind him and placed a tea towel round his neck, tucking it into the shirt collar. He felt her softness and it stirred him. 
‘I remember you leaving home,’ said Brendan. 
‘That was twenty years ago.’ 
‘No! Twenty years?’ said Brendan 
‘Will you sit still,’ said Maggie. ‘I’ll be sticking the scissors in you.’
‘Twenty years?’ 
‘It was,’ said Maggie resting her hand for a moment on Brendan’s head. ‘It was 1913, just before the war. Some bloody great idea it was to come to Sheffield.’ 
‘Why did you do it?’ 
‘Dermot had work in the steel factory.’ 
‘Ah, sure Jaysus, Maggie, it’s not Dermot’s fault the war broke out.’ 
‘I know that,’ said Maggie quietly. 
There was a silence between them as Maggie clipped away with the scissors, carefully holding his ears down with her cool fingers while snipping around them. 
‘I was sorry to see you leave,’ said Brendan. 
‘You were not.’ Maggie laughed. 
‘I was so.’ 
‘Why would you be sorry to see me leave?’ 
‘Well there wasn’t exactly a crowd of good looking girls around the village in those days.’ 
‘Now stop,’ said Maggie. ‘Stop now. You mustn’t be saying those things.’ But although she was behind him he could sense that she was pleased and when her fingers came to rest gently on the back of his neck he felt a tingling and he knew they rested there longer than they needed to.  

 



 

Fish Anthology Extracts to Read:

Flash Fiction – 

 

Fish Anthology 2021:  Both On and Off  by Jack Barker-Clark

Fish Anthology 2020:  Morning Routine<  by Kim Catanzarite

Fish Anthology 2019:  Teavarran  by Louise Swingler

Fish Anthology 2018:  The Chemistry of Living Things  by Fiona J Mackintosh

Fish Anthology 2017: Lost by Lindsay Fisher

Fish Anthology 2016: The Young Brown Bear by Julie Netherton

Fish Anthology 2014: A Theory of Relativity by Sally Ashton

Fish Anthology 2014: Juice Baby by Freda Churches

Fish Anthology 2011: The Long Wet Grass by Seamus Scanlon


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2021 – 

Both On and Off by Jack Barker-Clark

On the phone to your daughter all winter. On the power of attorney. On cloud cuckoo land. On the canal boat you once owned. On bravery. On ignominy. On trial. On fresh grapes. On the occasion of your birthday. On call if you need us. On amplification. On overreaction. On hold with the doctors. On display for one month only. On our best-case scenario. Onwards and upwards. On lovely shiny wet new grapes.

On modern medicine. On the contrary. On the one hand not so bad. On the other hand terminal. On assisted living. On your head be it. On the bedside table, there, next to your reading glasses. On increasing medication. On a tour of hospitals, West Yorkshire, the surrounding Humber. On the formal bed, writing down what the doctor had said. On dyschronometriaand cerebellar lesions. On lovely shiny wet new grapes.

On the ward. On the pillows inmates rest on. On-demand westerns. On John Wayne. On horseback. On purpose. On the bathroom floor with the shower gel. On the bathroom floor with the shower gel following a stroke. On disturbing volcanic dreams now. On canal boats choked with weeds. On holiday in 1972. On ghost trains. On beach towels. On lovely shiny wet new grapes.

On average twenty beats per minute. On life support. On your own. On top of the breadbin. On all sides surrounded. On the way. On the beach with Eleanor. On the borderlands. On the grass slopes. On and on. On Wednesday the 20thMarch. On and on, and then suddenly off.

On behalf of those who knew him. On behalf of those who knew him best. On behalf of his grandson, unable to attend. On the TransPennine Express writing letters to his grandad who had died.


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2020 – 

Morning Routine by Kim Catanzarite

 

I opened a can of cat food and grabbed a saucer and one of the forks nobody likes and scooped out the food and gave the fat one the fork to lick and gave the kitten the full saucer and lifted their water dishes from the floor and filled them up and then turned the lights on in the living room and raised the blinds in the eating area and made my way to the fridge and put the bread in the toaster and grabbed the butter before tapping out the allergy medicine and her ADHD medicine and her other allergy medicine and pouring her glass of water. Then I put the kettle on and grabbed the brush and dustpan and picked up some mud that tracked in on her shoes the night before, and then the toast popped and I buttered it and she came in and said “good morning” and asked me if her socks matched her outfit and I said yes and she told me it was cold outside and that she was going to freeze her ass off at the bus stop if I didn’t drive her there, and I told her that she would live, and she breathed out a cloud of disgust and said that if the puddle down the road was enormous like it was the other day I would have to drive her because she couldn’t get around it, it was so big, and I stared at her and said nothing because that’s often the best response, and then she looked out the window and also said nothing, so I knew the puddle was gone.


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2019 – 

Teavarran by Louise Swingler

 

She can never believe how bright the gorse is, laid in great yellow arcs across the land. She breathes its coconut tang as she walks up the lane.

She can hear the gurgling veins of Scotland in the beck that runs in the ditch beside her. It’s twelve degrees here, cool after London’s twenty-four. The relief of it is a sensual chiding. She fits well here. Where does Thomas fit, though? You know I don’t do ‘green’, he says, whenever she asks him to come home with her.

She had wanted to come at Christmas, and in March.

A quad bike roars and she steps aside. Clumps of dock leaves are already growing back on the roughly-cropped verge. The one time he came, Thomas said these lanes ruined his suspension. He didn’t seem to realise how victorious this strip of tarmac is, checking the unstoppable push of the forest. But she knows it is but a temporary occupation. She enjoys this challenge to mankind’s arrogance.

Her father’s Highland cattle, flank deep, munch steadily through yellow rattle and buttercups. Two auburn calves are submerged like islands in an inland ocean of green, beige, purple, yellow. They raise their snubby noses, eyeing her. She thinks of Thomas, eyeing her as she left him at Luton Airport.

She looks across to the hills and the peaks behind them. The sky is a dull pearl, flat and quiet, and the morning mist has frozen into a row of frail tufts along the valley bottom, as if a steam train had recently departed.

She turns and stares into the calf’s swimming eyes, daring him.

‘If you don’t move before I blink, I’ll stay.’

Tick. Tock.

Her eyes begin to water. The calf remains still. Like a painting that Thomas can’t climb into. She blinks.


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2018 – 

The Chemistry of Living thing by Fiona J Mackintosh

The blue ones make me dream of thistles, make me loop-de-loopy, shaking bubbles from my wrists. The big yellow ones are slow-witted and tip me into drenching sleep at unexpected hours. The white diamonds have a certain easy charm, but it’s the tiny silver ones I like the best. In my cupped palm they roll like mercury balls, but in my head they fizz and dazzle, splintering into gaudy reds and greens. They’re the reason I can glide above the broken glass, put a soft hand on my husband’s shoulder as he tells our guests another story and nods to me to bring the coffee and dessert. Smoke coils beneath the lamp, softening the light. The faces round the table seem familiar, but I don’t know who they are, the men with bristled hair, the women oiled and shiny with cat’s-eye glasses and wet teeth. Mouths open, voices bourbon-loud with the looseness of late evening. The noise pulls close around my head like curtains as I rinse the dirty plates and spear a perfect sprig of mint in every peach sorbet. Against the backsplash, the pill bottles gleam, and I promise-touch each one for later. You and you and you. Through the window, just beyond the house-thrown light, a young deer stares at me with deep, black eyes. I see its dappled hide, a white stripe on its haunch that may or may not be a scar. I know at once it’s come to lure me out into the dark and unfamiliar, onto bleak, untrodden ground. I press my hands five-fingered on the window, and, when I wipe away the cloud my breath has made, the deer has gone like it was never there at all.


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2017 – 

Lost by Lindsay Fisher

 

She presses her face against the glass, as if it is possible, as if she could find a way through and not be in this world but in the world on the other side, everything polished and shiny and new there.

The man in the shop scowls at her and waves his hand towards her, as a man who would frighten chickens or cats from his garden, and he hisses at her through his teeth. All the men the same.

Her name’s Lynnell, and she is a tale of loss. Lost her would-have-been-husband to the war, years back, a black-edged letter she keeps tucked in beside her heart, paper soft as cloth and all the words fainter than whispers. A letter to tell her he was lost, but not before she found herself with a child growing inside her. Lost the child when it was born; taken from her rather than lost.

Lynnell lost her father and mother, too, all in the one year, the same year, except she knows where they sleep for the place is marked with a stone.

And lost her wits about the same time. Lost them and does not miss them now they are gone, for there’s a sort of freedom in everything these days; she moves from shop window to shop window, peering in through the plate glass, and she does not see the men on the other side with their black brows knitted and their shoo-away hands waving. And Lynnell looks for a hopeful way through the glass, for if only she could step through to the other side, then she might find everything she has lost waiting for her, that’s what she thinks – and everything there is polished and shiny and new if ever she did.


 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2016 – 

The Young Brown Bear by Julie Netherton

 

Cuffed, cuffed, and cuffed again by She-bigger-than-me, who fed me and led me and then turned to me and cuffed again until I split.

Alone, along the brightly edge between the fishy wiggle wet and the soft brown tall green, standing on twos to reach for upbugs running along a log. Down on fours to roll boulders, opening dark to sniffle underbugs.

Away, across the shiny wet, a pack of people-persons all scooped together in a float. I stop and lift my snout to sniff and clickclickclick.

One little people-person between two bigger ones. Little pink snout in a little pink face. All else shiny fat shell, brighter than sundown. Pointing its cuff at me.

‘Look! Big teddy! Hello, Teddy,’ says Little He, and the sound wings across the wet like sunup song.

Little He clambers up the floaty side and as Big She reaches to cuff him, he tumbles into the wet, opens his bughole wide to splutter and wail. Big She and Bigger He howl and flail their cuffs.

Me curious.

Me thinking, stop Big She cuffing Little He.

Me thinking, I’ve never sniffed or peeped a people-person close.

Me thinking, Little He not bigger than me.

Just curious.

I amble-scramble across the loosely earth into the wet, feel the pull and cool. The floatman calls ‘Oy’ and the float’s throat roars as it spins. He lifts and points a shiny stick, longer and thinner than the clickclickclickers and with a sniffle hole at the end. Crackcrackcrack, bouncing sound around.

Hurt. Like being cuffed, but more. Wet around me like sundown and Little He’s shiny shell.

Should have trundled into the hidy green. Should have sat down against bugbark and snoozed. Should have stayed away like She-bigger-than-me made me before she cuffed me and left.

 


 

 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2014 – 

A Theory of Relativity by Sally Ashton

I stand at the window of a railway carriage – Albert Einstein

Across from me on a train Albert sat facing backwards, a little table between us, his forehead pressed against the glass. His eyes flickered as if to count passing fence posts. At length he reached a small notebook from a chest pocket, placed it on the table, jotted something down. I tried not to stare, but couldn’t make out what he wrote even when I did. He smiled. May I trade seats with you for a while, my dear? What could I say? In spite of my motion sickness, I agreed. For one the train travelled a relatively straight path, plus his eyes were so kind and sad. He steadied my elbow until I was seated, took his seat, turned again to the window, again to his notes. Then I watched, as he had, the landscape recede, what I knew blurred in immeasurable distances. The sky lost light, Albert’s white head bobbed, and just before I slept a luminescent clock appeared in the sky, though now I see it was the moon itself wearing a clock face that watched us speed by, or did we too appear to be standing completely still?

 

 


She was smoking a roll-up when I walked in. Been feeling tired. Went to bed and woke up a different colour. Bright orange to be exact. At the hospital, she climbed onto the table, affronted, because there was a hole in her tights and her knickers were out of Poundstretcher.

