(in alphabetical order)
K. L. Boejden
K. L. Boejden was born in South Korea, grew up in Denmark, studied in Paris, and now lives and works in Norway. He finds the arctic cold and darkness almost as inspiring as the cafés in Paris.
Jane Fraser
Jane Fraser lives in the small village of Llangennith, on the Gower peninsula, south Wales where she co-directs NB: Design, a design agency, by day and writes at every other opportunity. She has a Creative Writing MA from Swansea University and a PhD for a collection of short fiction entitled, The South Westerlies. She is a winner of the British Haiku Society and Genjuan International Prize for haibun. She has been a runner-up in the Rhys Davies Short Story Competition and Fish Memoir Prize, been longlisted once for the ABR Elizabeth Jolley Prize and seven times for the Manchester Fiction Prize.
Her work has been published in prize-winning anthologies including Accent and Momaya Press, and by New Welsh Review and The Lonely Crowd. She is grandmother to Megan 8, Florence 7 and Alice 3 who think it cool that, “Grandma’s been going to school to write stories”.
Sakinah Hofler
Sakinah Hofler is a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati, where she is a Yates Fellow. In 2016, she was shortlisted for the Manchester Poetry Prize. She received her MFA from Florida State University, where she was a recipient of the Kingsbury Fellowship. Her work has appeared in Hayden’s Ferry Review, Eunoia Review and Counterexample Poetics. A former chemical and quality engineer, she now spends her time teaching and writing fiction, screenplays, and poetry.
P. F. Latham
Now in his 86th year, P. F. Latham grew up in the war and won his first prize for writing aged ten years and ten months (one is precise at that age). A reader all his life, he has been a soldier (briefly) a management consultant, director of a Housing corporation, and then Town Clerk at Stratford upon Avon. Currently he has a children’s story on offer to half a dozen literary agents and a love story to another set of agents. So far none has offered to take on either book.
Hannah Vincent
Hannah Vincent began her writing life as a playwright after studying drama at the University of East Anglia. She worked as a child-minder to help fund her MA in Creative Writing at Kingston and is currently carrying out doctoral research in creative and critical writing at the University of Sussex. Her first novel Alarm Girl was published by Myriad Editions in 2014 and her second The Weaning – about a psychotic child-minder – is forthcoming from Salt in February 2018.
David Wakely
Raised in South London, Dave Wakely has worked as a musician, university administrator, poetry librarian, and editor in locations as disparate as Bucharest, Notting Hill and Milton Keynes. Currently a freelance copywriter/editor after completing a Creative Writing MA, he lives in Buckinghamshire with his civil partner and too many guitars. His short stories have appeared in Ambit, Best Gay Stories 2017, Chelsea Station, Fictive Dream, Glitterwolf, Holdfast, The Mechanics’ Institute Review, Prole, Shooter and Token. A poetry salon MC and one of the organisers of Milton Keynes Literature Festival.
Highly Commended
As well as short-listing six finalists for the Fiction Prize, the judges also chose to highly commend some further stories.
- Barclay Bradbury “The Interview”
- Dominic David Burgess “McFly”
- John Burns “Alberto Tomba and the List of Grievances”
- Dakota Canon “Little Earthquakes”
- Daniel Cordle “Surface Tension”
- Christina Craigo “Sharp Cheddar with Dijon on Rye”
- Helen de Burca “At the Border”
- Rachel Despicht “Memory”
- Tatiana Duvanova “Fast-Forward”
- Peter Ferris “Working for Mr. Rambridge”
- Clare Fielder “Services”
- Laura Foakes “Deep Time”
- Louise Goulding “Wild Mushroom Soup”
- Deborah Gregory “Silas in the Sea”
- Sarah Hegarty “Lucky”
- Finegan Kruckemeyer “Nests”
- Eamonn Lenihan “Our Little Secrets”
- Niall McArdle “The Joker’s Smile Cannot Stop the World Turning”
- Deirdre McAuley “Bruising”
- Niamh MacCade “To Memorise the Lark”
- Patrick McGuiness “A Place Where it’s Always Now”
- Fozia Mubarak “After Malala Was Educated…”
- Maia Nikitina “The Sea Creature”
- Alberto Nissim “Lost in the Depths of the Ocean”
- Michelle Redfern “Finding Treasure”
- Khadija Rouf “At the Lido”
- Elizabeth Chiles Shelburne “The Spacemen Them”
- Tracey Slaughter “some facts about her home town”
- Missy Smyth “Submerge”
- Trevor Syrett “The Tiger in the Cage”
- Natalia Theodoridou “All the Ophelias in My Flat”
- Maria Thomas “Lucky”
- Louise Tondeur “Falling”
- Peter Yeoh “Small Auntie”