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Upper Bucks Today

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

BUCKS COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE: Matthew Ulmer Named Winner of 4th Annual Short-Fiction Contest

Awards

Bucks County Community College issued the following announcement.

The Langhorne resident will read from his winning story Wed. Nov. 18 in an online celebration, joined by runners-up Joseph O’Kane and Barbara Beck

Matthew Ulmer of Langhorne has won first place in the fourth annual Bucks County Short-Fiction contest, officials at Bucks County Community College announced.

Ulmer, who wins a $200 honorarium for placing first, entered his story “Poached.” He’ll read portions of his winning story at an online reception at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 18. The reading can be viewed live on the college’s YouTube channel at youtube.com/BucksCCC.

Also reading at the celebration will be second-place winner Joseph O’Kane of Richboro, who takes home $100 for his story, “All the Way Home.” Joining in will be Barbara Beck of Quakertown, who captured third place and $50 for “A Little Ghost Story.”

The final judge, Philadelphia-area novelist Kiley Reid, will also speak at the reception. Reid is the author of the well-received novel Such a Fun Age, which is set in Philadelphia.

Reid called Ulmer’s “Poached” “…an exciting and twisting story of a regretful son, his late attempts to do the right thing, and the all too familiar understanding that sometimes, it's far too late. It's nicely paced, its main character is full and flawed, and it does what every short story should do, in that it made me, quite curious and with more questions than I started with.”

The judge lauded O’Kane’s “All the Way Home” by remarking that “The voice and point of view in All The Way Home make themselves known from the very first sentence, and not once do they let up. This is one of those stories that reads as if it's being directly overheard. The prose was refreshingly human and natural in its language, word choice, and most importantly, in its depiction of adolescent angst.”

Reid wrote of Beck’s “A Little Ghost Story,” “There is the growing tension and that exciting eerie glitch that comes when readers and characters alike come to know that something isn't quite right. And there is an omniscient and knowing third person narrator that carefully drops in and out of their own strong take on this cautionary take. A Little Ghost Story was a delightful fable that should be preferable read by fire or flashlight.”

The annual Bucks County Short-Fiction Contest is open to adults who are residents of Bucks County. The college sponsors a similar contest for Bucks County high school students is held in the spring.

The contest is funded by Bucks County Community College, and receives support from the Department of Language and Literature. For more information, contact Professor Elizabeth Luciano, the contest administrator, at Elizabeth.Luciano@bucks.edu.

Original source can be found here.

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