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UK writer Jennifer Moore wins 2009 Commonwealth Short Story Competition

Jennifer Moore is the overall winner of this year’s Commonwealth Short Story Competition with her entry ‘Table Talk’. A witty and poignant conversation about life and death, it was selected as the best story from the Canada and Europe region and the overall winner. Moore is the first entrant from the United Kingdom to win the overall prize in this prestigious competition.

Moore lives in Devon and has an English degree from the University of Cambridge and a research Masters Degree on witchcraft in English Literature from the University of Strathclyde. Her short fiction and poetry have been published on both sides of the Atlantic. She was shortlisted for the Orange New Voices adult short story prize in 2006 and won the 2006 Divine Poetry competition.

The regional winning entries in the Commonwealth Short Story Competition were ‘The One-Armed Thief’ by Kachi Ozumba from Nigeria; ‘Debbie’s Call’ by Manasi Subramaniam from India; ‘Shades’ by Alake Pilgrim from Trinidad and Tobago; and ‘The Colour of Rain’ by Terri-Anne Green from Australia. Regional winners addressed such contemporary issues as call centres in India, sport in the Caribbean, and drought in Australia. In addition to the overall and regional winners, there are 21 highly commended entries.

The winning stories were selected from over 4,000 entries from almost all countries of the Commonwealth.The choice of stories was made on the basis of merit, originality and voice by an international panel of judges. This panel comprised Canadian short story writer Craig Boyko, English professor Dr Vibha Chauhan from India, New Zealand writer and reviewer Jolisa Gracewood, Dr Eddie Iroh, author and former Director General of the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria, and Nicholas Laughlin, Editor of The Caribbean Review of Books, and a former judge of the Foundation’s Commonwealth Writers’ Prize.

All 26 stories are available on a CD which will be broadcast widely around the Commonwealth. The actors include some of the finest readers for radio, such as Adjoa Andoh (reading a story from Nigeria), Sudhar Bhuchar (India), Dona Croll (Trinidad and Tobago), Maynard Eziashi (Nigeria), Liz Sutherland (Malaysia) and Nigel Anthony (UK), and talented new-comers Sagar Arya, Darren Hart and Manjeet Mann (Norman Beaton Fellowship winner, 2008). The winning story is read by the young and talented Jessica Raine who since graduating from RADA in 2008 has appeared in David Hare’s Gethsemane at the National Theatre in London, Ridley Scott’s film Robin Hood and the new television drama Garrow's Law for the BBC.The CD is produced by the award-winning radio producer Amber Barnfather through Goldhawk Essential, winners of last year's Sony Gold Award for Drama.

The CD is available for sale in the CBA Shop.

The competition is an annual scheme to promote new creative writing. Established in 1996, it is funded and managed by the Commonwealth Foundation in partnership with the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association. It aims to increase understanding and appreciation of Commonwealth cultures and to promote rising literary talents. Anyone who is a citizen of a Commonwealth country can enter, whether a professional or amateur writer. Entries can be on any topic, but must be original, unpublished, written in English and no more than 600 words long. For details of next year’s competition, please visit: www.commonwealthfoundation.com.

For more information, please contact Emma D’Costa on e.dcosta@commonwealth.int or phone +44 (0) 20 7747 6328 or fax +44 (0) 20 7839 8157.

If you would like to read the stories you can download them in PDF format by clicking on their title below.

Short Stories Audio
If you would like to download audio recording of a selection of the winning entries, click here.


The winners are:

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Overall Winner and regional winner Canada and Europe
Jennifer Moore (UK)
for "Table Talk"

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Regional Winner for Africa
Kachi A. Ozumba (Nigeria)
for "The One-Armed Thief"

Image Regional Winner for Asia
Manasi Subramaniam (India)
for "Debbie’s Call"
           
 

Regional Winner for the Caribbean
Alake Pilgrim (Trinidad & Tobago)
for "Shades"

Regional Winner for the Pacific
Terri-Anne Green (Australia)
for "The Colour of Rain"
           

The winners of Highly Commended stories are:

Juliet Barnes (Kenya) for "Broken Glass"

* Ayobami Adebayo (Nigeria) for "Dreams" * Akinwumi Akinwale (Nigeria) for "LIFO"
 
Mbofung Carlang Ndubuisi (Nigeria) for "The Father’s Blessing" * Becky Apteker (South Africa) for "The Sound of One Hand Clapping" * Image Soraya Sunitra Kee Xiang Yin (Malaysia) for "Light After Death"
 
Archana Mohan (India) for "The American" * Image Praveena Shivram (India) for "Neer (Water)" * Arjun Sudhir (India) for "The Visit"
 
Abeer Yusria Hoque (Bangladesh) for "On Growing"   Vanessa Savage (UK) for "The Seasons"   Dave Pescod (UK) for "All Embracing "
 
Minoli Salgado (UK) for "Too Many Legs" * Judith Allnatt (UK) for "Hiding in the Cracks" * Image

Princeton Ebanks (Jamaica) for "Caramel"

 
Barbara Jenkins (Trinidad and Tobago) for "No News is Good News" * Heidi N Holder (Trinidad and Tobago) for "Love Story No 8 – Jane and Philip" * Corinne Pentecost (Australia) for "Synchronicity"
 
Felicia Willows (Australia) for "You Can’t Miss It" * Adrian Ziino (Australia) for "Fifteen Minutes of Heart Failure" *   Lisa Merrifield (Australia) for "Into the Deep"