Afterwards, we drove to the Cooperative for some messages. Under the stark fluorescent lights she seemed to glow brighter than ever, lolling against the soft drinks counter in her too-big coat, like a wee lassie.

You look like you’ve been Tango’d, I said.

Later, her colour deepened. Visitors fluttered around like moths, as she lay gulping glasses of ginger, bathed in an Irn Bru glow.

I tweaked her arm. Made from girders eh?

Every morning I wheeled her into the smoke room. Watched the spark go out of her. The hag with the fag. Waited, as the bony frame, kindling limbs, crumbled in a puff of reek. Ticked her menu card, like a waitress in a restaurant. Held a tumbler of Tizer to her lips.

You’re getting to be a right wee juice baby, I said.

Then, one day, her face clouded over. I saw a darkness creep in. But when I looked out the window, the sky was just as blue, the trees just as green. So, I swallowed the skelf in my throat. Made ready my voice.

You’re exactly the same as this Lucozade, I said, gazing into her yellow eyes.

Pure gold. 

 


 

 

Winning Flash Fiction Story from the Fish Anthology 2011 – 

The Long Wet Grass by Seamus Scanlon

The resonance of tires against the wet road is a mantra, strong and steady.  The wipers slough rain away in slow rhythmic arcs into the surrounding blackness.  The rain falls slow and steady, then gusting, reminding me of Galway when I was a child where Atlantic winds flung broken fronds of seaweed onto the Prom during high tide.  Before the death harmony of Belfast seduced me. 

The wind keeps trying to tailgate us.  But we keep sailing.  The slick black asphalt sings on beneath us.  We slow and turn onto a dirt road, the clean rhythm now broken, high beams tracing tall reeds edging against the road, moving rhythmically back and forth with the wind.  No lights now from oncoming cars. 

We stop at a clearing.  I open the door, the driver looks back at me. The rain on my face is soothing.  The pungent petrol fumes comfort me.  The moon lies hidden behind black heavy clouds.  I unlock the trunk.

You can barely stand after lying curled up for hours.  After a  while you can stand straight.  I take the tape from your mouth.  You breathe in the fresh air.  You breathe in the fumes.  You watch me.  You don’t beg.  You don’t cry.  You are brave.  

I hold your arm and lead you away from the roadway, into a field, away from the car, from the others.  The gun in my hand pointed at the ground.  I stop.  I kiss your cheek.  I raise the gun.  I shoot you twice high in the temple.  The coronas of light anoint you.  You fall.  The rain rushes to wipe the blood off.  I fire shots into the air.  The ejected shells skip away.  

I walk back to the car and leave you there lying in the long wet grass.

 



 

 

Read Extracts from Fish Anthologies.:

Short Memoir – 

 

Fish Anthology 2018:  What Was Once A City by Marion Molteno

Fish Anthology 2017:  Pay Attention by Paul McGranaghan

Fish Anthology 2013:  Luscus by Maureen Boyle

 


 

Extract from winning Short Memoir 2017 –

Pay Attention by Paul McGranaghan

 

Come and see.

Here is Spring Hill with its weirs of steps and tiers of streets. Their kerbs are green, white, and orange; yet this is not, nor ever has been, the Republic of Ireland. The sun is a spark in the clouds. See how the wind blows on it? Watch it. Watch it wax to a brilliant light. Look: Dandelions flare where they erupt from fissures in the paving. The bright buttons of daisies glitter across the common. We have been waiting for this. Can you see the removal van in the car park above our street? Can you see it gleaming?

Now look. The sunlight pushes away the rain and the workmen heave, shouldering the last of our furniture through the narrow door and up the wet steps to the van. That’s me, there. Can you see? There. That’s me, and my friends, and we’re following them. We want to go in the back of the van, sitting on the settee, but we aren’t allowed. It’s dangerous, they say; something might fall on us. I think of the bookcase with its glass panels and green and gold volumes of Charles Dickens toppling on top of me. Besides, my friends are staying behind and I am going to begin life as an outsider on the far side of town.

It is 1984. I am seven years of age.


 

Extract from winning Short Memoir 2013 –

Luscus by Maureen Boyle

The eyes are lined neatly in wooden trays.  They are laid in grooves according to colour and there seem to be hundreds of them staring blind off velvet lining.  The velvet is deep purple – as though they’ve been laid there bleeding – but that is a fantasy and the velvet may be too.  It was, after all, a National Health clinic in the Royal Victoria Hospital in 1966 but my memory of it is blurred and mixed with winter darkness and the sense of a bazaar.  My parents have taken me first to the giant Woolworth’s store in the centre of Belfast to buy me a bright yellow rubber duck as a beacon of small light in my hands, distraction from the ordeal ahead and whether it is because this is my first remembered experience of looking out on the world with only half the light I’d had until then – all of that first trip to Belfast and to the clinic, is shrouded in the colours of the dark:  of rich mahogany wood, of the hunched  Victorian corridors of the children’s hospital, of shops with wooden counters and sweets in wood-cornered vats like coloured fish you had to scoop out into little brown bags for weighing; of dark polished doors and of rain. 
We were there to find me an eye and the man who would do this was Mr Lennox.  Apart from the trays of eyes, I remember little of that first visit but I would come to know his method very well over the next twenty years and would miss it when he finally retired.  He would begin by washing his hands very thoroughly.  And then he would simply sit and look at my one good eye, staring into it as if hoping to find a secret: the secret of its precise colour, of the size of the pupil, of the iris, the shades of the white, the shape of the eye and then the choosing would begin and that is where the perfectly-organised trays came into play.  He would begin to scan the strange spectrum – leaving the tray of browns that had at one side a disconcerting row of pink albino eyes, and the tray of greens and go instead to blue – the colour of my eyes and of my family’s.  He would gather up a range of them, like a boy lifting coloured marbles, and hold them, one at a time, not initially where my empty socket was, but at the side of the good eye, the better to do the matching.  And it seemed to me that the movement of his fingers, deftly moving the first eye chosen, back into his palm and another forward between thumb and forefinger, was done like a conjuring trick – a version of the one where an uncle takes a coin from the child’s nose or its ear – this kindly uncle was going to pluck me back an eye from his magic box of them.
We are here because I have recently had an enucleation – my left eye removed entirely after an accident. The word comes from ‘nuclear’ which means ‘kernel’ – the removing of the seed from the kernel – the eye thumbed out like a Brazil nut from its shell.  I’ll come to know these words too in the months and years ahead – the socket – like pocket – from which the eye has slipped, been picked; the sulcus, from the furrow of a plough, for the little groove between eyelid and eyebrow.  I remember nothing of the enucleation but I do remember the day I lost my eye – an odd idea – as if I’d been careless and left it somewhere or dropped it while playing. 
My parents were building an extension.  It was the early sixties, when people built their own houses or did things to them and we knew about plans and permissions.  The builder was from Strabane.  We lived outside the village of Sion Mills, in County Tyrone, a Mill village where my mother grew up, in a house on the Melmount Road in the townland of Liggartown and my mother and father were replacing the tiny scullery, which would then become the ‘back kitchen’, with  a big light kitchen that would have a massive orange formica table, around which we would all sit on high stools and a divider of shelves made of exotic bamboo for ornaments.  The sink would face the road, the main road between Derry and Omagh, and its big picture window would allow my mother to look out on the world as she did her chores, to see the buses passing at their regular times and later the soldiers set up check-points on the corner and beyond to the fields, the river and the mountains. 
On this day my sister, who is younger than me, is playing with me in the garden – there is a vast uncultivated meadow behind where the vegetables grow – it is a country site and too big for my father and grandfather to tend – where we like to play safaris, imagining ourselves ‘lost in the jungle’, when in fact we are hiding behind overgrown gooseberry plants and under the umbrella leaves of the  wild rhubarb.  But it begins to rain and so we take shelter in the garage which contains the overspill of the family house and good things to play with.  In later years, though I doubt it was ever said, I always saw what happened subsequently, as carrying a moral message of obedience – always do what you are told – my mother having called us in out of the rain – meaning come in to the safety of the house.  Instead we go to the garage – where we are not really supposed to play because of my father’s tools and garden weed-killers –  but I love the smell of creosote and the jam jars my father screws by their lids to shelves to hold all his different nails and twine.  We are playing with umbrellas in there.  My parents have a print of Renoir’s ‘Les Parapluies des Cherbourg’ in our living room – its colours all the greys and blues of Parisian rain.  The woman in the front of the picture though looks dry and carries an empty basket lined dark like a gaping hole.  A little girl stands by with a hoop.  The rain of this day is green in my mind, and rust-coloured from the gravel of the drive, as it runs down the slight slope from the garage, running down the fields in front of the house and down into the Mourne River.  But we are dry inside the garage and the rain is spectacle through the open doors – like the moment in White Christmas where the barn doors are opened behind so that the scenery is suddenly real.  There is an old white umbrella which I think may have been from my mother’s wedding, it has a frill and it seems sumptuous  and it too is forbidden for play because of the danger of its tip. And that day also in the garage is the builder’s equipment, stored there for the weekend.  There is a step-ladder.  My little sister climbs it to the top.  I am underneath looking directly up at her.  There is a trowel –  from the Old French word ‘truele’ – ‘a small tool for spreading plaster or mortar’ from the Late Latin ‘truella’ – ‘small ladle, dipper’ –‘ a stirring spoon, a ladle, a skimmer’.

*  *

It is a Saturday.  I know this because my father is at a cricket match.  I remember the imprint of one of my mother’s tea towels – as though it were a phantom imprint on the lost or losing retina – like the checkered cloth marks that were burned into Hiroshima  victim’s skin.  The tea towel, white with red stitching, is held to the eye from the moment I run into the new kitchen screaming, held by my mother, all the way to Derry in my uncle’s small, wine-coloured  Mini car, my uncle who is called to take me to hospital in Altnagelvin in Derry.  I think I remember the surgeons in green scrubs and the panic.  I think I remember being wheeled in a high-sided cot or bed.  I don’t remember pain. They remove the whole eye.  

(Complete Memoir in the Fish Anthology 2013.)

 

 

 



 

 

Read from Fish Anthologies:

Poems – 

 

Fish Anthology 2018: Vernacular Green by Janet Murray

Fish Anthology 2017: Paris, 13 November 2015 by Róisín Kelly

Fish Anthology 2015: Saint John’s Primary School Nativity. Nineteen Years On. 
by Tessa Maude

 


 

 

Fish Anthology 2018 –  Winning Poem

Vernacular Green

 by Janet Murray

(i.m Howard Hodgkin1932-2017)

 

Hodgkin sees common green

in privet, grass, chestnut husks

blown horsetail, chickweed

crushed under baby’s toe

scum on ponds―pond weed.

 

Not silver olive, willow spinning

green or white, imported

rhododendron, clunking monkey

puzzle tree. Exempt montbretia’s

erect leaves, circling

 

fiery tiger flowers, but if he glimpses

luminous green on the wing-tip

of an escaped parakeet, exposed

by pallid vernacular green, which

hides fairy wings sometimes,

 

in this moment he speaks

Indian green where a greener green

can be unleashed, somewhere between

emerald and jade, a brush dipped

in feathers round a teal duck’s eye.

 


 

Fish Anthology 2017 –  Winning Poem

Paris, 13 November 2015

 by Róisín Kelly

In the end, it’s like going to bed as usual

except we lie down side by side in the street

and the night sky is our ceiling, and blood

drifts away from us between cobblestones

like rose petals torn up and scattered.

 

I don’t mind that the last thing I’ll see

is a café window’s red-and-blue OPEN sign,

and a neon coffee cup with three white lines

that symbolise rising steam.

 

Or the lights in your eyes going out—

as if someone turned off the bedside lamp

in your mind—except your eyes are still opening

and opening, and I am frightened.

