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Gloucestershire Writers’ Network 2025 
Poetry Competition for Young People Age 16-18

Supported by The Times and The Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival. 
Sponsored by Liggy Webb

On This Page:
GWN Competition 2025 Flyer

16-18 Poetry Competition

THEME: EDGES

Opens 1 Jan 2025 
Closes 31 May 2025
Poetry Judge - Kate Potts

Prize
£50 + anthology

Winners and runners-up will be invited to read their work at The Times and Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival, date to be announced.

Rules of Entry

The winning poem will be included in the competition 2025 anthology, and the winning poet will receive a free 2025 anthology. They will be invited to read their poem at our event at The Times and Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival in October 2025, date to be announced. Winners aged under 18 must be accompanied by a responsible adult — a parent, guardian or teacher.

  • You will only be eligible if you put your age (on 31 May 25) on your entries.
  • You will be automatically entered in the main competition.
  • All personal data and entries will be destroyed in December 2025.
Who can enter
  • You must be 16, 17 or 18 years old on 31 May 2025.
  • If you win, you must be willing to have your entry included in the anthology. You must either read your poem at our event at Cheltenham Literature Festival, or ask someone to read it on your behalf.
  • If you win and are under 18, we will require the consent of a parent, guardian or carer to publish your poem in the anthology, and for you or a reader to read it at Cheltenham Literature Festival.
What to enter

Poetry (max 50 lines). Word/line numbers do not include titles, stanza breaks or epigrams.

  • Your entries must be your own work, unpublished either electronically or in print.
  • If you wish to submit your poem elsewhere you must withdraw it — no refunds.
  • Your poem can't be altered for the anthology or reading at the festival. You will be sent a proof copy of your work to check before the anthology is printed.
How to enter - Online or by Post
Fees
£3.50 one entry
£6 two entries
£8 three entries

Enter as many as you wish, combining these entry fees, eg., 5 entries for £14.
No refunds or withdrawals

Preparing your Entries
  • Put what your age will be on 31 May 2025 in the top right hand corner of your entries. Your entries will also be entered in the main competition.
  • Use the title as your document name
  • Do not put your name or anything else which could identify you on your entries.
  • Each entry must be in a separate document, and be either .doc, .docx., or .rtf (need to use a pdf? Email competition@gloswriters.org.uk)
Sending Entries Online
Use the Paypal button below.
You can use a debit card with Paypal if you don't have a Paypal account.
 
Email your entries to competition@gloswriters.org.uk with:
  • your submission titles
  • name
  • school/college
  • your phone number.
  • If you are under 18, please include your parent or guardian's email and phone number.

ENTER

Enter by Post
Post a cheque (with entries if not emailed) to: Competition Administrator, 31A Upper Park Street, Cheltenham GL52 6SB with your name, phone no., titles and email address. If you are under 18, please include your parent or guardian's email and phone number.
To enter online — pay first

To enter online, pay first, then email your entries

You don't need a Paypal account. Pay either by Paypal or card.

  • Please complete your name and titles in the box below.
  • Click on Pay Now.
  • Paypal will give you the option to pay by Paypal — or
  • Click on Pay by Debit or Credit Card.

When you have paid:

Email competition@gloswriters.org.uk with:

  • Titles and whether prose or poetry,
  • Name, address, email, phone no.
  • Paypal receipt or transaction number
  • Whether you wish to subscribe to our mailing list.

DON'T FORGET to attach your entries, each in a separate document.

Results
The results are usually available by mid-July. They will be sent to everyone on our subscribers' list, and posted on our Facebook page, website, X and BlueSky. If you wish to receive the results by email, you (or your parent or guardian if you are under 18) are welcome to join our subscribers' list. Please email info@gloswriters.org.uk. The winner will hear by email or phone.

Judges

Poetry Judge - Kate Potts

Kate Potts - Poetry Judge Kate Potts is a poet, creative writing lecturer, mentor and editor. Her new book Pretenders, a multi-vocal work exploring imposter feelings and 'imposter syndrome', will be published by Bloodaxe Books in March 2025. Her previous collection Feral (Bloodaxe 2018) was a Poetry Book Society recommendation and a Telegraph Poetry Book of the Month. Her poetry has been shortlisted for The Moth International Poetry Prize and commended in the Forward Prizes.

