CRWROPPS Post: $12,500 Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize


Closing midnight, 3 May 2021.

EDM Header Jolley 600

Enter the $12,500 ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize!

Entries are now open for the 2021 ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize, worth a total of AU$12,500. The Jolley Prize is open to all short story writers writing in English. We seek original short stories of between 2,000 and 5,000 words. Closing 3 May 2021.

First Prize: $6,000
Second Prize: $4,000
Third Prize: $2,500

Judges: Gregory Day, Melinda Harvey, and Elizabeth Tan

Use the online entry form to submit your story. 

Click here for information about past winners and to read their stories. 

  

Entry fees and bundles

AU$15 for current ABR subscribers and full-time students*
or AU$25 for non-subscribers**.

Entrants who are not current ABR subscribers can choose to subscribe
when submitting their story for the special combined rates listed below:

Entry + Digital subscription - $65
Entry + Print subscription (Australia) - $100
Entry + Print subscription (NZ and Asia) - $190
Entry + Print subscription (Rest of World) - $210

*Terms and conditions apply, see website for details.
**Non-subscribers will receive a four-month digital subscription free of charge from entry.

     

 General information  

Before contacting us with queries, see our Frequently Asked Questions

Before entering the Jolley Prize, please read the Terms and Conditions.

Please forward this information to friends, colleagues and students
who may be interested in hearing about the Jolley Prize.        

 

ABR gratefully acknowledges Ian Dickson's exceptional support for the Jolley Prize, over many years.  


ABR's principal partner is Monash University. 
Visit our website for more information about ABR's supporters and sponsors.

This work was developed in a Creative Spaces managed studio.
Creative Spaces is a program of Arts Melbourne at the City of Melbourne.

Australian Book Review acknowledges the Traditional owners of the Kulin Nation as Traditional Owners of the land on which it is situated in Southbank, Victoria, and pays respect to the Elders, past and present.


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