 

What were the last things they saw, those eyes?

A cathedral’s rose window, or a view

from a tower: grey buildings like soft birds

nestling to the horizon.

 

My hair on my back as I walked before you

down a flight of stone steps on a hill.

My face turned towards yours, moments ago.

 

 There’s a sound like fireworks, but the stars

are as colourless as the diamond rings

laid out in the jeweller’s window

that we stood shyly in front of last night.

Our mouths and blood were ringing with wine,

but what we dared to think went unspoken

and now it always will.

 

That sound—it’s like the sky tearing apart,

as loud as the gig where we had our first kiss.

It was a metal band in a tiny hot room

above a bar in our home city.

 

The musicians rolled their eyes and screamed

do you want more? The drummer played naked

and kept throwing his sticks in the air,

catching them perfectly every time.

 

The singer hated the bright spotlight on him

and we cheered when he wrenched it down.

How we craved the plunge into darkness,

the careless unscrewing of the moon.

 


 

 

Fish Anthology 2015 –  Winning Poem

Saint John’s Primary School Nativity. Nineteen Years On
by Tessa Maude 

The Virgin Mary lights a fag 
Behind the vestry door 
She’s pregnant for the fourth time 
At only twenty-four.

Herod dies in Helmand 
And Caspar deals in crack and 
Melchior rapes Gabriel 
And stabs him in the back.

The shepherds beat up Joseph 
And steal his mobile phone 
Miss Stevens gives up teaching 
And drinks and dies alone.

The Star stands by her lamp post 
And sore afraid acts tough 
By bridges and in doorways 
The Inn Keeper sleeps rough.

The mothers and the fathers 
The chief priests and the scribes 
Are gathered in the court house 
Where Balthazar takes bribes.

The Heavenly Choir disbanded 
And went their separate ways 
Three wise men went to Wandsworth 
The shepherds to The Maze.

A suicidal Jesus 
Curses God then leaps 
And in his stained glass window 
Saint John the Baptist weeps.

 

 

Poetry Contest 2016 LONGLIST

POEM TITLE

POETS

Darwin’s Garden

 

Sense Memories: Ohio, Summer

 

For a Catfish (after Fukushima)

 

Ave Maria

Abigail Warren

Go well, stay well

Angus Walker

Other continents

benjamin weinberg

She Bee He Fly

bern butler

Lumbering

Bernadette Crawford

Novus Ordo Seclorum

Bjel Bakker

Poor Little Rich Girl

Bjel Bakker

Gold field

Brian Mostoller

Leaving You

Brian Wall

Hoping

Cáit R Doherty-Coogan

The Liturgy of Penitence

Carmine Giordano

The Looting

Cathy Guo

The Amaryllis

Charles Evans

For God’s Sake

Charles Evans

Jackdaws

Charlie Gracie

Unlikely Day

Charlotte Clutterbuck

GROWING PAINS

Chris Hardy

UP THE GARDEN PATH

Chris Hardy

OPEN HOUSE

Chris Hardy

Canta Tuerta/Twisted Song

Christopher Watson

Death of a Refugee

Ciaran O’Rourke

Nailing the Suicides to the Branches of the Family Tree

clodagh beresford dunne

THE OBSERVER

clodagh beresford dunne

Resonance

Colette Colfer

Today As I Wander

Colin Montfort

See below for details

D.G. Geis

Songbird

Dan Reid

Ena

Dan Reid

The Genesis of Isis

David Childs

Every medal that she won

Dawn Kozoboli

Sunday morning in Kigali

Deborah Livingstone

Remnants

Deirdre Daly

The Last Stand

Deirdre Dowling

I Glimpse a Ghost

Dermot O’Lynn

Cache

Dermot O’Lynn

What Our World Was Made Of

Devreaux Baker

North Bearing

Dougal Cousins

16 July 1969 AD

Eamonn Lynskey

ISN’T HE LUCKY?

Edith Anderson

Ground Truth

edward denniston

Today

elaine feeney

Blight

Elisabeth Rowe

The Woodpigeon and Me

eliza homan

Gypsum Mine, Skanesbukta

ELIZABETH BAGBY

Reckless

Elizabeth Buttimer

The Place Where No Trees Grow

Elizabeth Buttimer

Soft Moonlight From The Window

Elizabeth Buttimer

Despite His Good Ole Boy Ways, You Just Can’t Trust Him

Elizabeth Buttimer

The Price of a Biscuit

Elizabeth Buttimer

Unexpected Forecast

Elizabeth Buttimer

Life After Death

Elizabeth Cox

#girls on the brink

Elizabeth Gleeson

My Life as a Fountain Pen

Emily Vieweg

Amen

Eric Berlin

Gutter Ball

Eric Berlin

How to Avoid the Grave

Eugenie Theall

Mercurial Ocean

Fintan Clabby

Place of Stone

Frank Farrelly

BLVD

Gary Quinn

The sink

Gerry Dorrian

Flaking Paint on the Stanchion

Glen Wilson

Divining at Lissywollen

Grace Wilentz

Common Woes

Gráinne Tobin

The Art of Limning

H David

In Memory

Hannah Glickstein

Ordinary Pain

Hannah Glickstein

Rain

Hannah Glickstein

Lotus Sutra

Harry Newman

The Opposite of Rescue

Heather Duffy

Scarecrow

Hong Ray Tee

Talking shit

Ian Shine

Feast

Jacqueline P Haskell

Back Door

Jacquelyn Shreeves-Lee

Hy-Brasil

James O’Sullivan

Rust

James O’Sullivan

Mapping Hi-Zex Island

Janet Lees

Autobiography

Jay Kidd

Carapace

Jay Whittaker

Only Child

jeanne wilkinson

Recovery

Jed Myers

Intern’s Memory

Jed Myers

Blackout

Jed Myers

These Years You Climb

Jed Myers

The Temperature

Jed Myers

Passover

Jenny McRobert

A bell in the distance

jenny pollak

Vanishing Point

jenny pollak

The Library

Jess Bugg

Sat Nav Pilgrimage

Jim Green

Under the bus

Jim Lamey

The Checkout at Lidl

John D Kelly

Teenaga Kicks

John D Kelly

“Ballade to a Dublin Day”

John Pidgeon

A Short History of the Cold War

Jonathan Pinnock

Coiffer

jones irwin

Black Baby Money

Karen Ashe

You’d know it was Spring

Karina Tynan

The Fountain of Relative Age

Kathleen Balma

What Do Ghosts Need?

Kathleen Balma

For Oyster Shuckers

Kathleen Balma

Temporary Empathy

Kathleen Balma

Singularity

Kathleen Balma

Mass Rock at Gortaghig

Kathleen O’Toole

The Good News

Katie Bickham

silk

Katie Fitzpatrick

Goeld aand Blue

kellyn gooding

Nothing Matters

Kevin Conroy

Entangled Life at Murrisk Pier

Kevin Conroy

Plumes of Enceladus

Kristina Blaine

Somewhere Between Madness and Alienation

Krystyna Rawicz

More Sinner than Sinned Against

Krystyna Rawicz

Everything to Lose

Krystyna Rawicz

A collect of archways

Laila Farnes

Discovering light

Laila Farnes

See no evil

Laila Farnes

Hives

Laila Farnes

The Vortex

Laura Foley

The Dance of the Wind

Leigh Whiting

You Said I was your Moon

Leigh Whiting

Mowing the Lawn

Lisa St John

Inclement

Lorna Shaughnessy

A Question for Van the Man

Lynn Sadler

Going Beyond

Maggie Jackson

A Romance Revisited

Maggie Jackson

Plainsong

Maggie Jackson

Extracts from Advent Journey 2015 – an Interweaving

Maggie Jackson

Triptych

Maggie Jackson

WINTERIZE

Majella Kelly

FUNERAL

Majella Kelly

Her Takotsubo Heart

Mandy Beaumont

Land’s Wounding

Mara Adamitz Scrupe

Lacunae

Mara Adamitz Scrupe

The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight

Maria Ní Mhurchú

Minuet

Marian Fielding

Dirty Window

Mary Madec

Rain

Mary Upton

Silent Journey 2

Marylou DiPietro

Curfew

Matt Hohner

Dorothea in the Labyrinth

Michael Coy

The Soddy

Michael Fleming

Blood and Honey

Michael Poage

Memorabilia

michelle brock

Daily Bread

michelle brock

The Spy’s Wife

Monika McGreal Viola

Travels with my Father

Mran-Maree Laing

White Calla Lily (on red)

Nancy Lewis

Ten Minutes

Natalie Holborow

Felix Baumgartner’s Spacesuit

Natalie Scott

Neill Speers Moving On

Neill Speers

Ode to Maria

nollaig rowan

to FORSWEAR — (verb : renounce, disavow, reject, disown, abjure, give up)

nollaig rowan

a foreign country

Norm Neill

VE Day

Norm Neill

Cloud 9

Olivia Walwyn

Salvador Dali’s “Down the Rabbit Hole”

Orla Donoghue

Carer and seagrass

Orlagh O’Farrell

Cloud Cuckoo Land

Pamela OBrien

Gilgamesh was written by Humans.

Patrick Butler

Flash in the Distance

Patrick Dixon

3030s

Paul Bregazzi

Lesson

Paul Bregazzi

THE ALBATROSS AT LANGDON SCHOOL

Paul Nash

THE NIGHT TRAIN STEWARD

Paul Nash

LA HAUTE BORNE

Paul Nash

Coor Li

Peter Branson

Amazon

Rachel Fenton

Thought Experiment

Radhika Chadha

salt free, gluten free

Richard Thompson

ZOMBIES

Robert Campbell

Broken Lines

Robert Rooney

Cormorant

Robert Rooney

The Book House Hotel, Bursa

Robyn Rowland

Ode to Love

Roisin Kelly

HOW TO SET YOURSELF ON FIRE

Ron Carey

Sandcastles

Rosalin Blue

Biology Drive

Rosalin Blue

Abuse

Rosita Sweetman

Warren Mathews

Ross Donlon

Moving

S A McCormick

It came from everywhere

Saakshi Joshi

The Secret Religion

Samuel Selinger

Can I just speak to you for a second?

Sarah Byrne

Letter from St. Judes, April 1956

Sarah Byrne

Sandhill Road, Ballybunion, 1979

Sarah Kelly

Reni’s Cenci in the sitting room

Sarah Kelly

She Sees Him

Shirley Bunyan

Bitch O Bytes

Shirley Bunyan

Father, Diving

Shubha Venugopal

mother ireland’s lament for her son 2016

Sighle Meehan

The Dyslexic

Soon Eu Leon

Davy Jones Lockup

Steve Startup

Amphibious Landings

Stuart Lee

HOLY GRAIL

Susanna Clayson

‘MAM’

Susanna Clayson

The Ridding

Tess Barry

Camerata

Theophilus Kwek

Eaters of the Apple

Tom Moore

March Madness

trish kelly

Word by Word

Trish McGrath

Key

Trudie Murrell

Talking At Dawn To Myself In Riga

Wende McCabe

The Last Call

Wiebo Grobler

Gorgon

Zoila Bergeron

Results: Short Memoir Contest 2016
Winners, Shortlist and Longlist

Results: Fish Short Memoir Contest 2016

Competition Judge Carlo Gebler has reached his decisions on the winners. The ten memoirs he has chosen will be published in the 2016 Fish Anthology. The Anthology will be launched at the West Cork Literary Festival in July. 

Winners

Shortlist

LongList

WINNERS: Short Memoir Prize 2016

1st
The Way I Tell It by Angela Readman (Newcastle, England)

Bleak, affecting, simple, pure, absolutely convincing, and also complete; it told me everything from start to finish that I needed to know and there’s nothing in the material that requires amplification. The opposite of this is also true: there’s nothing here that should be subtracted either.  The writer of this piece is completely in control of the material.  The piece is easy to read but I know an enormous amount was required to get it to that stage.

