a word to the maybe-not-wise....
Jun. 16th, 2008 09:47 amI have too much Stuff in my brain. Is crowded. Must write something down soon or may go splooey. Also? Laying out maps on the floor when you have cats? Just asking for trouble. *facepalms* and *tail-swats*
But that's not the reason for this post. The reason for this post is as follows.
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This week, a call for submissions in a SFWA-sponsored contest was posted on Craigslist and FLiXER, promising large cash prizes and publication. Writers take warning: this contest is a fake.
Here's the pitch:
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Inc. is currently accepting science fiction story submissions of no more than 3000 words. All genres of science fiction accepted. Winners will get published in a Random House book titled "Asimovs of the Future." The cash prizes for winners are as follows:
1st Place: $10,000
2nd Place: $5,000
3rd Place: $2,000
10 Honorary Mentions: $1000
All winners and honorary mentions will get published. A percentage of the royalties for the book will also be included as part of the prize. The exact percentage has yet to be determined. A check for $10 must accompany each entry, made out to "Science Fiction Writers of America." The mailing address is a "submissions center" in San Diego.
I can only imagine the number of hopeful writers who will be enticed by the SFWA name, not to mention the promise of enormous prizes plus a commercial publishing credit. Once again, however: this contest is a fake. I've confirmed this with SFWA's president, Michael Capobianco, but to anyone who's familiar with SFWA, the bogusness is obvious. SFWA does not conduct writing contests (and if it did, why would it advertise them on Craigslist, rather than on its own website?). It has no San Diego address. Its publisher is Penguin, not Random House.
Presumably, the contest is an entry fee scam--though for a scam, $10 seems a little unambitious. One also wonders how whoever is behind the scam plans to cash checks made out to SFWA.
SFWA is investigating. In the meantime, if you've entered this contest, please contact Writer Beware immediately.
http://accrispin.blogspot.com/2008/06/victoria-strauss-fake-contest-alert.html
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we now return you to your regularly-scheduled Monday.
But that's not the reason for this post. The reason for this post is as follows.
------
This week, a call for submissions in a SFWA-sponsored contest was posted on Craigslist and FLiXER, promising large cash prizes and publication. Writers take warning: this contest is a fake.
Here's the pitch:
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Inc. is currently accepting science fiction story submissions of no more than 3000 words. All genres of science fiction accepted. Winners will get published in a Random House book titled "Asimovs of the Future." The cash prizes for winners are as follows:
1st Place: $10,000
2nd Place: $5,000
3rd Place: $2,000
10 Honorary Mentions: $1000
All winners and honorary mentions will get published. A percentage of the royalties for the book will also be included as part of the prize. The exact percentage has yet to be determined. A check for $10 must accompany each entry, made out to "Science Fiction Writers of America." The mailing address is a "submissions center" in San Diego.
I can only imagine the number of hopeful writers who will be enticed by the SFWA name, not to mention the promise of enormous prizes plus a commercial publishing credit. Once again, however: this contest is a fake. I've confirmed this with SFWA's president, Michael Capobianco, but to anyone who's familiar with SFWA, the bogusness is obvious. SFWA does not conduct writing contests (and if it did, why would it advertise them on Craigslist, rather than on its own website?). It has no San Diego address. Its publisher is Penguin, not Random House.
Presumably, the contest is an entry fee scam--though for a scam, $10 seems a little unambitious. One also wonders how whoever is behind the scam plans to cash checks made out to SFWA.
SFWA is investigating. In the meantime, if you've entered this contest, please contact Writer Beware immediately.
http://accrispin.blogspot.com/2008/06/victoria-strauss-fake-contest-alert.html
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we now return you to your regularly-scheduled Monday.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 01:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 01:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 02:31 pm (UTC)Laying them ANYWHERE here, gets a cat laying on them. Magazines get at least one too.}:P
no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 02:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 04:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 04:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-16 07:42 pm (UTC)(also as an update on converting the infidels, or whatever it was called, I got my best friend to read Robin McKinley's Sunshine, and tho it's not fantasy, I got my book-hating boyfriend to start Mark Dunn's Ella Minnow Pea. Yay for a successful month!)
no subject
Date: 2008-06-17 02:54 pm (UTC)One also wonders how whoever is behind the scam plans to cash checks made out to SFWA
Easy enough. An account DBA SFWA would do it. The money would still be traceable, but the checks could certainly be cashed. The theory, I expect, is that nobody would try to trace the money if none of the contestants realized that nobody actually won the contest. And it's not as if these guys are all that slick. The prize money is laughably over the top, and the vague "a percentage of royalties" screams scam.
And you're right; $10 is way too low an entry fee for a prize that big.