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Winners Of Bucks County Short Fiction Contest For High School Students Announced


Provided by Bucks County Community College:

File photo.

The Bucks County Short Fiction Contest for High School Students is pleased to announce the winners for Spring 2022.

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Maria Kesisoglou, a ninth-grader at New Hope-Solebury High School, and a resident of New Hope, won first place for her story, โ€œCatโ€™s Cradle.โ€

Bethany Conover, a sophomore at Council Rock South High School, and a resident of Holland, took second place for her story, โ€œWhat could have happened.โ€

Adam Dombrowski, a sophomore at Pennsbury High School, and a resident of Morrisville, was awarded third place for his story, โ€œNo Chances.โ€ 

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The winnersโ€™ stories were selected from a field of 67 entries this year.

The winners will receive certificates, as well as awards for $200, $100, and $50, respectively. The contest is funded by Bucks County Community College, and receives support from the Department of Language and Literature. The final judge was Joseph Shakely, a professor in the department.

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Of Kesisoglouโ€™s the first-place story, Shakely wrote, โ€œWith the first lineโ€”โ€˜A phone rings in an empty house late at nightโ€™โ€”a sense of foreboding draws the reader into this well-crafted tale of supernatural horror. The story unfolds almost entirely in the form of a message left on the answering machine in that empty house, a message that is both a warning and a plea for help from the self-described โ€˜shut-in next door.โ€™ The authorโ€™s deft handling of characterization, even within the confines of the tight narrative setup, has us believing the caller and experiencing a growing sense of dread that peaks with an ending that in retrospect seems inevitable but that nevertheless lands with a punch. The meaning of the title, too, becomes clear with that ending and provides a chilling metaphor to make the story linger in the readerโ€™s mind.โ€

Conoverโ€™s second-place story, Shakely said, is โ€œa mix of fantasy and surrealism, told in the first person by a would-be novelist experiencing writerโ€™s block. Her stop in an odd book shop with an equally odd proprietor launches her into something that seems halfway between dream and reality. The author of this story creates a narrator who remains believable and engaging whether musing on her fate, conversing awkwardly with an eccentric stranger, or struggling to get her bearings in an alternate reality. The genre-bending introduction of notes of mysticism and existentialism elevate this story well above the mere adventure tale.โ€

In regard to Dombrowskiโ€™s story, the judge noted, โ€œโ€˜No Chancesโ€™ is an ambitious story that manages within just a few pages to evoke the dystopian visions of Orwell, Burgess, and Serling. Its opening is calculatedly disorienting, reflecting the situation of the narrator. We donโ€™t lose patience with this minimal exposition, though, because we are experiencing it just as the narrator/protagonist is and because the author has a good sense of what information to introduce, when to introduce it, and how to accomplish all this in a way that seems natural and organic to the story. The emphasis on settingโ€”sterile, cold, and claustrophobicโ€”provides an effective backdrop for the emergence of the ideas at the core of โ€˜No Chances.โ€™โ€

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The winners will read from their works at a celebration at the college on Wednesday, April 20.

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