2nd
Dead Hand by Gwen Sayers (Harrow, England)Gwen Sayers

An astonishing slice of memoir that neatly and ingeniously combines crime, sleuthing and deep personal experience of the South African public health system.  Rivetting, disturbing, compelling.

3rd
Still Life with Cemetery by Teresa Hudson

This is a complex and complicated narrative that combines fraught personal family history (fraught because of the narrator’s family’s involvement in slavery in the American South) with a description of how, in America, the unhappy past is remembered or not, now, in the early twenty-first century.  The writer’s ambition was admirable and the writer’s honesty was searing.

Runners-up:

This is the Boat that Dad Built  by Jane Fraser (Swansea, Wales)

Moon Over River, 1956 by John Killeen (Ireland)

Tell It On The Mountain by Eileen P. Keane (Ireland)

Burning Bridge by Barry McKinley

First Kiss by Sarah Leigh (Cheshire, England)

Stepfathers by Sarah Tirri

Setting the Water by Diane Simmons

 

 

 

SHORLIST: Short Memoir Prize 2016

 

TITLE

First Name

Surname

Hold Very Tight Please

Geraldine

Anslow

The Who, December 3, 1979

Mike

Ashmore

Skeleton in the Closet (a bio-vignette)

Bjel

Bakker

Airport – Blackbushe

Mark

Blackburn

Festival for a Goddess

Terese

Brasen

Happy as a Pig

Tracy

Brighten

Jailtime

Jay

Bugg

Dormit in Pace

Aran

Burrows

The Visitors

Alan

Coley

Yellow House On The High Side

Celeste

Cooper

The Visitation

Marion

Crouchman

The Name Game

Jackie

Davis-Martin

The Year of the Worm

Fiona

Deverell

Dear Steven

Susan

Dillon

Escape Velocity or
There Must Be 50 Ways to Leave ‘The Family’

Lisa

Duggan

Trial by Fire

Janet

Duignan

Cynic

Chris

Fay

The Last Day

Stuart

Fisher

Hush Little Baby

Cathy

Foustanellis

Gone Away with Marilyn

JONATHAN

FRANK

This is the Boat that Dad Built

Jane

Fraser

The Color Pink

Diana

Gittins

Blue Hills and Chalk Bones

Sinéad

Gleeson

Parties, Pianos and Plumbing

Sheila

Gray

Begin then

John

Gredler

Church Point, December 2015

Winton

Higgins

September Spam, 2014

Richard

Holeton

Still Life with Cemetery:
A Brief Memoir of a Place

Teresa

Hudson

We Are Going To Be Rich

Louise

Ihringer

LIVING WITH ANTI-SEMITISM

Renate

Justin

Go Tell It On The Mountain

Eileen

Keane

Moon over River, 1956

John

Killeen

The Way To Go

William

Lannigan

First Kiss

Sarah

Leigh

Confessions of a Fruit Thief

Cathy

Leonard

Hatching an Avocado

GAY

LYNCH

When Knute Rockne Died

Sheila

MacAvoy

War Games

Andrew

Maynard

The Cage

John

McBride

Burning Bridge

Barry

McKinley

CECI NE PAS UNE PIPE:
IT’S A MEMOIR

Michael

McManus

European Starling

Mark D.

Miller

The Meaning of Home

Melissa

Neff

trashman loves maree

warwick

Newnham

Teasie and Paddy

Jane

O’Neill

War is not suitable for Children

Judith

O’Connor

In Harm’s Way

Mary

Pecaut

Children Are Easy

Katerina

protopsaltis

The Way I Tell It

angela

readman

Some Bits of Broken China

Sheelagh

Russell-Brown

Eve’s Choice: The Power of Apples

Esther Phoebe

Rutter

Dead Hand

Gwen

Sayers

The Great Bed-Switching Caper

debby

seguin

‘Friend, when you die….’

Barry

Sheils

Setting the Water

Diane

Simmons

A Pact

Lynn

Smailes

One Eyed in Juarez

Morgan

Smith

B.L.E.S.

wilma

stark

What if the Pastor’s Wife Wants to Quit?

Carrie

Stephens

Enduring Passion

Riba

Taylor

Stepfathers

Sarah

Tirri

Bath Café Days

Stella

Townson

The Head’s Office

Angus

Walker

Good Girl

Alice

Walsh

Songs to be Heard

angela

yeoman

 

 

 

LONGLIST: Short Memoir Prize 2016

 

TITLE

First Name

Surname

In a Mill Town

Michelle

Adserias

Hold Very Tight Please

Geraldine

Anslow

Archipelago – A Memoir

Maria

Arena

The Who, December 3, 1979

Mike

Ashmore

Skeleton in the Closet (a bio-vignette)

Bjel

Bakker

An Irish American Woman in Australia

Bjel

Bakker

The Dentists Visit

James

Balian

Bye-bye Mzungu

Jo

Barker Scott

Brujería

Akesha

Baron

Sunday School

Amanda          

Bell

LONG SENTENCES

jessic

berens

Help! My Bucket List has Sprung a Leak

Laurie

Best

Mr. Iyenaga and I

Kate

Birchenough

Airport – Blackbushe

Mark

Blackburn

Ashes to Ashes

Mark

Blackburn

Taking Tea with Joseph Needham

Michael

Bloor

I Learned to play the Piano at age 91.

Alma

Bond

Letter WIth No Address

Sandi

Bowie

Festival for a Goddess

Terese

Brasen

Rommel’s Left Hook

David

Brennan

Not A Little Us

Carol

BrickStock

Happy as a Pig

Tracy

Brighten

The Quilt

michelle

brock

Only 400 Miles

Jane

Bryce

Jailtime

Jay

Bugg

Hoover Dam

Jacob

Burris

Dormit in Pace

Aran

Burrows

Still Life

Carol

Caffrey

Bedrock

Deborah

Cameron

Soul Crows

michael

casey

Hitching on a combine harvester

Nicola

Cassidy

T-Shirts For Sale

Elisa

Chalem

Esso Blues

Mark

Clarke

THE COLONEL’S WIFE

Susanna

Clayson

In My Father’s Store

Elaine

Cohen

Drawn From Life

Catherine

Coldstream

The Visitors

Alan

Coley

The Cure

Monica

Connell

Yellow House On The High Side

Celeste

Cooper

Memoir: Voyage to Nigeria

Patrick

Courtney

Going Away and Coming Hame

Ann

Craig

The Bones of a Story

Martin

Cromie

The Visitation

Marion

Crouchman

Dead Kittens

Alexandra

D’Arcy

Unravelling Dad

Rebecca

Dalton

Maternal Lines

Lauren

Daniels

An English Girl in New York

Rosie

Dastgir

When Egypt Was in Israel Land

Catherine

Davidson

The Name Game

Jackie

Davis-Martin

Lux Sit

Anna

Denisch

The Year of the Worm

Fiona

Deverell

Dear Steven

Susan

Dillon

In An Instant

Melissa

Disharoon

Smelling of Roses

Jim

Ditchfield

The Hungry Slavs

Bosi

Djukic

Salt: A World History

Mira

Dougherty-Johnson

On The Way

Diana

Dr. Radovan

Control

Laura

Dromerick

Escape Velocity or
There Must Be 50 Ways to Leave ‘The Family’

Lisa

Duggan

Trial by Fire

Janet

Duignan

The Outcrop

Yvonne

Egan-Petzal

Shit called tragedy

Sally

Elsbury

It begins and ends with the sea

Michelle

Elvy

Much More Important than That

Oliver

Farry

Cynic

Chris

Fay

The Last Day

Stuart

Fisher

You Try Not To

Lauren

Foley

Hush Little Baby

Cathy

Foustanellis

Gone Away with Marilyn

JONATHAN

FRANK

This is the Boat that Dad Built

Jane

Fraser

Words

Jane

Fraser

A Tale of Two Cities

Jane

Fraser

A Numbers Game

Jane

Fraser

Here to Get My Daddy out of Jail

Hester

Furey

Keeping Up the Conversation

Linda

Gibson

The Color Pink

Diana

Gittins

Mercury Retrograde

Diana

Gittins

Blue Hills and Chalk Bones

Sinéad

Gleeson

Memoir Of A Dream Interpreter

Dan

Gollub

Sweetness and Light and Bump in the Night

Dolores

Gough

Parties, Pianos and Plumbing

Sheila

Gray

Begin then

John

Gredler

What The Stranger Gave Them

Alyson

Hallett

Outside the Story

JoeAnn

Hart

Mottsy

James

Hartley

Skin deep

J.D.

Hellsinger

The trouble with being born to be alive

Marcy Rae

Henry

Church Point, December 2015

Winton

Higgins

September Spam, 2014

Richard

Holeton

Do That Again

Sue

Holroyd

Chin Chin!

Alannah

Hopkin

Still Life with Cemetery:
A Brief Memoir of a Place

Teresa

Hudson

We Are Going To Be Rich

Louise

Ihringer

English Pigs.

Lauren

Iozzi

Stations of the Cross

Jason

Irwin

An Unrepentant Itinerant

Migel

Jayasinghe

Kilcolman A Visitation

Doreena

Jennings

WHAT MEN WANT

Sandra

Jensen

The Carnivore

Lone Veirup

Johansen

LEARNING TO FLY

Elizabeth

Jones

LIVING WITH ANTI-SEMITISM

Renate

Justin

Sometimes You Have Elevation

marilyn

katz

Go Tell It On The Mountain

eileen

keane

Moon over River, 1956

John

Killeen

Vindication at The Ritz

John

Killeen

The Desert and a Pack of Lucky Strikes

Chris

Knodel

Festivals

Simon

Korner

Shreds

Peter

Lamb

Primary Education

Kathleen

Langstroth

The Way To Go

William

Lannigan

Mexico–Summer of ’69

William

Lannigan

A Father’s Flowers

Frank

Lee

The summer Murray Shackshaft ate the laburnum

Janet

Lees

First Kiss

Sarah

Leigh

Ruminations About Murder from Attica State Prison

John

Lennon

Confessions of a Fruit Thief

Cathy

Leonard

Crocodile Tears

Rozanna

Lilley

Copy That

Angela

Long

Hatching an Avocado

GAY

LYNCH

When Knute Rockne Died

Sheila

MacAvoy

Dirty Silver on the Matt Black Rock

Niamh

MacCabe

To Thee do we send up our sighs

Niamh

MacCabe

The colour of night

Lorna

Malone

Fear of the Storm

Louise

Mangos

Gardening at Night

Una

Mannion

Call of the Peacock

Sherri

Matthews

War Games

Andrew

Maynard

The Cage

John

McBride

Rendering Elizabeth

Mairead

McCann

SAINT FRANCIS

Alan

McCormick

A History of My Family in Three Soft Fruits

Gareth

McKeown

Burning Bridge

Barry

McKinley

CECI NE PAS UNE PIPE:
IT’S A MEMOIR

Michael

McManus

PATER MEUM – MY FATHER

Marie

McMillan

The Test

Val

Melhop

Through the Wringer

Margaret

Milardo

European Starling

Mark D.

Miller

The Waiting Game

Jessie

Miller

Miranda and her Madam

Jan

Moran Neil

Living With the Dead

deirdre

murray

The Ark

Darlin’

Neal

The Meaning of Home

Melissa

Neff

trashman loves maree

warwick

newnham

The Red Dress

Bo

Niles

Memoir of a Teenage Rebel in the GPO

Richard

O’Leary

Teasie and Paddy

Jane

O’Neill

ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES

MARIS

O’ROURKE

War is not suitable for Children

Judith

OConnor

Leprechauns and Antlers

Judith

OConnor

Ski Thrills

Judith

OConnor

In Harm’s Way

Mary

Pecaut

Class Divisions

Jeanine

Pfeiffer

Children Are Easy

Katerina

protopsaltis

The Way I Tell It

angela

readman

My Island Home

Peter

Rodgers

Remembering Memphis

Peter

Rodgers

Some Bits of Broken China

Sheelagh

Russell-Brown

Eve’s Choice: The Power of Apples

Esther Phoebe

Rutter

Cockpit Fly.

