Space Opera Fans discussion

49 views
Author & Blogger Shop-Talk > Baen has Open Submissions for Short Stories

Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Anna (new)

Anna Erishkigal (annaerishkigal) Greetings Space Opera Fans AUTHORS!!!

Baen Books has just opened up submissions for their 2015 Jim Baen Memorial Short Story Award.

HERE: http://www.baen.com/baenmemorialaward...


Jim Baen


In a nutshell (from their site):

"Since its early days, science fiction has played a unique role in human civilization. It removes the limits of what "is" and shows us a boundless vista of what "might be." Its fearless heroes, spectacular technologies and wondrous futures have inspired many people to make science, technology and space flight a real part of their lives and in doing so, have often transformed these fictions into reality. The National Space Society and Baen Books applaud the role that science fiction plays in advancing real science and have teamed up to sponsor this short fiction contest in memory of Jim Baen."


Contest Rules:

-Write a short story of no more than 8,000 words, that shows the near future (no more than about 50-60 years out) of manned space exploration.

-No entry fee. But please only submit one story...your best one!

-No reprints.

-All entries must be original works in English. Plagiarism, poetry, song lyrics, or stories that utilize characters or settings from another person’s works will not be considered.

-E-mail submissions only. Send entries as .RTF attachments to: baen.nss.contest@gmail.com

-Please put the word SUBMISSION in the subject line when sending a contest entry and QUESTION in the subject line for questions to the contest administrator.

-Please include the following in the body of your email: The title of the work, the author's name, address and telephone number, and an approximate word-count. The manuscript should be a RTF attachment, in standard manuscript format and should be titled and numbered on every page, but the author's name MUST BE DELETED to facilitate fair judging.

-Employees of Baen Books, NSS and previous Grand Prize Winners are not eligible. Previous Second and Third place winners are eligible.

-Contest opens for submissions on October 1, 2014 at 12:01am EDT. (Entries sent before that date will be deleted unread.)

-Deadline - February 1 (12:59pm), 2015.


What We Want To See: Moon bases, Mars colonies, orbital habitats, space elevators, asteroid mining, artificial intelligence, nano-technology, realistic spacecraft, heroics, sacrifice, adventure.


What We Don't Want To See: Stories that show technology or space travel as evil or bad, galactic empires, paranormal elements, UFO abductions, zombie stories, thinly veiled copies of previous winners, non-standalone novel excerpts, screenplays.

Judges: Judging will be by Baen Books editors Hank Davis, Jim Minz, Tony Daniel and best selling Baen author David Drake.

Prizes: The GRAND PRIZE winner will be published as the featured story on the Baen Books main website and paid at the normal paying rates for professional story submittals. The author will also receive an engraved award, free entry into the 2015 International Space Development Conference, a year's membership in the National Space Society and a prize package containing various Baen Books and National Space Society merchandise.
SECOND and THIRD place winners will receive a year's membership in the National Space Society and a prize package containing various Baen Books and National Space Society merchandise.


Winners will be announced and notified no later than March 15, 2015. (Only the winners will be notified.) The winners will be honored at the 2015 International Space Development Conference in Toronto, Canada, May 20-24, 2015. (We would prefer the winner attend the conference, but it is not required.)


message 2: by R. (new)

R. Billing (r_billing) | 196 comments This is worth entering, it's judged on what I would call "Real SF" lines. I got second place in the original 2007 contest with "Anniversary". Here's a little taster:

I punched the button and chewed Trapp's ears off. I condensed all the months of agony working with him into sixty seconds of raw vitriol. I know that I ended with "...all because you're not man enough to accept that I may well have made a fundamental discovery."

Then I realised it was the wrong button.

Trapp had heard it all right.

So had about a billion TV viewers. The whole thing had gone live on the networks. Worldwide.


message 3: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Bergeron (scifi_jon) | 370 comments Your first comment says it closed February 1 of this year.

I have to respectfully disagree with "real scifi". There is such thing as real nonfiction, it's where they tell the truth. When you enter fiction nothing is real. There is no right or wrong way to write fiction.


message 4: by R. (new)

R. Billing (r_billing) | 196 comments Noli de gustibus...

OK, point taken.


message 5: by Anna (new)

Anna Erishkigal (annaerishkigal) R. wrote: "This is worth entering, it's judged on what I would call "Real SF" lines..."

I think they meant 'hard' sci-fi, which is more techno-heavy.


message 6: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Bergeron (scifi_jon) | 370 comments haha. When I read "techno-heavy" I think of the times I went to raves.


back to top