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Short Story Day Africa

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<strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong><br />

Press Release<br />

On Wednesday 20 June revel in a celebration of fiction’s short- yet-<br />

perfectly-crafted form, the short story.<br />

Last year on June 21st, the shortest day of the year, we invited you to<br />

participate in <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> South, a southern-<strong>Africa</strong>n celebration of<br />

short fiction.<br />

This year on June 20th, <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> goes global with the launch<br />

of International <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> and <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong>.<br />

<strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong> aims to highlight the outstanding fiction<br />

<strong>Africa</strong> has to offer. We encourage every one of all ages and all genders to<br />

do something in honour of the short story. This could be absolutely<br />

anything, from running a creative workshop or class, a competition,<br />

making a short film or film adaptation of a short story, organizing a<br />

spoken word night, a reading, an author appearance, a literary salon, or<br />

simply picking up a short story and enjoying it, for maybe the first or the<br />

hundredth time.<br />

Whatever it is you're doing, we want to hear about it! Send us<br />

details of your event to info@shortstorydayafrica.org, a link to your<br />

website (if applicable), and any images you have, and we'll put it on the<br />

brand new <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong> website, where you can also find short<br />

stories to read and enjoy, short story recommendations, competitions,<br />

giveaways and more.<br />

Follow us on Twitter @shortstoryAFR or Facebook <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong><br />

www.shortstorydayafrica.org


What’s it all about?<br />

The concept, celebrating the short story on the shortest day of the year,<br />

is borrowed from the pilot project, National <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong><br />

(www.nationalshortstoryday.co.uk), which launched in the UK in October<br />

2010 and concluded on 21 December (their shortest day). The project<br />

grew organically using social networking tools (Facebook and Twitter)<br />

and was a great success. <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> South followed on 21 June<br />

2011, culminating in a series of events around the country, including the<br />

popular Chain Gang Challenge.<br />

This year, the organizers of National <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> and <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong><br />

South, decided to collaborate to create an international celebration.<br />

International <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> was born, with <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong><br />

focusing on <strong>Africa</strong>n writing and writers.<br />

Who can take part?<br />

Readers and writers of all ages, teachers, students...YOU!<br />

Competitions and Giveaways<br />

As part of the International <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> celebrations, The Book<br />

Lounge (South <strong>Africa</strong>) and Comma Press (United Kingdom) challenge you<br />

to a chain story competition. At 8.00am GMT* on Wednesday 20th June,<br />

the first literary legends will sit down around the globe and start writing.<br />

An hour later, the keyboard will be wrested from his/her hands and<br />

passed on.<br />

As each segment of the story unravels, we’ll upload it to the <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong><br />

<strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong> website. Readers will be able to watch the stories unfold online<br />

and, at 2.00pm GMT, when the last writer adds the final full stop, the<br />

www.shortstorydayafrica.org


polls will open and readers can begin voting for their favourite story.<br />

Prizes sponsored by Comma Press.<br />

* 9.00am UK and 10.00am SA<br />

This year also sees the return of the popular Fiction Flash and, during the<br />

week running up to <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong>, we will be giving away books and<br />

prizes. See the <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong> website for details.<br />

YA and KIDS<br />

This year, the <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Africa</strong> has a new team member. Tiah<br />

Beautement will be spearheading an all new <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong><br />

children’s programme. See the website for details of kids’ workshops,<br />

competitions and giveaways.<br />

Submissions<br />

In the month of June, we will publish short stories from some of <strong>Africa</strong>’s<br />

most talented. Previously published writers wishing to take advantage of<br />

this opportunity for greater exposure of their work, should see the<br />

website for submission guidelines.<br />

Who is behind <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Story</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>Africa</strong>?<br />

Rachel Zadok is the author of Gem Squash Tokoloshe (shortlisted<br />

for The Whitbread First Novel Award 2005 and The John Llewellyn Rhys<br />

Prize 2005). Her long-awaited second novel, The Gathering Station, is<br />

due out April 2013. She lives in Cape Town with her husband and her<br />

daughter.<br />

www.shortstorydayafrica.org


Isla Haddow-Flood is a writer, editor and marketing specialist who<br />

works specifically on cultural fields in <strong>Africa</strong>. She currently works for the<br />

<strong>Africa</strong> Centre (www.africacentre.net), advising on and implementing<br />

marketing strategies across their 10 projects. She lives in Cape Town with<br />

her husband and son.<br />

Colleen Higgs is a writer and a publisher. She launched Modjaji<br />

Books (http://modjaji.book.co.za/), an independent press for southern<br />

<strong>Africa</strong>n women writers, in 2007. She has two published collections of<br />

poems, Halfborn Woman (2004) and Lava Lamp Poems (2011). In 2012,<br />

her first collection of short stories, Looking for Trouble was published.<br />

She lives in Cape Town with her daughter.<br />

Tiah Marie Beautement is the author of the novel Moons Don’t<br />

Go to Venus. <strong>Short</strong>er works have appeared in various publications,<br />

including two anthologies: The Edge of Things and Wisdom Has a Voice.<br />

She lives on the Garden Route with her husband, two children, Orwell the<br />

dog and five chickens all named Eva.<br />

www.shortstorydayafrica.org

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