Gretchen

Ryan

Baba Ghaibi

Bashir

Sakhawarz

Welcome to Canada

Victoria

Sarne

Dead Hand

Gwen

Sayers

The Great Bed-Switching Caper

debby

seguin

‘Friend, when you die….’

Barry

Sheils

Setting the Water

Diane

Simmons

From Shore to Sea

Elizabeth

Simpson

Sarah Wrestles Obedience

Elizabeth

Sinclair

A Pact

Lynn

Smailes

One Eyed in Juarez

Morgan

Smith

Bite

Carly

Smith

Fakhrul and I

Hilary

Standing

B.L.E.S.

wilma

stark

A BLAST OF CHRISTMAS PAST

wilma

stark

What if the Pastor’s Wife Wants to Quit?

Carrie

Stephens

I Can’t Find My Teeth

Trudy

Swenson

Enduring Passion

Riba

Taylor

TWO WEEKS ONE SUMMER

JANET

TEAL DANIEL

The last days of summer

Mary

Thompson

You (and His Demons on Leashes)

Taylor

Thornton

Stepfathers

Sarah

Tirri

Bath Café Days

Stella

Townson

Wait

Elsa

Valmidiano

Staying Alive

Alexis

VanDeventer

The Head’s Office

Angus

Walker

Good Girl

Alice

Walsh

Our Shop

Liz

Walsh

Home From Home

Chris

Weldon

Brothers Katrin

Bradley

Wester

First Year Corridors

Catherine

White

This is Not the Way Home

Jo

Wilko

Knowing

Pamela

Woolford

We Are Waiting

Ruth

Wyer

Songs to be Heard

angela

yeoman

First Kiss

Jill

Young

 

 

 

 

RESULTS Short Story Prize 15 – Winners, Short list and Longlist

RESULTS: Fish Short Story Prize 2015

Long list
Shortlist
Winners

LONGLIST SHORT STORY PRIZE 2015 (480 stories selected from 1,400)

Title

First Name

Last Name

Wait For Me Joy Frost

 

 

How to kill friends

and influence people

 

Tribal Marks

 

 

Eat and Run

 

 

Episodes

 

 

AFTER

 

 

In the Darkness the Siren’s Song

 

 

The Duel

 

 

The Spotless Chronicles of a One-of-a-Kind Leopard

Carla Vee

Ababon

Tiny Everyday Crimes

Annabel

Abbs

Is Yours Now

Claire

Adam

The Hole in the Fence

Christine

Adamson

The Revenge of Two-Streams O’Malley

Michael

Allen

For the love of muses

Oana

Aristide

Beyond The Waves

Philip

Arnold

Choices

Louise

Aronson

BENEFITS

Maria

Ashworth

Conceptual

Cait

Atherton

Where Unicorns Weep

Stephen

Atkinson

Me & Mr. Tinkles

Thomas

Atkinson

‘Ushering’

Jennifer

Bailey

On the Coast at 65

James

Balian

Lift

Susan

Baller-Shepard

Tiny Hands

Xanthi

Barker

Left Behind

Elizabeth

Barrouquere

Unknown Bulky Contents

Paul

Bassett Davies

Come in for a Cocktail

kate

beales

Orpheus Down Under

Tim

Bednall

Melody Rose

Dianne

Beeaff

Fortune

honoria

beirne

Clair de Lune

Susan

Bennett

Denouement

Darlene

Bentley

The Stars Look Up To Me

Michael

Bird

Dive

Tavi

Black

The Strait

Grace

Blackwood

The Shattering

Daniel

Blokh

Telling Blue

astra

bloom

Black cat dreaming

astra

bloom

Sunset over Lake Garda

robin

blyth

I Confess

Marie

Boland

Lost Invite

Jessica

Bonder

Roll Up x 2

Sharon

Boyle

Bodies of Sand

Manus

Boyle Tobin

The Wooden Indian

Theodore

Brady

Porcelain Doll

Terese

Brasen

Pests

Maggie

Breen

The Great Song

Rex

Bromfield

He’s the One

Anthony

Brophy

Timidity

dan

brotzel

“cotton and crème”

Chad

Broughman

The Pram

Susanne

Brownlie

Icaro

Linda

Brucesmith

         THE JUNGLE

josephine

bruni

Dublin Demon

Louise

Bunyan

The Longings of Máire De Búrca

Ger

Burke

A Summer’s Day Odyssey

Kathryn

Burke

SEMELE

Colin

Burns

That Day

Sarah

Burton Kennedy

Ckzmchupach

Ann

Cahill

Day of the black snake

Alexandra

Cain

A Little Trouble with the Spirits

Deborah

Cameron

Promise

Joanna

Campbell

Skye

Neil

Campbell

The Cancerjack

Sean

Carabini

Mammy says

Mary Lys

Carbery

A Few Notes from the End of the World

Mike

Carson

Surface Appearances

Mike

Carson

Leave the Light On

Enda

Carty

If our reduction is not stereospecific,

then how can our product

be enantiomerically pure?

Aoife

Casby

Shared Needles

Mairead

Casey

Not 1914

Heather

Chadwick

On the other hands

Clare

Chandler

White Sparrow

Melanie

Cheng

You Only Kill Your Parents Once

Cheryl

Cioci

Jokes in lemon juice

 Lezanne  Clannachan

What I’ve Got

Amanda

Coats

Blood Orange

Niamh

Coen

Doris Day the Hunter

Deirdre

Coffey

Iceland Horses

Deirdre

Coffey

Terror Cognita

Louise

Cole

A Bit Missing

Jo

Colley

The Land Of Colours And Shapes

Jon

Collins

The Cuckoo and The Moth

Sara

Collins

Hanging Houses

Kathy

Conde

There’s No One New Around You

chrs

connolly

Troll

chrs

connolly

Lady from America

john austin

connolly

ON QUESTS

Ruaidhri

Conroy

THE SADDEST CUFFLINKS INTHE WORLD

Ruaidhri

Conroy

Maybe Baby

Lynne

Cook

Path of the Ground Birds

James

Cooper

The Letting

Priscilla

Corbin

GIRL IN KNOTS!

Priscilla

Corbin

The Party Poodle

jacqui

corcoran

Aground

Lucy

Corkhill

Don’t Look Back

Julie-Ann

Corrigan

Myles To Go

Frank

Cossa

PROLOGUE

Brian

Coughlan

Of the Night

Michelle

Coyne

The Lion

Steve

Crow

Kindred Spirits

Maureen

Cullen

The warm-hot intergalactic medium

Paul

Currion

Visiting Hours

Conor

Darrall

Battery Hens

Patricia

Davis

Seeking Treasure

Patricia

Davis

Wanting

Jackie

Davis-Martin

The interview

Helen

de Búrca

The parrotfish

Helen

de Búrca

P.P.J.A.

Anne

de Fornel

Longshanks & The Brute

kit

de waal

Bella

Diane

Demeter

Feathering The Blade

Emily

Devane

To Woo

Anthony

Dew

Charlie’s Turn

Susan

Dillon

UNDER THE OAK

Cáit R

Doherty-Coogan

Brothers-in-arms

Ray

Dolphin

Half-A-Boy

Anne

Donnelly

Iscariot

Anne

Donnelly

Flyherding for Beginners

Maria

Donovan

The Artist

Diana

Dr. Radovan

Oh Sussana

Fiona

Drury

The Bell

simon

duddy

Step Back In Time

Ann

Dufaux

Bengal Terrace

Dermot

Duffy

Lucky

Jean

Duggleby

Swan Dive

Janet

Duignan

Nighthawks

Molia

Dumbleton

Be A Man

Julia

Dunne

Collecting Unpainted Pictures

Tatiana

Duvanova

Heaven

Owen

Dwyer

A Very Fine Specimen

Eisen

Erica

Big Fish

Michael

Erickson

Head Shrink

Alun

Evans

Loggerheads

Emer

Fallon

Steps to Freedom

Juliana

Feaver

Avalanche Peak and Devine Intervention

Juliana

Feaver

Ming the Clam and Immortal Jellyfish

Tracy

Fells

Not Like Us

Hilary

Fennell

The Braes

Graeme

Finnie

All the empty spaces

John

Fitzgerald

The Stoneman’s Wife

chris

fitzgerald

Apocalypse Systems

Stephen

Flanagan

Molly & Jack at the Seaside

Lauren

Foley

Regula Et Vita

Larry

Fondation

The Goblin Child

Michael

Forester

contested

fiona

foskin

Mistletoe Birds

Brian

Fox

Stage Directions

Gareth

Fox

The First Cut

Grace

French

Bed Rest

Miriam

Frendo

House of Pies

Barbara

Fried

The Fontanel

Thomas

Froyland

And Mama’s Dead Of A Broken Heart

Keith

Fryer

‘Greenbacks’

Crona

Gallagher

Salaud

gerard

galvin

Runt

gerard

galvin

The Last Syllable

Peter

Garrett

The Swim

Liam

Gavin

Agatha Earle

Tiffanie

George

THE STRANGER

Cosmin

Gheorghe

The Faithless Wife

Penny

Gibson

Aliens

David

Gibson

Islands

Penny

Gibson

The Bath

Sonya

Gildea

KEEPING LADY ALICE HAPPY

Martin

Gleeson

No one had missed Kelly yet

Ann

Godridge

The Death Artist

Goldie

Goldbloom

Almost Like Running

Clare

Golding

Judo For Jesus

Joseph

Golombek, Jr.

Class Reunion

Joseph

Golombek, Jr.

Your turn now

Induka

Gomez

Irish or Something

Aine

Greaney

Quixby

Michael

Green

This Guy Comes into the Shop

Caroline

Greene

Circle City

Robert

Grindy

Sisyphus takes a vacation

Stuart

Handysides

The Goddess of Wealth

Daniel

Harper

PARANORMAL SOCIETY

John

Harris

SAMANTHA

Alison

Harrop

Thoughts Become Things

Siobhan

Harte

Acts of Cruelty

Jacqueline P

Haskell

After the raincoat

Jacqueline P

Haskell

The Net

Jacqueline P

Haskell

Allah Akhbar

patria

hatami

The Burglar Trap

Lander

Hawes

THE ACE

Catherine

Hawkins

Four walls

Gina

Headden

The Distance

keren

heenan

Babby’s Lament

Elizabeth

Heery

lay lady lay on your big grass bed

Michael

Heffernan

Out of the Shadows

Sarah

Hegarty

Ullapool

J.D.

