SLUSH PILE CHALLENGE January 2022

 

 

We are pleased to announce the January 2022 Slush Pile Challenge, set by Christabel McKinley, of David Higham Associates.

 


 

 

Christabel joined David Higham Associates in 2018, having previously worked in translation rights and at a scouting agency. She graduated with a degree in Russian and English Literature from Trinity College Dublin, after which she spent a year teaching English in South Korea.

 

Christabel is building a list of children’s authors and illustrators, from picture books to Young Adult fiction. She is particularly drawn to writing that feels authentically child-oriented with clear insight into the way young people feel and think. Among her favourite picture book authors, she enjoys the warmth and wit and clever rhyming of Anna Kemp’s texts, and the playfully subversive nature of Bethan Woollvin’s storytelling.

 

 

THE CHALLENGE

 

“I’d like to set a challenge of writing on the theme of New World. I have a real yearning for adventure right now (probably from being cooped up so much over the last two years!) so would love a picture book text that shows the magic of discovering the world is bigger than you think. Feel free to interpret ‘world’ in a literal, metaphorical or figurative sense – I just want to feel the surprise and delight of discovery in it.

 

Texts should be a maximum of 800 words.

 

 

THE REWARD

 

Christabel will pick a winner. She will arrange to have a 30-minute meeting with the winner.

 

It will be via Zoom or a phone call.

 

 

COMPETITION CLOSED

 

 

TERMS AND CONDITIONS

 

WHO IS ELIGIBLE?

 

 

You need to be an un-agented, current SCBWI member, and resident in either the UK or Europe.

 

If you win a challenge, you can enter any other Slush Pile Challenges but not with the same manuscript.

 

To join SCBWI and take advantage of the many opportunities to raise your profile, market your work, meet fellow writers, artists and the gatekeepers to publication, while being supported in the development and pursuit of your craft, visit scbwi.org

 

If, between submitting your entry and the winner being announced, you gain representation from an agent, please contact us at competitions@britishscbwi.org

 

 

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO DO?

 

 

1 Check that you are a paid-up member of SCBWI before submitting your entry by going to scbwi.org. Any entries received where member's details cannot be found on SCBWI records will not be included as a valid entry.

 

2 Send in your entry as a single Word Document to competitions@britishscbwi.org. Submissions to the Slush Pile Challenge should not be sent direct to the agent/editor/judge.

 

3 The document should only contain THE TITLE and PICTURE BOOK TEXT the judge has requested. Do not include your name, address or email address in your word document or the document name. The word document should be named in the following format – 'your title' January 2022 Slush Pile.doc

 

4 Please do not insert a header or footer in your submission.

 

5 In the email please write your full name as it appears in SCBWI membership records and your email address. Also include the title of your work.

 

6 Shortly after you have submitted your entry you will receive an email from the competitions email address stating, 'Your entry has been received.' If you do not receive this message please send an email to competitions@britishscbwi.org. However, we cannot put entries through after the closing date unless your entry is received on or before the closing date.

 

7 Only the first entry will be considered. Please do not send revisions, multiple entries or multiple attachments.

 

8 Any entries received after the closing date will automatically be disqualified.

 

 

THE PROCESS

 

 

As soon as the competition is closed, it is necessary to generate a random selection using a computer program. All valid and verified entries received will be included irrespective of whether the entry was received on the date of the launch of the competition or on the closing date, or whether the entrant has previously had their submissions seen by an agent/editor/judge. This has to be done to ensure that there is no bias or pre-judging from SCBWI BI/SCBWI BI Words &Pictures editorial team when sending the entries for judging. The terms of the competition are that the judge agrees to read a minimum of fifteen entries from the number of submissions. In many cases the agent/editor/ judge requests to read more. When an agent/editor/judge requests to read fifteen or another proportion of the total entries, those chosen as the first ones to be read by the computer will be sent to him/her. Sometimes the judge may request a further selection of valid and verified entries before making their decision. When this occurs, to avoid bias, the next group of entries from the initial computer generated random selection will be sent to the agent/editor/judge. There are times when the judge requests to read all the entries and these are then forwarded to him/her.

 

The judge will pick a winner and also tell us why. Sometimes he/she may quote a few sentences or phrases from the winner's submission in the blog announcing the winner.

 

The winner will be put in touch with the judge so they can arrange the 30-minute discussion by Zoom or on the phone.

 

Good Luck Everyone!

 

 

The Words & Pictures team are aware that our members write for different ages and genres. With this in mind, we endeavour to provide at least one Slush Pile Challenge a year that our un-agented members feel able to enter.

 

 

Elaine Cline has been a SCBWI member for over six years and loves to write picture books, middle-grade and teen books. She lives by the sea and has one dog and one cat. Elaine is a member of the Words & Pictures editorial team, managing The Slush Pile Challenge.

 

Elaine is a member of the Words & Pictures editorial team, managing The Slush Pile Challenge.

 

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