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2008 - the year of the short story...

 

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Winners Announced

Allan reading out the winnersSaturday 23 August, Melbourne

Allan Browne announced the winners of the 2008 National Jazz Writing Competiton tonight as part of the Melbourne Writers Festival.

2008 was the year of the Short Story. The winning three entries were chosen from a total of 57 entries received and a short list of 10.

First Prize: I Thought About You, Peter Newall
A beautiful lyrically written journey on a train and into the past, with rhythms that allow us to cross into the internal reflective world of the traveller and back out again into the evoked landscape...

Second Prize: Gut Bucket Blues, Matthew Asprey
Funny, gutsy... would make a great short film.

Third Prize: Taking the A Train, Spike Mason
Irreverent comedy, a laugh-out-loud story...

Where do I read the winning stories?

Stories will be published in the first issue of extempore, Australia's newest Arts and Writing Journal. Issue 1 will be launched on 31 October at Wangaratta Festival of Jazz and will be availalbe at selected bookshops and online at www.extempore.com.au from 1 November.

Thanks to the Melbourne Writers Festival and to Adrian Sherriff who provided music on the evening.

The prizewinners...

Peter NewallPeter Newall lives and works in Sydney, where he was born. In the northern winter he travels by train through the border cities of central and eastern Europe, where he sits in jazz clubs and regrets the loss of the Habsburg empire. He speaks halting French and German, and plays the double bass poorly. His favourite musicians are Tomasz Stańko and Glenn Gould; he reads and re-reads everything written by Ivan Turgenev, Joseph Roth and Thomas Bernhard.

Matthew AspreyMatthew Asprey is a writer from Sydney. In 2004 he hosted a weekly jazz program on Gosford community radio, and has reviewed festivals, albums, and Sydney gigs for the Jazz Australia website. He recently completed a comic novel, Lewis is Robbed, which has been excerpted in Island; other short stories have appeared there and in various publications such as Total Cardboard. He teaches creative writing at Macquarie University.


Spike Mason

Spike Mason spends a large portion of his time telling stories. He does this with either improvised music or words, and has come to believe that the two activities are on a similar path. He also spends time reading autobiographies, and has discovered that it is often what a writer has left out of a story that prompts the most thought.

 


The judges

Each year the competition has attracted judges who represent the spectrum of Australian jazz expertise from education, performance, composition, writing and broadcasting; all outstanding in their respective field. This year we continue that tradition with our two judges Gerry Koster and Professor Catherine Cole.

Gerry Koster

Since February 2006, Gerry has produced and presented ABC Classic FM's new weekly jazz program, 'Jazz Up Late'. He has been involved with the Australian jazz scene for 20 years, beginning as a volunteer in 1988 at one of the nation's largest community radio stations, Melbourne's PBS 106.7FM.

During his time with PBS, Gerry produced and presented the weekly jazz program 'Dizzy Atmosphere' as well as assuming the role of Jazz Coordinator. He was later also employed in a variety of roles at PBS 106.7FM including Office Manager, Music Manager and Volunteers Coordinator. For seven years, Gerry was the Manager of the independent Australian jazz record label, Newmarket Music. These roles have seen Gerry personally involved within the Australian jazz community in a multitude of ways, liaising directly with musicians, jazz organisations, jazz festivals, venues, media and the general public.

Although his own reading tastes extend well beyond the subject matter of jazz, Gerry is widely read across the spectrum of jazz-related books, articles and stories, through his interest in the music and his research into the music and its makers.

Being a judge in this year's National Jazz Writing Competition, says Gerry, is another way to contribute to the to the music that, along with books, is vital for his general well-being.

Professor Catherine Cole

Dr Catherine Cole was recently appointed Professor of Creative Writing at RMIT University, Melbourne. She has been awarded international and local writers’ residencies - the Keesing Studio, Cité International des Arts, Paris, an Asialink Writer’s Residency in Hanoi, Vietnam and Writer’s fellowships in 1996, 2001, 2003 at Varuna, The Writers’ House, Katoomba. She has also been awarded literary grants and a wide range of funding for her research and creative projects.

Catherine has published two crime novels, (Dry Dock, 1999 and Skin Deep, 2002), short stories and poetry. Her literary novel, The Grave at Thu Le (Picador, 2005) examined French colonialism in Hanoi. Her non-fiction work includes Private Dicks and Feisty Chicks: An Interrogation of Crime Fiction (Curtin University Press, 2005) and her recent memoir about A.D. Hope, The Poet Who Forgot (UWA Press, 2008). Catherine is currently completing a novel and an anthology of writing about Vietnam.