CONTENTS

Masthead

Benefactors

Editor's Note

Poetry

Fiction

Nonfiction

Interviews

Contributors' Notes

 

Spring 2011



Announcing the winners and finalists of the 2011 Gulf Stream Award:

Fiction
Gregory J. Wolos—Winner
Mariah Robbins—Finalist
Corey Campbell—Finalist

Nonfiction
Kelly Hayes-Raitt—Winner
Erin Clune—Finalist
Dillon Tripp—Finalist

Poetry
Michael Schmeltzer—Winner
Penelope Scambly Schott—Finalist
Gretchen Fletcher—Finalist

Look for their work and more in Gulf Stream Online No. 5, due out April 15, 2011.

Congratulations to everyone!



Fall 2010


We are excited to announce our newest contest, the 2011 Gulf Stream Award. One winner in each genre will win $250 and publication in Gulf Stream Online #5, due out in April, 2011. The judges are:

John Dufresne: Fiction
Les Standiford: Nonfiction
Denise Duhamel: Poetry

Guidelines:
Entry fee is $10.
Entries will be accepted from September 24th to December 1st, 2010.
Prose submissions are limited to 7,500 words.
Poetry submissions are limited to five poems.
Winners will be announced in the spring of 2011.
You may submit as many times as you like, but each submission requires a separate entry fee.
All entries will also be considered for future publication.
Friends, family members, colleagues, and current/former students of the judges are ineligible.
Submissions should be Word documents.
Please include a cover page with contact information, title(s) of your entry, and a short bio.
Since judges read anonymously, do not put your name or contact information on any page other than the cover page.



Fall 2009

Gulf Stream Magazine is pleased to announce that we have a winner in our "_____ Warps the Mind a Little" nonfiction contest. After carefully reviewing our many great submissions, we selected Lori Jakiela's essay "Searching Warps the Mind a Little" as the winner. Her piece was published as part of Issue #2.

Lori Jakiela is the author of a memoir, Miss New York Has Everything (Warner/Hatchette,2006). Her essays have most recently appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Westmoreland Magazine, Pittsburgh Quarterly, and elsewhere. She teaches at The University of Pittsburgh's Greensburg campus and lives in Trafford, Pennsylvania--the birthplace of the chocolate covered pickle.

We congratulate Lori and thank all those who submitted essays.

Please check back again to look for other contests in the future.