Kate teaches for Dialect Writers and The Poetry School. She taught creative writing for Middlesex University, Royal Holloway and Oxford University before moving to Gloucestershire in 2021. She lives in Stroud with her son.

How to Get Started

Our theme for 2025 is ‘Edges’. You can interpret this as widely as you like, exploring real or imagined edges, by life writing or fiction, in prose or poetry.
Physical boundaries can also be metaphors for situations or states of mind we long to go beyond or stay within. They can provide openings or shut us in, as do gateways, thresholds or borderlands. We might need to take a decision to move forward or have no choice in doing so, like leaving school, a country, a way of thinking. Edges can be liminal spaces beyond which anything might happen, making us feel disconcerted or excited.

In his poem ‘Out there’ John Foggin says:

‘How we are drawn to edges; to sweeps of pale sand;
to the banks of rivers to watch the waters endlessly process’

So take yourself to the edge and see where that leads you . . .

Here are some ideas and exercises for you to try, either individually or in a group.

1. Mind mapping

Take a sheet of paper and write ‘Edges’ in the centre. Scribble around the subject all the different kinds of ideas, meanings, metaphors etc you can think of. For examples, look up spidergrams, mind maps etc.

2. Free writing

Start with the word ‘Edges’. Keep your pen steady and your hand moving! No matter what, don't stop, write whatever words, ideas you think of.

Don't overthink the subject – be free flowing.

Don't worry about spelling, punctuation or grammar.

Go back and circle the ideas you especially like.

3. Word and Image Association

Thumb through the dictionary and choose several words at random. Look at ways they might relate to what you’re writing.

Do the same with images – flip through a magazine and look at the pictures you find. Can they be related to your piece?

4. What if?

Ask of your characters:

What if s/he is from a different culture?
What if she is a he – and vice versa?
What if this was based abroad or by the coast/in town?
What if there was someone else involved?
What if they had much less or much more ...?
What if s/he didn’t do it?

5. Learn from past winners

Our Competition Winners Anthologies for 2017 – 2024 are on sale via the website – see here for the link

What did you enjoy about the poems and stories? What were the stand-out entries? What made them so readable or compelling?

Writing Tips

‘In the planning stage of a book, don't plan the ending. It has to be earned by all that will go before it.’ — Rose Tremain

‘Always carry a note-book. And I mean always. The short-term memory only retains information for three minutes; unless it is committed to paper you can lose an idea for ever.’ — Will Self

‘Work on a computer that is disconnected from the internet.’ — Zadie Smith

‘Read it aloud to yourself because that's the only way to be sure the rhythms of the sentences are OK (prose rhythms are too complex and subtle to be thought out — they can be got right only by ear).’ — Diana Athill

‘Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.’ — Anton Chekhov

‘Listen to the criticisms and preferences of your trusted 'first readers.' — Rose Tremain

‘The main rule of writing is that if you do it with enough assurance and confidence, you're allowed to do whatever you like. (That may be a rule for life as well as for writing. But it's definitely true for writing.) So write your story as it needs to be written. Write it honestly and tell it as best you can. I'm not sure that there are any other rules. Not ones that matter.’ — Neil Gaiman

‘The nearest I have to a rule is a Post-it on the wall in front of my desk saying “Faire et se taire” (Flaubert), which I translate for myself as ‘Shut up and get on with it.’ — Helen Simpson

‘The trick is to keep your reader believing in the characters and the story - even though both of you know it’s a work of fiction’ — Margaret Attwood

Happy Writing!

Purchase Competition Anthologies

Previous competition anthologies are available to purchase. 

If you’re interested in reading the work from past winners and runners-up, you can buy copies of our 2017 to 2023 anthologies directly from us.

If you would like to pay another way, for example by cheque or bank transfer, please email info@gloswriters.org.uk
Visit our book shop

With thanks to our Sponsors

We are grateful to The Times and The Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival for their support of local writers and for creating the opportunity for the winners and the runners-up of our annual writing competition to showcase their work at the GWN event.
Liggy Webb Logo
We would like to thank Liggy Webb for her generous sponsorship of our annual writing competition.
www.liggywebb.com
The go-to place for writers in Gloucestershire and South Gloucestershire
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