Hellsinger

The Bag

Orla

Hennessy

Insane Reality

Michele

Henningham

Three Trebles and a Chain

Wayne

Herbert

Three Stops To Angel

joanna

herrmann

Julia and Frances

John

Hill

The Meta More Sophist

Emmet

Hirsch

We Went There

Debz

Hobbs-Wyatt

The Skunk Ape

Jim

Hohenbary

True

John

Holland

Why I Live In Mississippi

Phyllis

Hollenbeck

The Eeko of Atdm

Luke

Holm

The Great and Amazing Disappearing You

Matthew

Hooton

Pookies

Conor

Houghton

The end of the world as we know it

Anthony

Howcroft

The Mugging Plague

Jeremy

Howell

The Last of Michiko

Mandy

Huggins

A Lancashire Lane

Eirik

Hunt

When They Kissed They Really Kissed:

A Story in Three Stories

The Man

in the Black Pyjamas

ONCE A BOY NOW A MAN

Melanie

Ingram

A birthday present

Gail

Ingram

Philosophy Begins With A Ž

jones

irwin

DONNELLY

jones

irwin

Jack the Ink

sarah

isaac

Tayama-tei

Mariko

Iwasaki

Skittery-winter’s Tale

Olive

Jackson

Another Day at the Office

Julian

Jackson

Six Million Dollar Boys

Barry

Jacques

Her Rocket Ship Still Falling Up

Alice

Jolly

I Have My Suspicions About That

Alice

Jolly

Rooster Song

Carol

Jones

Beneath the Sand of the Hourglass

Chris

Jones

Collecting Virtues

Marc

Jones

Kitten Heels

Marc

Jones

There Were Red Roses At The Gas Station

Jaimee

Joroff

Beetle Mania

Peter

Jump

The Announcement

Haico

Kaashoek

Prone

Anna

Kalinski

The Sea Witch

Dave

Kavanagh

Your dream life come true.

Kevin

Keely

KEEPING UP

Sara

Keene

The Tin Whistle

Jack

Kelleher

Goodbye Ringo

Jack

Kelleher

Unravelling

Bridgett

Kendall

Milkweed and mercy

Louise

Kennedy

Plagium

Marjorie

Kennedy

The Smiles

Alan

Keogh

Snow Load

Liz

Kerr

Minor Ways of Being

Olivia

Kiernan

Black Socks

Noel

King

THE CONVENER

Stella

Klein

Cats

Harriet

Kline

The Beauty Contest

William

Konarzewski

The Renaissance of Thomas Bilney

William

Konarzewski

The Ambassador’s PA

David

Kotok

The Protagonists

Kieran

Lambe

A Small Unfinished Life

Maria

Lane

The Siren of the Central Line

John

Langan

Marie

Lauren

Lawler

The Sheer Joy of It All

Stephen

Leach

Empty Nest

Johanna

Leahy

The Faithful Look Away

Melissa

Lee-Houghton

Within these walls

Simon

Lee-Price

The Fourth of July

Kathryn

Legan

A Man About a Dog

M.B.

Lennon

Deserters

Julia

Lichtblau

Debbie Does Doomsday

Lex

Lindsay

THE BLACK LACE DRESS

Sarah C

Linnane

Lost

Julie

Lockwood

Everybody Wants Baby Girls

k

Lockwood Jefford

Paul Newman Eyes

k

Lockwood Jefford

MISERY LOVES COMPANY

joe

lombo

Good For Carving A Turkey

virginia

lowes

John’s Bird

Annie

Lowney

Summer, 2002

Nancy

Ludmerer

Second Home

Nancy

Ludmerer

The Year of Four

Nancy

Ludmerer

Executions

Robert

Lumsden

The Remedy

Robert

Lumsden

Nobody knows the shivering stars

Niamh

MacCabe

Dirty Silver on the Matt Black Rock

Niamh

MacCabe

The Dark Unfathomable Solace Remembered

Niamh

MacCabe

The Lark Ascending

Niamh

MacCabe

Hirundo Rustica

Niamh

MacCabe

This is Unravel

Niamh

MacCabe

No Fall from Lie

Niamh

MacCabe

Raindance

Soudabeh

MacClancy

Kelly’s Eye

Janis

Mackay

Tattletale,1994

Maggie

Mackay

Running with the Dog

Bobby

MacPherson

The Living Must Eat

Meagan

Macvie

The Uninvited

Andre

Mangeot

Guitar Hero

Louise

Mangos

Endpoint

Keeley

Mansfield

Spirit in the Sky

Nick

Marsden

Lost On the Way to Paradise

Nicola

Martin

Certain Trains

David

Mathews

The Weather at the Dinner Table

Jo

Mazelis

The Hotel

Jo

Mazelis

Everyone Here Has a Story

Eamon

Mc Guinness

Man in a Shed

James

McCabe

TOM DEMPSEY AND THE MIDDAY TIGER

John

McCabe

A Pocket Full of Matches

mahon

mccann

Maggie’s Straw Hat

Veronica

McGivney

Evie

Anna

McGrail

Kill The Craic

David

McGrath

The Ballybailte Donkey Derby

David

McGrath

An energetic chorus of love

Trisha

McKinney

Shopping Centre

Catherine

McLoughlin

Knight Meets Octopus

Thomas

McNally

THE WINTER THEY WIDENED THE ROAD

Petra

McNulty

Name The Dead

Catherine

Menon

Armstrong

Erinna

Mettler

Blue, red, blue, red, blue

jennifer

mills

Dog Days

GUY

MITCHELL

That Was How

GUY

MITCHELL

Handsome

GUY

MITCHELL

What About Me Mikey?

GUY

MITCHELL

My Cousin Harold

Jim

Moeller

Like Christians At A Suicide

Stuart

Molloy

A corrupt little exercise

Donal

Moloney

And now this

Donal

Moloney

Not Like Water

Safia

Moore

Elevation

Luke

Morgan

Russian biscuits are best

Vicki

Morley

Blue

Linda

Moser

Slainte

Linda

Moser

Lancaster Street

Linda

Moser

Lone Tree Hill

Nikki

Mottram

A Nun’s Arse

James

Mulhern

Rabbit Starvation

craig

mullineaux

Me and Peter James McGee

Pauline

Murphy

Brogan On Adelaide Park

Andrew

Murphy

The Fight

Daniel

Murphy

Frogs; The City

Aengus

Murray

He, revisited

Aongus

Murtagh

Dead Things

Kate

Myers

This is not a Fairytale

M

N/A

Charade

May

Nasr

Hit Me Like You Mean It

Farid

Nassif

Grime

martin

nathan

Almost Theides

Manini

Nayar

Almost Angels

Charles

Nevin

THE GREEN SHIRT

Peter

Newall

CHERRY VARENIKI

Peter

Newall

Borderline

Richard

Newton

The Unknown Visitor

Michael

Noonan

Baby Dragon

john

norry

Glassblown Stars

Lily

Nueva

Intensive Care

Anne

O’Brien

Silence

Tom

O’Brien

Pitch

Amanda

O’Callaghan

The Buddy Dharma

Fiona

O’Connor

The Obituary

Clare

O’Dea

Fr Tom

Malachi

O’Doherty

Just Like You

John

O’Donnell

May Day ’99

Jim

O’Donoghue

Accident on Slowackiego Street

Jim

O’Donoghue

Corner Boys and a Boot Girl

Anthony

O’Donovan

Sunrise

Sean

O’Leary

Thursday Nights at the Parochial House

Jane

O’Neill

Ghosts and Giants

clare

O’reilly

Out Foreign

Mary

O’Shea

Teenagers

Terry

O’Shea

Strays

Donal

O’Sullivan

Inheritance

Kath

O’Sullivan

Sea Saw

Liz

O’Sullivan

The End of Every Step

Sarah

Olson

The Plain

Jonathan

Page

One in, one out

R

Parker

Dissenters

Stuart

Paterson

Business as usual at The Yew Tree

Hannah

Persaud

Aequanimitas: Or, How to Fall Out of Love

Frances

Phillips

Bad Day for a Prank

Matt

Pigott

Like Bonnie and Clyde

Jonathan

Pinnock

What’s in a Name?

Mark

Piper

Secret Rendezvous

Elizabeth

Player

Ghostie Boy

Stephen

Policoff

The Switchover

Jim

Power

Home from War

brendan

price

Nu-life

Chris

Price

ONE MOUTH

Clare

Pugh

A POSTHUMOUS EMBRACE

Troy

Ratcliffe

WILL A SPARROW MOURN FOR JIMMY ALDRIDGE?

Troy

Ratcliffe

The Vanishing

David

Rea

Pillow Talk

Paula

Read

House that Jack Built

Russell

Reader

HAPPY NOW

Alex

Reece Abbott

The Cat and The Mouse

David

Revel

Men of Science, Men of God

Amanda

Reynolds

Dialogue

Michael

Rhodes

Cwtch

Jane

Roberts

Hercules Versus the Unicorn Army

Jane

Roberts

Make mine whisky

Sue

Robertson

After The Last Train Left.

Glenn

Robinson

Exhibit A

Tessa

Robinson

Lines of Resistance

John

Rodgers

The Day Our Ship Came In

Toby

Roebuck

When I See You Again

pauline

rooney

the worlds greatest bachelor

pauline

rooney

Sea Fret

Dilys

Rose

Look there’s a light in the Drumlins.

Sean

Ross

A Quiet Frontier

a.m

ruiz

Letter to a Friend

Paola

Ruocco

An Overnight Success

Valerie

Ryan

The Rub of the Green

Lynn

Sadler

Phenomenology

Michele

Sagan

The Spirit of Repentance

Michele

Sagan

Dost-e-Whisky

Bashir

Sakhawarz

Anton and the Giant Scale of Justice: A Tale for Adults

Nivien

Saleh

First and Last

Tom

Sanderson

Membrane

Sabah

Sanhouri

Curtain Call

Richard

Scarsbrook

Tiger

Lynette

Schinke

Maddie Alone

Jane

Seaford

A French Exit

peter

sear

The Inflation

Ian

Sears

Eel

Stefanie

Seddon

Zoomorphic Juvenescence

Bikram

Sharma

Cousin Peter

Barry

Sheils

Trophy

Tara

Sherman

Mountain and the Boots

Brie

Sherow

The Road With Reasons

AHJIN

SHIM

The Good Old Days of Evil

Gareth

Shore

The Queen’s Tale

Fiona

Skepper

the receiver

Tracey

Slaughter

Three Memories of a Young Dragon

Dan

Sofaer

In the Empty Heart of a Continent

Edmund

Soohoo

Mrs Weber

Daniel

Soule

James Dean Daydream

Ruby

Speechley

The McAn Man

Brian

Spellman

Chasing Dreams through Nightmares

Brian

Spellman

Just Visiting

Sofia

Stambolieva

Monster: Eight Letters?

Lindsay

Stanberry-Flynn

Her Own Woman

Lindsay

Staniforth

Returns

John

Staples

The Air Con Queen

Shanna

Streich

9th and Pine, 1989

Sam

Sudar

Oviparous

Sam

Sudar

The Menace at the Gate (but not the same as last time)

Janet

Swinney

In May

Jasmine

Szabo-Knox

Sundowners

Mandy

Taggart

Richard’s Grief

catherine

talbot

One of Those Things

Daniel

Tantanella

Mother’s Keepers

Jeff

Taylor

The Sea

Tracey

Taylor

Second Lives

Lisa C.

Taylor

Full of Grace

Phyllida

Taylor

A WOMAN’S INTUIUTION

Judith

Tipping

SHIRLEY’S GOLD HERITAGE

Neila

Todd

Snake Oil for the Third Millennium

Peter

Tonkin

Odin’s Birds

Sylvia

Torti

Salt

Kate

Tregaskis

The Sun And The Moon Were Out

Annette

Trevitt

Fish Eye

Adam

Trodd

Angel of death

Marcus

Tse

Graduation Day

Jennie

Tucker

The Stolen Day

Jennie

Tucker

Revelations At The Hot Spot

Jennie

Tucker

Perilous Illusions

George

Tuohy

Nashville

Judith

Turner-Yamamoto

How Do You Know Them?

