Creative, Literature, News

The 2024 QuietManDave Prize opens for entries – celebrating short-form writing

0 282

The QuietManDave Prize celebrates short-form writing and the life of someone who loved to experience new places, art and events and write about them.


The QuietManDave Prize, honouring theatre critic and writer Dave Murray, is now open for entries for its 2024 edition, encouraging submissions in all forms of writing.

Writers are invited to submit flash fiction and non-fiction entries until Friday 25th October, 2024.

Run by the Manchester Writing School based at Manchester Metropolitan University, the prize is named after Dave’s popular blog of the same name where he built up a portfolio of whimsical arts reviews, flash fiction and poetry.

The Prize seeks to honour Dave’s memory and achievements, in addition to encouraging and promoting new writers. It also seeks to embrace some of the core principles of Dave’s creative practice, where no forms of writing were neglected.

Previous prize winners Sara Hills and Kathryn Aldridge-Morris, demonstrated through their winning pieces the creative possibilities of reconciling strict limitations on word count with complete freedom in approaches to style and content.

Speaking ahead of this year’s Prize, Kathryn praised the QuietManDave prize values: “It is one of the best writing prizes out there for flash fiction writers! Flash is the perfect container for experimentation in prose, and in life writing – so it’s wonderful to have a competition which recognises and honours this.”

The QuietManDave competition particularly encourages submissions from new writers. Murray was trained in engineering and accountancy, getting into published writing later in life, and the prize was set up under the reality that writing can be a financially arduous feat, and often excellent writers don’t get the recognition they deserve.

It features two categories: flash fiction (up to 500 words) and flash nonfiction (up to 500 words). In both categories the first prize is £1000 and runner up prizes are £200 and £50 in each category.

Writers are prompted to write in unique and offbeat ways, with the prize asserting that forms often seen as on the periphery of prestigious writing – such as blog posts, book reviews, recipes – should be given a legitimate place in the published landscape.

For more information on the 2024 QuietManDave prize and how to enter, visit www.mmu.ac.uk/qmdprize

About the author / 

aAh!

aAh! Magazine is Manchester Metropolitan University's arts and culture magazine.

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More News Stories:

  • The Slates @ Gorilla review – packed rooms and big ambitions for the Yorkshire Lads

    Featured image and gallery: Sam Holmes From Mirfield to Manchester, this Yorkshire-born four-piece bring their funk-interwoven indie rock to a sold-out Gorilla for their biggest headline show to date. Fresh off the back of their new single ‘Watch Life Burn’ and signing their first record deal with This Feeling/ LAB Records, there is already a…

  • Manchester Film Festival 2026: Northern talent shines in record-breaking edition

    Feature image: Press The Manchester Film Festival has wrapped its 12th edition, running over 11 days and showcasing a strong line-up of local and international talent from across the independent film industry. Festival director Neil Jeram-Croft reflected on this year’s programme, filled with a mix of features, shorts and documentaries spanning the cities’ cinema hotspots:…

  • Toots and the Maytals bring ‘Reggae Got Soul’ 50th anniversary tour to Manchester

    Featured image: Press Toots and the Maytals return to Manchester for their ‘Reggae Got Soul’ 50th anniversary tour. Following their hugely successful 2025 tour, Toots and the Maytals return to Manchester to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their landmark album, Reggae Got Soul. Fronted for decades by Frederick ‘Toots’ Hibbert – named by Rolling Stone…