Published Date: 22/04/2020

Spread the Word is delighted to announce the longlist for the Life Writing Prize 2020.
Now in its fourth year, the Life Writing Prize, in association with Goldsmiths Writers’ Centre, was established to find and develop the best new life writing from emerging writers. The prize, which is free to enter, and open to UK writers who have yet to publish a full length work or secure literary agent representation, is generously funded by Joanna Munro.
Included on the list selected from almost 900 submissions are 12 exceptional new writers. Some of the writers have had their work published in literary magazines and won prizes while others present their work for the first time.
Judges praised the ‘astounding’ quality of the longlist which explores overarching themes of immigration, #MeToo, religion, childhood, death, friendship, family, love, loss, infertility, bereavement, social change and the NHS. The settings are international in scope, from the Yorkshire moors to Paris and the Philippines. This year’s submissions were judged by the writers Kerry Hudson and Nell Stevens, and Sathnam Sanghera.




As the world now is very different to the world we were in when we launched the Prize, we’ve made some changes to our plans. The results will be announced online on Wednesday 3 June, when an online booklet featuring the 12 pieces on the longlist will be published, available to download and read for free from the Spread the Word website. Agents or publishing professionals keen to receive a copy of the booklet should email Laura Kenwright to request one to be emailed straight to them.
The winner of The Life Writing Prize will receive £1500, an Arvon course, a writing mentor, two years’ membership of the Royal Society of Literature and a development meeting with an agent and editor. Two highly commended writers receive a writing mentor and £500.
Writing mentors are writers Max Porter, Colin Grant and Kerri Ní Dochartaigh who was highly commended in the inaugural Life Writing Prize in 2017.
In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, Spread the Word will be offering writers of all levels a number of free-to-participate opportunities to explore life writing, writing for wellbeing and nature writing led by Kerry Hudson, Kerri Ní Dochartaigh and poet and counsellor Jasmine Ann Cooray. These will be available to sign up to in the coming weeks to give writers a sense of connection, creativity and joy in these trying and unprecedented times.
Introducing The Life Writing Prize Longlist 2020
Birdie by Lorelei Goulding

Birds can Be Heard Singing Through Open Windows by Joanna Brown

Dad’s Home by Maxine Davies


Josh Holton is an ex-MMA fighter who took too many blows to the head and now writes weird fiction and non-fiction. He quit his stable office job to find fulfilment in the study and practice of storytelling. He now survives on instant noodles but loves his life. Find him on twitter @JHoltonWriter.

Down Ashton by Stephen Crawley
Stephen hails from Ashton under Lyne in the foothills of the Pennines, a town considered ‘bare, wet, and almost worthless,’ until the introduction of the cotton trade. From that historical perspective Stephen prides himself on being a working–class writer, his heroes being Barry Hines, Alan Sillitoe and Nell Dunn, who have all influenced his work, and being a Northerner Stephen isn’t scared to proudly admit that fact. A late starter writer, Stephen enjoys constructing first person narratives, and began taking writing seriously after receiving a screenplay commission from Film Four without any writing experience or educational qualifications under his belt.

Laurane Marchive lives in London. Her work has appeared in The London Magazine, The Mechanics’ Institute Review, Review 31 and the TLS. Laurane is a past winner of the French Escales des Lettres. She was recently longlisted for the BBC Short Story Prize and shortlisted for the Spread the Word Life Writing Prize 2019 and the London Short Story Prize 2020. She holds an MA in Creative Writing from Birkbeck. She also runs a circus.

SR Shah is a working class queer Muslim poet and philosopher hailing from South London. They are interested in the dynamics between poetry and death, the abundance of London, and honouring migrant histories. They have had their Instagram philosophy series exhibited at VFDalston for “unfinished,” and host a quarterly literary event, “untitled.” By day, they are a makeup artist. Photo by Lily Vetch.
North of the River by Carla Montemayor

On Sigma-Algebras by Elena Croitoru

Palingenesis by Sue Hann

The Spoon Garden by Ruby Eastwood

This is a story about friendship by Nicky Watkinson

Special mentions
Spread the Word is delighted to list the 75 writers whose work reached the final reading stages of the Prize – the top 10%. Well done to these writers for reaching the penultimate stages of this year’s Life Writing Prize:
Fay Al-Kasey, Kawther Alfasi, Tatum Anderson, Barbara Attwood, Maddie Cahn, Ruby D Jones, Chris Barker, Carol Barnes-Burrell, Maria Barraclough, Kirsteen Bell, Lucie Bowins, Jill Brooks, Beverley Byrne, Sean O’Carolan, Sabine Casparie, Victoria Clarke, Jane Copland, Donna Costa, Ella Davis, Maryann Davison, J Dennison, Anna Derrig, Cat Diamond, Ellen Dorrington, Faizan Fiaz, Laura Finska, Yasmina Floyer, Shirley Gillan, Ruth Goldsmith, Ethan Greenwood, Ellen Hart, A. M. Hassan, Shelley Hastings, Alice Hiller, Madeleine Holmes, Becky Horsbrugh, Angela Hughes, Peter Johnson, Kris Johnson, Alexis Keir, Helen Keville, Richard Lakin, Jiye Lee, Ronnie Leek, Frankie Leeson, Sarah Leigh, Meg Lewis, Edward Little, Joanne Mallon, Misty McAdam, Aisling McCrea, Megan McIntyre, Mark McLaughlin, Eva McMillan, Carol Preston, Edward Millett, Sophie Mullins, Larraine Nicholls, Marienna Pope-Weidemann, Emily Richards, Simon Sharman, Molly Sharples, Jane Shepherd, Chris Simpson, Amie Tolson, Lynnda Wardle, Satyadasa Waterston, Katie Watson, Lucy Whetman, Shane White, Pete White, Ben Widsmith, Katie Willis, Elspeth Wilson, Irina Zahl.
We know it takes heart and guts to submit your writing into this Prize, and we are grateful to everyone who enters. If your piece didn’t make it this year, please don’t be disheartened and do consider entering again for the Life Writing Prize 2021.
Published 22 April 2020
Back to all