Published 20 November 2012 · Writing Results of the first Overland Victoria University Short Story Prize Editorial team Announcing the results of the first Overland Victoria University Short Story Prize for New and Emerging Writers The $6000 major prize in Overland Victoria University Short Story Prize for New and Emerging Writers has been won by Tara Cartland with her story ‘Frank O’Hara’s Animals’. The joint runners-up are Melissa Fagan with ‘The Day the World Stayed the Same’ and John Turner with ‘The Killing Floor’. Each will receive $1000. The prize – one of the richest awards in Australia for emerging writers – attracted 622 entries, all of which were assessed blind. The judging panel (Victoria University academic Enza Gandolfo, Overland editor Jeff Sparrow, Overland deputy editor Jacinda Woodhead and Overland fiction editor Jennifer Mills) selected a short list of nineteen stories – seventeen by women and two by men – from which the winners were then chosen. In the judges’ report, Mills notes that ‘Frank O’Hara’s Animals’, a fantastical coming-of-age narrative, stood out both because of its themes and its execution. ‘For all its suggestions of evil,’ she says, ‘this story is suffused with a human longing for contact, and the sadness of being an outsider.’ All three stories, along with Mills’ comment, are published in Overland 209 and are now up online at overland.org.au. ‘Each of these stories was captivating,’ writes Mills, ‘even on multiple readings, and each is a well-deserved winner. Here at Overland we’ve been very pleased to be able to offer a lucrative reward to good writing, to promote the visibility of the short story form with this competition, and in particular, to continue our support and encouragement of emerging writers.’ The prize – a collaboration between Overland literary journal and Victoria University – will re-open in 2013. Editorial team More by Editorial team › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 11 December 202411 December 2024 · Writing The trouble Ken Bolton’s poems make for me, specifically, at the moment Linda Marie Walker These poems doom me to my chair and table and computer. I knew it was all downhill from here, at this age, but it’s been confirmed. My mind remains town-size, hemmed in by pine plantations and kanite walls and flat swampy land and hills called “mountains”. 17 July 202417 July 2024 · Writing “What is it that remains of us now”: witnessing the war on Palestine with Suheir Hammad Dashiell Moore The flame of her poetry scorches the states of exceptions that allow individual and state-sponsored violence to continue, unjustified, and unhistoricised. As we engage with her work, we are reminded that "chronic survival" is not merely an act of enduring but a profound declaration of existence.