Dave

Tynan

Semi-Beauty and the Beast

Emily Claire

Utley

Abducted And Raped By Aliens

Bob

Van Laerhoven

Ducks

Peter

Vey

Flattery’s Tale

Michael

Vigor

Two Nothing

Martin

Wakefield

The Scent of Oranges

Francesca

Walsh

The French Exchange

Elizabeth

Walter

Fisherman’s Rib

Phillipa

Warden Hill

Casserole Queens

Bill

Watkins

The Boy Who Ran

Christoph

Weber

Courtship

Philippa

West

“The Setting Sun”

Star

Westbrook Earle

African Grey

melanie

whipman

A Lesson in Collaboration

Polly Ann

White

Grapefruit

Ellen

Wiles

Landlady Of The Flies

Michelle

Wilker

Silos

Scott

Williamson

Of Human Frailty

Sarah

Willis

The Gilt Thief

Chloe

Wilson

The Reviewer

Michele

Wong

Pisces

Susan

Wood

Charlie’s Book

Peter

Woodbridge

bRuddy

David

Woods

Iced Buns for Barry

james

woolf

Shifting Stuff

James Bernie

Yeo

I Believe in Miracles

Richard

Ziglar

Faith in the Unreal World

Les

Zigomanis

 

 

SHORTLIST: Fish Short Story Prize 2015 (143 stories selected from 1,400)

TITLE

Name Surname

The Duel

 

 

The Hole in the Fence

Christine

Adamson

Conceptual

Cait

Atherton

Me & Mr. Tinkles

Thomas

Atkinson

Unknown Bulky Contents

Paul

Bassett Davies

Come in for a Cocktail

kate

beales

Clair de Lune

Susan

Bennett

He’s the One

Anthony

Brophy

“cotton and crème”

Chad

Broughman

         THE JUNGLE

josephine

bruni

A Summer’s Day Odyssey

Kathryn

Burke

A Little Trouble with the Spirits

Deborah

Cameron

Skye

Neil

Campbell

If our reduction is not stereospecific,

then how can our product

be enantiomerically pure?

Aoife

Casby

Jokes in lemon juice

Lezanne

Clannachan

What I’ve Got

Amanda

Coats

Hanging Houses

Kathy

Conde

Troll

chrs

connolly

Lady from America

john austin

connolly

GIRL IN KNOTS!

Priscilla

Corbin

The Party Poodle

jacqui

corcoran

Myles To Go

Frank

Cossa

The Lion

Steve

Crow

Kindred Spirits

Maureen

Cullen

Seeking Treasure

Patricia

Davis

Bella

Diane

Demeter

To Woo

Anthony

Dew

UNDER THE OAK

Cáit R

Doherty-Coogan

Brothers-in-arms

Ray

Dolphin

Iscariot

Anne

Donnelly

Bengal Terrace

Dermot

Duffy

Be A Man

Julia

Dunne

Heaven

Owen

Dwyer

Big Fish

Michael

Erickson

Head Shrink

Alun

Evans

Loggerheads

Emer

Fallon

The Stoneman’s Wife

chris

fitzgerald

Apocalypse Systems

Stephen

Flanagan

Molly & Jack at the Seaside

Lauren

Foley

Regula Et Vita

Larry

Fondation

The Fontanel

Thomas

Froyland

Runt

gerard

galvin

Agatha Earle

Tiffanie

George

Aliens

David

Gibson

Islands

Penny

Gibson

Class Reunion

Joseph

Golombek, Jr.

Quixby

Michael

Green

Circle City

Robert

Grindy

The Net

Jacqueline P

Haskell

The Burglar Trap

Lander

Hawes

The Distance

keren

heenan

Out of the Shadows

Sarah

Hegarty

Insane Reality

Michele

Henningham

Why I Live In Mississippi

Phyllis

Hollenbeck

The Mugging Plague

Jeremy

Howell

When They Kissed They Really Kissed:

A Story in Three Stories

The Man

in the Black Pyjamas

A birthday present

Gail

Ingram

DONNELLY

jones

irwin

Another Day at the Office

Julian

Jackson

Six Million Dollar Boys

Barry

Jacques

Her Rocket Ship Still Falling Up

Alice

Jolly

I Have My Suspicions About That

Alice

Jolly

Beetle Mania

Peter

Jump

The Renaissance of Thomas Bilney

William

Konarzewski

The Sheer Joy of It All

Stephen

Leach

The Faithful Look Away

Melissa

Lee-Houghton

The Fourth of July

Kathryn

Legan

A Man About a Dog

M.B.

Lennon

Deserters

Julia

Lichtblau

Debbie Does Doomsday

Lex

Lindsay

Paul Newman Eyes

k

Lockwood Jefford

Summer, 2002

Nancy

Ludmerer

Second Home

Nancy

Ludmerer

The Year of Four

Nancy

Ludmerer

The Lark Ascending

Niamh

MacCabe

Hirundo Rustica

Niamh

MacCabe

This is Unravel

Niamh

MacCabe

No Fall from Lie

Niamh

MacCabe

Lost On the Way to Paradise

Nicola

Martin

Man in a Shed

James

McCabe

TOM DEMPSEY AND THE MIDDAY TIGER

John

McCabe

Shopping Centre

Catherine

McLoughlin

Name The Dead

Catherine

Menon

Armstrong

Erinna

Mettler

Blue, red, blue, red, blue

jennifer

mills

Handsome

GUY

MITCHELL

What About Me Mikey?

GUY

MITCHELL

Like Christians At A Suicide

Stuart

Molloy

A corrupt little exercise

Donal

Moloney

And now this

Donal

Moloney

Not Like Water

Safia

Moore

Elevation

Luke

Morgan

Russian biscuits are best

Vicki

Morley

Lancaster Street

Linda

Moser

A Nun’s Arse

James

Mulhern

Brogan On Adelaide Park

Andrew

Murphy

The Fight

Daniel

Murphy

Frogs; The City

Aengus

Murray

Dead Things

Kate

Myers

Hit Me Like You Mean It

Farid

Nassif

Almost Theides

Manini

Nayar

Almost Angels

Charles

Nevin

CHERRY VARENIKI

Peter

Newall

Borderline

Richard

Newton

Silence

Tom

O’Brien

Pitch

Amanda

O’Callaghan

The Buddy Dharma

Fiona

O’Connor

Aequanimitas: Or, How to Fall Out of Love

Frances

Phillips

WILL A SPARROW MOURN FOR JIMMY ALDRIDGE?

Troy

Ratcliffe

The Vanishing

David

Rea

The Cat and The Mouse

David

Revel

Dialogue

Michael

Rhodes

Hercules Versus the Unicorn Army

Jane

Roberts

Make mine whisky

Sue

Robertson

the worlds greatest bachelor

pauline

rooney

A Quiet Frontier

a.m

ruiz

First and Last

Tom

Sanderson

Zoomorphic Juvenescence

Bikram

Sharma

Cousin Peter

Barry

Sheils

Mountain and the Boots

Brie

Sherow

the receiver

Tracey

Slaughter

Three Memories of a Young Dragon

Dan

Sofaer

James Dean Daydream

Ruby

Speechley

Chasing Dreams through Nightmares

Brian

Spellman

Oviparous

Sam

Sudar

The Menace at the Gate (but not the same as last time)

Janet

Swinney

In May

Jasmine

Szabo-Knox

Richard’s Grief

catherine

talbot

Second Lives

Lisa C.

Taylor

Full of Grace

Phyllida

Taylor

Salt

Kate

Tregaskis

The Sun And The Moon Were Out

Annette

Trevitt

Nashville

Judith

Turner-Yamamoto

Abducted And Raped By Aliens

Bob

Van Laerhoven

Ducks

Peter

Vey

Flattery’s Tale

Michael

Vigor

The Scent of Oranges

Francesca

Walsh

African Grey

melanie

whipman

Of Human Frailty

Sarah

Willis

The Gilt Thief

Chloe

Wilson

The Reviewer

Michele

Wong

Shifting Stuff

James Bernie

Yeo

I Believe in Miracles

Richard

Ziglar

 

 

 

WINNERS of the 2015 Fish Short Story Prize

The ten stories chosen by judge Kevin Barry will be published in the 2016 Fish Anthology, which will be launched at the West Cork Literary Festival in July ‘16. We would like to thank Kevin for giving his time and expertise, judging the prize. His comments on the winning stories are with each title below.

Congratulations to the ten winners, their stories emerging from a field of 1,400.

The long and short lists will be published within the next day or two on the Fish website.

*The 2016 Fish Short Story Prize is now open for submissions. Judge is Neel Mukherjee. Closing 30 Nov. *

1st (The prize is €3,000, and a creative writing workshop with Claire Keegan at the West Cork Literary Festival).
Frogs; The City by Aengus Murray (Dublin, Ireland)

This is a story that mightn’t be for everyone but it was totally up my street. I was really sucked into its world – I found it utterly convincing. It’s a kind of a fable that leans in towards reality and then quickly pulls back from it again. It’s got a really lovely voice; it’s tone or note is very well got indeed. The story is as funny and sad as its memorable narrator. Like the best stories, its workings are mysterious – you don’t know how it all holds together, but it does.

2nd (The prize is €300 and a week’s residence at Anam Cara Writers Retreat).
When They Kissed They Really Kissed by The Man in the Black Pyjamas (Dublin, Ireland)

A really interesting structure, with some tremendous writing all the way through. There’s a real intensity to it. I’m not sure if the story benefits when its references to The Dead are brought above the surface – I don’t think it needs these to work on its own terms; or maybe they could be left submerged.  But this is a quibble against a very, very fine piece of work. A real writer is pulling the strings on this one.

3rd (The prize is €300)
Conceptual by Cait Atherton (UK)

This is very funny, and the voice is so very well done, but then it all builds up to something even funnier, and darker. And it’s very touching, too. It threw me – I should have twigged where it was going but I didn’t, at all. Great stuff.

Runners-up.
Circle City by Robert Grindy (Illinois, USA)

Tremendous comic energy and characterisation. Great on place and the detail seems to be very authentic. Maybe there’s a tendency to tell a little more than show but it’s a terrific story.

Clair de Lune by Susan Bennett (Australia)

The writing wears its finery unashamedly. It’s very sensitive to time, place, mores. It tells a good old-fashioned story.

To Woo by Anthony Dew (York, England)

I really like our odd little narrator friend. The story is funny and strange and it keeps the reader guessing. And I very much like the nutty ending.

Nashville by Judith Turner-Yamamoto (Cincinatti, Ohio, USA)

A very well-made story, and it’s full of real feeling, with a wealth of harsh nostalgia. It captures precisely the moment in a young life when all seems lost but all may yet be there to play for.

Me And Mr Tinkles by Thomas Atkinson (Ohio, USA)

This is a story that builds very powerfully, line by line, and then builds some more. I think it’s conceivably one draft short of where it should be but it has a real effect on the reader, and the ending is tremendous.

Jokes in Lemon Juice by Lezanne Clanachan (West Sussex, UK, via Denmark)

There is some very nice and unexpected detail in this. The story carries real emotion and a kind of strangeness, too, which I found oddly moving. 

The Sun And The Moon Were Out by Annette Trevitt (Victoria, Australia)

A tangled web of a story, again with great detail all along the way.  It keeps the thumb moving through the pages, and the style is very fine.

top

Flash Fiction Prize

Fish Flash Fiction Prize

 

 

 Prizes    –   Rules   –   Entry Fees   –   How to Enter  –  ENTER NOW

 

 

The Fish Flash Fiction Prize is an opportunity to attempt one of the most interesting and rewarding tasks – to create, in a tiny fragment, a completely resolved and compelling story in 300 words or less.

Michelle Elvy, flash fiction writer from New Zealand is the judge for 2024. Michelle will be selecting the 10 flash stories to be published in the Fish Anthology 2024.  ABOUT MICHELLE

The Flash Fiction Stories are wonderfully entertaining to read and challenging to write, but we love them and so do the readers of the Fish Anthology. This is a chance to get a story, however small, into the next Fish Anthology.

