The Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writing Prize

The 2024 Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writing Prize, the fifteenth edition of the prestigious prize, is open from 1 February to 1 July 2024. 

Follow us on social media or sign up to our newsletter to be the first to hear about the shortlist and winners later in the year.


Exceptionally international in scope, the prize supports writers who have not yet published a book-length work, with no limits on age, gender, nationality, or background. The winners of each category will receive a £1,000 cash prize and publication in Wasafiri magazine. All winners and shortlisted writers will be offered the Chapter and Verse or Free Reads mentoring scheme in partnership with The Literary Consultancy (dependent on eligibility), and a conversation with The Good Literary Agency to discuss their career progression, as well as a one-year print subscription to Wasafiri.

Every writer recognised by the prize, running since 2009, remains part of the Wasafiri community, and is supported by the magazine as their career grows. Past winners and shortlistees of the New Writing Prize include the likes of Akwaeke Emezi, Caleb Femi, and Louise Kennedy, who have gone on to score deals with major international publishing houses such as Penguin, Peepal Tree Press, Bloomsbury and Hachette, and to be shortlisted for and win prizes including the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Forward Prizes, and the Bocas Poetry Prize, among many others.

Read the terms and conditions and enter the prize here.

About the judges 

Margaret Busby (Chair), Cristina Rivera Garza (Life Writing), Meena Kandasamy (Poetry), Isabel Waidner (Fiction)

 

Margaret Busby CBE, Hon. FRSL (Nana Akua Ackon) is a major cultural figure around the world. Her career has spanned work as a publisher, editor, interviewer, reviewer, scriptwriter, lyricist, radio and TV presenter, activist and mentor. She has judged prestigious literary prizes, including the Booker Prize, and served on the boards of such organisations as the Royal Literary Fund, Wasafiri magazine, Tomorrow’s Warriors, and the Africa Centre in London. She has been a guest on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs. In 2023, she was appointed President of English PEN.

Cristina Rivera Garza is an author, translator and critic. Recent publications include Liliana’s Invincible Summer (Hogarth, 2023), which was long listed for the National Book Award in nonfiction. The Taiga Syndrome, trans. by Suzanne Jill Levine and Aviva Kana, (Dorothy Project, 2018), won the 2019 Shirley Jackson Award. Grieving. Dispatches from a Wounded Country, trans. by Sarah Booker (The Feminist Press, 2020), was a finalist National Book Critics Circle Award In Criticism. She is M.D. Anderson Distinguished Professor and founder of the PhD Program in Creative Writing in Spanish at the University of Houston, Department of Hispanic Studies, and a MacArthur Fellow 2020-2025.

Meena Kandasamy has been described by the Independent as a ‘one-woman, agit-prop literary-political movement’. Meena Kandasamy is a poet, writer, translator, anti-caste activist and academic based in India. Her extensive corpus includes two poetry collections, Touch (2006) and Ms Militancy (2010), as well as three novels, The Gypsy Goddess (2014), When I Hit You (2017) and Exquisite Cadavers (2019). In 2022, she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) and was also awarded the PEN Hermann Kesten Prize for her writing and work as a ‘fearless fighter for democracy, human rights and the free word.’ Her latest published work is Tomorrow Someone Will Arrest You, a collection of political poetry written over the last decade.

Isabel Waidner is a novelist based in London. They are the author of Corey Fah Does Social Mobility (2023), Sterling Karat Gold (2021), We Are Made of Diamond Stuff (2019), and Gaudy Bauble (2017). They are the winner of the Goldsmiths Prize 2021 and were shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize in 2019, the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction in 2022 and the Republic of Consciousness Prize in 2018, 2020 and 2022. They are a co-founder of the event series Queers Read This at the Institute of Contemporary Arts and they are an academic in the School of English and Drama at Queen Mary University of London.

Photo credits: Margaret Busby CBE – Luke Daniels ©, Cristina Rivera Gaza – Annette Hornischer ©, Meena Kandasamy – AR Sumanth Kumar ©, Isabel Waidner – Robin Christian ©


PAST PRIZES

Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2018

The 2018 Wasafiri New Writing Prize winners and shortlist We announced the winners of the Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2018 on Thursday 25th October at The Blenheim Saloon, Marlborough House. They were: Plunder by Deidre Shanahan (F …

READ MORE
NWP Winner and Commended

New Writing Prize 2017

The 2017 Wasafiri New Writing Prize winners and shortlist We announced the winners of the Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2017 on Thursday 19th October at The People’s Palace, Queen Mary University of London. They were: Some Freedom Dr …

READ MORE
NWP 2016

New Writing Prize 2016

The 2016 Wasafiri New Writing Prize winners and shortlist Winners: Niamh MacCabe for Nobody Knows the Shivering Stars (Fiction) Danielle Boodoo-Fortuné for Portrait of my father as a grouper (Poetry) Shiva Rahbaran for Massoumeh: …

READ MORE

New Writing Prize 2015

The 2015 Wasafiri New Writing Prize winners and shortlist Winners: Uschi Gatward for My Brother is Back (Fiction) Amaal Said for The Girl Grew (Poetry) Louise Kennedy for A Suitable Family (Life Writing) In addition, the following …

READ MORE

New Writing Prize 2014

The winners and shortlisted entries There are four winners this year, two of the poems being too close to call. Our congratulations go to: Fiction: The Bearer by Simon van der Velde (UK)  Life Writing:  Seeing Double by Aurvi Shar …

READ MORE

New Writing Prize 2013

Winners: Life Writing  Cliff Chen for Life Exchanges Poetry Anita Pati for A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Stealing Love Fiction Gita Ralleigh for Back at the Museum The winning entries were published in Issue 77 of Wasaf …

READ MORE

New Writing Prize 2012

At a special event at Asia House on Wednesday 3 October, John Haynes announced the winners of the 2012 Wasafiri New Writing Prize: David Houston for Wish You Were Here (Life Writing) C S Mee for The Walk (Fiction) Sally St Clair f …

READ MORE
NWP 2011

New Writing Prize 2011

The winners of the Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2011 were announced by Fiction judge Brian Chikwava at a special event at Bush House in London. Winners: Richard Scott for Adin (Poetry) Michael Marett-Crosby for Room 618 (Fiction) Ab …

READ MORE
NWP 2010

New Writing Prize 2010

The Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2010 Winners and Shortlist The winners of the Wasafiri New Writing Prize were announced at a special event on October 14, at Somerset House, London. There were four winners this year: Noel Williams f …

READ MORE
NWP 2009

New Writing Prize 2009

The Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2009 Winners and Shortlist The winners of Wasafiri’s prize for new writing were announced by poet and prize judge, Mimi Khalvati, on the 31st October in front of packed audience at the Purcell Room, …

READ MORE

RELATED NEWS

The Intrigue of the Image by Leila Aboulela

In this exclusive piece, Leila Aboulela, Fiction judge for the 2023 Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writing Prize, looks back to the beginning of her writing life – including her long relationship and publication history with Wasafiri – and considers the intrigue of the lingering image, offering writing advice to potential prize entrants.

READ MORE