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"A culture is as rich and as capable of surviving as it has imaginative
artists. The artist is looked upon to start things. The artist injects the
spirit of life into a culture. And through his creative endeavors, the
writer works continually to give tomorrow a new form.
"In these modern
times, there are many communication lines for works of art. Because a
few works of art can be shown so easily to so many, there may even be fewer
artists. The competition is very keen and even dagger sharp.
"It is with this in mind that I initiated a means for new and budding
writers to have a chance for their creative efforts to be seen and acknowledged."
L.
Ron Hubbard, 1983
WRITERS AND ILLUSTRATORS OF THE FUTURE CONTESTS
From the start of his own illustrious writing career, L. Ron Hubbard offered
practical advice based on hard earned knowledge about the writer's craft
to others seeking to enter the profession. Shortly after launching his
own meteoric rise as an author of popular fiction, he was back at universities
such as Harvard and George Washington lecturing to students and offering
practical advice about how to make the jump from literary courses to professional
writing careers.
In 1935, at only twenty-four, he was elected president of the prestigious
New York Chapter of the American Fiction Guild. During his tenure Ron
initiated a much needed campaign to attract new and as yet unpublished
writers to the Guild while never hesitating to provide new members with
all-important introductions to established editors and publishers. He
was also the author of how-to articles for magazines such as Writer's
Review, Writer's Digest and Author and Journalist which were
filled with practical advice and examples, and continue to be used today
in writers' workshops and seminars.
In 1940, while hosting a radio show in Alaska, he initiated the Golden
Pen Writing Contest for which he put up the prize money and judged the
stories.
Many years later in 1983—as the culmination of his life-long commitment
to helping other writers—L. Ron Hubbard established what has become the
hallmark discovery vehicle for the best new writers of speculative fiction,
the Writers of the Future Contest. The stacks of envelopes containing
new stories by entrants display postage of every English-speaking country
and many that speak other languages. Age is not a factor. Contestants
have ranged from eleven years to seventy-five. Backgrounds and occupations
are equally diverse. Doctors, lawyers, truck drivers, housewives, factory
workers, farmers, dentists, students and professors are just a few of
the occupations represented among the thousands of aspiring entrants.
Command of the language varies from fledgling and tentative to the highest
echelons of sophistication; but every entrant shares a common
characteristic—the
urge to tell a story that is a work of narrative skill.
In 1988, under L. Ron Hubbard's inspiration, a companion contest for new
illustrators was founded to encourage the speculative fiction artist,
in much the same way the writers' contest has done for authors. Winning
illustrators take the winning stories and illustrate them for the annual
anthology,
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future.
Both contests are judged by top writers and illustrators of speculative
fiction who contribute their time and experience to identifying and encouraging
novice writers and illustrators of talent. In addition to quarterly prizes,
which earn significant cash prizes, Grand Prize winners receive $4,000
and the
L. Ron Hubbard Gold Award trophy.
Administered by ASI, on behalf of L. Ron Hubbard, the Writers of the Future
and Illustrators of the Future Contests have provided encouragement and
opportunity to novice writers and artists for more than a decade. More
than that, they have provided a springboard for many of the most promising
writers and illustrators—new talents whose gifts will shape the literary
and artistic forms of the new century. The contests are a wellspring of
creativity that has inspired a generation of creative writers and artists.
Winners of the Writers of the Future Contest alone have gone on to sell
well over two hundred fifty novels and more than two thousand
five-hundred short stories.
Entrants who have never won also point to their participation in the contest
as the driving force that speeded their entry into the professional ranks.
For more information please review www.writersofthefuture.com
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