The Fish Flash Fiction Prize has been an annual event since 2004.
To view our catalogue of anthologies containing the winning stories from previous flash fiction contests and to read extracts, click Fish Books.

If you would like to refine your flash fiction writing skills, you might like to take advantage of the Flash Fiction Writing Course.

Critique Service provides an appraisal of your work prior to entering a writing contest, or at any time.  

 

 

Prizes: Flash Fiction Prize

Ten stories will be published in the Fish Anthology 2024. (First, second, third and seven honourable mentions)

First – €1,000

SecondOnline Writing Course + €300

Third – €300

The ten published authors will each receive five copies of the Anthology and will be invited to read at the launch during the West Cork Literary Festival in July ’24.

 

 

 

Rules: Flash Fiction Prize

  • No entry form is needed.
  • Entry is online or by post if required.
  • You can enter as many times as you wish.
  • The Flash Fiction Contest is open to writers of any nationality writing in English.
  • There is no restriction on theme or style.
  • Maximum number of words is 300. The title is not included in the word limit.
  • The winning stories must be available for the Fish Anthology, and therefore must not have been published previously.
  • Fish holds publishing rights for work published in the Fish Anthology for one year after publication, after which rights revert to the author. (Please acknowledge Fish in any subsequent publications.)
  • Notification of receipt of entry will normally be by email.
  • The judges’ verdict is final. No correspondence will be entered into.
  • Stories cannot be altered or substituted once they have been entered.
  • Judging is anonymous. Name and contact details must not appear on the stories, (in the box provided if entering online, on separate sheet if entering by post).
  • In order to give opportunities to emerging writers: (a) Writers who have had two flash stories published in Fish Anthologies may not enter for three years after their second publication. They may enter other Fish competitions. (b) Previous first prize winners may enter again, but will not be eligible for the first prize.
  • Entry fees will not be returned if stories are withdrawn after entering.
  • Entry is taken to be acceptance of these rules.

 

 

Entry Fees: Flash Fiction Prize

  First Entry
 Subsequent
ONLINE 14.00 9.00
Critique (Optional) 38.00 38.00
Entry & Critique  52.00  
     
POST 16.00 11.00
Critique (Optional) 40.00 40.00

 

 

How to Enter: Flash Fiction Prize

You can enter online or by post. The cheaper option is to enter online.

– How to Enter ONLINE:
To enter online, click on the green button and follow the instructions. 

MAKE SURE YOUR NAME AND CONTACT DETAILS ARE NOT ON THE STORY.
(Judging is done anonymously.) Your story and name are linked automatically when you enter.

 

– How to Enter by POST: 
Post to: Fish Flash Fiction Prize, Collingwood, Coomkeen, Durrus, Bantry, Co. Cork, P75 H704, Ireland.
Please use normal postal service (not couriers as this service is unreliable in our rural area).
Best not to use registered post as this slows receipt. (We will email you to confirm that your entry has arrived.)

Make cheques payable to Fish Publishing, using your country’s currency.
Do not sent postal orders (outside Ireland).
Print on one side of the page only in reasonable sized type.
The Flash Fiction Prize is judged anonymously, so please do not put your name or contact details on any of the story pages.
Include all contact details on a separate sheet.
Receipt of entry will be by email.
Stories will not be returned.

 

 

 

Michelle Elvy

MORE ABOUT MICHELLE

Michelle Elvy is a writer, editor and teacher of creative writing in Ōtepoti Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand. In 2010, she co-founded the 52|250 A Year of Flash project, and in 2012 she founded National Flash Fiction Day NZ and Flash Frontier: An Adventure in Short Fiction. Her books include the everrumble (2019) and the other side of better (2021) and her anthology editing work includes, most recently, A Kind of Shelter: Whakaruru-taha (2023), A Cluster of Lights: then and now, 52 writers from around the world (2023), Breach of All Size: Small stories on Ulysses, love and Venice (2022) and Ko Aotearoa Tātou | We Are New Zealand (2020), as well as the international Best Small Fictions series, where she has edited since 2015. 

MORE ABOUT MICHELLE

 

 

Past Winners

Past Winners of  Fish Writing Contests.

Many of the authors who have their story published in the Annual Fish Anthology, have subsequently had further publications and even gone on to be house-hold names. Fish Writers

Here is a list of the overall winners. To find all of the authors published in Fish Anthologies, see Fish Books

 

Read Extracts from Fish Anthologies

 

Short Story Contest – Overall Winners

1996: The Stranger by Molly McCloskey (biography)

1997: Dog Days by Karl Iagnemma (biography)

1998: Scrap Magic by Richard O’Reilly

1999: From the Bering Strait by Gina Ochsner (read)

2000: Five O’Clock Shadow Kathryn Hughes 2001: Asylum 1928 by Maureen E. O’Neill (read)

2002: Franklin’s Grace by Catherine L. Dowd

2003: Feathers & Cigarettes by Andrew Lloyd-Jones (read)

2004: Spoonface by Freda Churches

2005: The Mountains of Mars by Marc Phillips (biography)

2006: Grandmother, Girl, Wolf by Katie Henderson

2007: A Paper Heart Is Beating, A Paper Boat Sets Sail by Kathleen Murray (read)

2008: Harlem River Blues by Julia Van Middlesworth

2009: Ten Pint Ted by Ian Wild (read)

2010: A Matter of Luck by Jane Camens

2011: The Space Between Louis and Me by Mary O’Donnell (read)

2012: Roommates by Linda Heurin

2013: The Nut Machine by Sally Franicevich

2014: Taylor Keith by David Butler

2015: The Pace of Change by Chris Weldon

2016: Frogs; The City by Aengus Murray

2017: Dead Souls by Sean Lusk

2018: Clippings by Helen Chambers

2019: Wakkanai Station by Richard Lambert

2020: 25:13 by Tracey Slaughter

2021: A Correspondence by Mark Martin

2022: The Days by Shannon Shavvas

2023: Vietnam by Letty Butler

 

Flash Fiction Contest – Overall Winners

2004: Countdown to Ecstasy by Adrian Wistreich

2005: Postcard From New York by Tom Murry
2005: Believe It by Brian Tiernan

2006: Out of Order by Clorinda Smith

2007: Skaters by Patricia Middleton

2008: Will we go on Ahead and Wait for You by Michael Logan

2009: In the Car by Bernadette M. Smyth

2010: Darling Mummy by Zoe Sinclair

2011: The Long Wet Grass by Seamus Scanlon (read)

2012: Serene Suburban Sunday by John Mulligan

2013: Jennifer’s Piano by Ken Elkes

2014: A Theory of Relativity by Sally Ashton

2015: Trashfish by Chloe Wilson

2016: The Young Brown Bear by Julie Netherton

2017: Lost by Lindsay Fisher

2018: The Chemistry of Living Things

2019: Teavarran by Louise Swingler

2020: Morning Routine by Kim Catanzarite

2021: Both On and Off by Jack Barker-Clark

2022: The Stone Cottage by Partridge Boswell

2023: First Steps in Probability by Susan Wigmore

 

Poetry Prize – Overall Winners

2006: The Siren Lovers by Richard Rudd

2007: The Island Grows on Me by Tim Lenton

2008: The Stolen Sheela Ni Gig of Aghagower Speaks by Jean O’Brien

2009: The Locksmith by Annie Atkins

2010: Limbo by Catherine Phil MacCarthy

2011: string theory by Ken Taylor

2012: What Remains by Martin Childs

2013: Against Forgetting by Andy Kissane

2014: Pacific Rim by Chris Andrews

2015: Saint John’s Primary School Nativity. Nineteen Years On. by Tessa Maude

2016: Death of a Refugee by Ciaran O’Rourke

2017: Paris, 13 November 2015 by Róisín Kelly

2018: Vernacular Green by Janet Murray

2019: Not My Michael Furey by A M Cousins

2020: Father by Peggy McCarthy

2021: Letter to Dowsie, from Roethke in Ireland by Greg Rappleye

2022: The Life Galleries, Kelvingrove by Susan Shepherd

2023: The Scene Without by Winifred Hughes

 

Short Memoir Contest – Overall Winners

2012: Music Today? by Stephen Policoff

2013: Luscus by Maureen Boyle

2014: In the Dark Garden by Kirstin Zhang

2015: Throat of Morning by Wendell Hawken

2016: The Way I Tell It by Angela Readman

2017: Pay Attention by Paul McGranaghan

2018: What Was Once A City by Marion Molteno

2019: Fejira // to cross by Bairbre Flood

2020: Buck Rabbit by Noelle McCarthy

2021: Blood and Roses by Mary E Black

2022: Thirteen Ways of Interrogating an Incident by Wally Suphap

2023: My Mother’s Daughter by Anneke Bender

 

Past Judges

Past Judges of Fish Publishing’s Story, Poetry and Memoir Contests. 

Since 1996, we have been joined by many successful authors, who have in common both wonderful talent and the desire to help aspiring writers. They have given their time generously, selecting stories or poems to be published in the Fish Anthology.

 

Past Judges:

1996: Roddy Doyle, Dermot Healy, Deirdre Madden.

1997: Joseph O’Connor, Jennifer Johnston, Emma Donoghue.

1998: Eamonn Sweeney, Pat Boran, Germaine Greer.

1999: Frank McCourt, Molly McCloskey, Alex Keegan.

2000: William Wharton, Julia Darling, Dermot Bolger.

2001: Kate O’Riordan, Merric Davidson, Antonia Logue.

2002: Christopher Hope, Mary Morrissy, William Wall.

2003: Pat McCabe, David Means, Geraldine Cooke.

2004: Hugo Hamilton, Roddy Doyle, Victoria Glendinning, Gina Ochsner.

2005: Julia Neuberger, Morgan Llywelyn, Frank Delaney, Dave Eggers.

2006: Michel Faber, Helen Garnons Williams, Karl Iagnemma, Gerard Donovan, Angela Jane Fountas, Leanne O’Sullivan, Michael McCarty.

2007: Michael Collins, Dame Fiona Kidman, Robert Richardson, Reginald Hill, Euan Thornycroft, Elizabeth Chadwick, Emma Darwin, Philip Gooden, Rita Ann Higgins, Robert Shaphard.

2008: David Mitchell, Carlo Gebler, Vanessa Gebbie, Michael Thorsnes, Keith Souter, Richard Lee.

2009: Colum McCann, Peter Fallon, Arthur Mathews.

2010: Ronan Bennett, Matthew Sweeney, John Hegley, Simon Munnery.

2011: Simon Mawer, Brian Turner, Chris Stewart.

2012: David Mitchell, Billy Collins, David Shields, Michael Collins.

2013: Philip O’Ceallaigh, Molly McCloskey, Peter Benson, Paul Durcan.

2014: Claire KilroyDermot HealyGlenn PattersonRuth Padel.

2015: Jennifer JohnstonCarmen BuganBret Anthony JohnstonNick Laird.

2016: Kevin BarryCarlo GeblerNuala O’ConnorDave Lordan.

2017: Neel Mukherjee, Vanessa Gebbie, Chris Stewart, Jo Shapcott.

2018: Billy O’CallaghanSherrie FlickMarti LeimbachEllen Bass

2019: Mia Gallager, Pamela PainterChrissie GittinsBilly Collins

2020: Colum McCann, Tania HershmanDavid ShieldsBilly Collins

2021: Emily Ruskovich, Kathy FishBlake MorrisonBilly Collins

2022: Sarah Hall, Tracey SlaughterQian Julie WangBilly Collins

2023: Sarah Hall, Sean LuskKit de WaalBilly Collins

2024: Sarah Hall, Sean LuskMichelle ElvyBilly Collins

 

Thank you from Fish Publishing to all the past judges.

Fish Publishing, Durrus, Bantry, Co. Cork, Ireland

COPYRIGHT 2016 FISH PUBLISHING