Jerome Bank Story Contest

 Franklin & Marshall students are invited to submit a short story to the annual Jerome Irving Bank Memorial Short Story Contest, the winner of which will receive $1000 and the opportunity to meet with this year's contest judge.

 The Jerome Irving Bank Esq., Memorial Fund was established in 2003 by F&M alumnus Lawrence Henry Bank, Esq. '65 to honor and preserve the memory of his late brother, Jerome Irving Bank.

Eligibility:
 The contest is open to all currently-enrolled students at Franklin & Marshall College.

Deadline for submission for the 2008 Jerome Irving Bank Prize:
 Monday, January 28, 2008, 4:30 p.m.

Guidelines:
 Maximum 20 pages [typed and double-spaced], submitted in duplicate with name, class year, email and phone contacts appearing on the top left corner of the first page of the story. One story per student. No electronic submissions. Please submit to Cookie Faust ibn the English Department, Keiper Hall, 3rd Floor.


2008 Jerome Irving Bank Short Story Prize Judge:

Ryan Harty is the author of the story collection Bring Me Your Saddest Arizona, which won the 2003 John Simmons Award for the Short Fiction.  His stories have appeared in Best American Short Stories 2003, The Pushcart Prize XXVII, Playboy, Tin House, The Missouri Review, and many other publications.  He has received fellowships from the Croporation of Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony.  At Standford University, he was a Stegner Fellow and Jones Lecturer.  He received his MFA from the University of Iowa,  where he was a Teaching-Writing Fellow.  He is a currently a Helen Hertzog Zell Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan.

2008 Winner: Indrapramït Das '08, "Morphosis"

2007 Jerome Irving Bank Short Story Prize Judge:

Michael Griffith is the author of the novel Spikes (2001) and the story collection Bibliophilia (2003).  His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in New England Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, Southern Review, Five Points, Salmagundi, Oxford American, Southwest Review, The Washington Post, and many other periodicals.  He received a 2004 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and teaches at the University of Cincinnati.

2007 Winner: Adam Cogbill ‘07

2006 Jerome Irving Bank Short Story Prize Judge:

Cathy Day's short story cycle, The Circus in Winter, was published by Harcourt in 2004. Day was born in Peru, Indiana, which was once winter quarters for several traveling circuses. Her great-great uncle was an elephant trainer. Her fiction and non-fiction have appeared in New stories from the South, Story, AntiochReview, Shenandoah, and elsewhere. The Circus in Winter was a finalist for The Story Prize; the book was also Amazon.com's "Best Books of 2004," a Barnes & Noble "Discover" pick, and an "Original Voices" selection at Borders. Recipient of the Bush Artist fellowship and a New Jersey Arts Council grant, Day teaches in the graduate writing program at the University of Pittsburgh.

2006 Winner: David Axelrod  '06

2005 Jerome Irving Bank Short Story Prize Judge:

Michael Byers, author of Coast of Good Intentions  [American Academy of Arts prize for First Fiction, finalist for PEN/Hemingway Award]; Long for this World; and stories selected for The Best American Short Stories and O. Henry Awards. Michael Byers is on the faculty at the University of Pittsburgh.

2005 Winner: Erina P. Gruner '08

 

©2009 Franklin & Marshall College  |  Lancaster, PA  |  717-291-3911