Our 2025 adult and student short story contest is completed. Entries were accepted March 1, 2025 through June 30, 2025.
The F. Scott Fitzgerald Literary Festival Short Story Contest
Aspiring writers are invited to delve into the world of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Literary Festival and participate in the Short Story Contest by submitting their original, thought-provoking works.
About the Short Story Contest
The F. Scott Fitzgerald Literary Festival’s Short Story Contest has been an integral part of the festival since its inception in 1996, showcasing a rich tradition of celebrating literary excellence. Open to both adult and student writers, this contest provides a platform for emerging talents to showcase their storytelling prowess in the spirit of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s literary legacy. With a commitment to nurturing creativity and fostering a love for literature, the contest encourages participants to craft compelling narratives that resonate with the timeless themes that Fitzgerald explored in his own works.
The festival’s dedication to promoting literary arts is exemplified through this contest, where participants have the opportunity to contribute to the festival’s vibrant tapestry of literary exploration. Winners of the adult and student contests will be invited to read their stories aloud before an audience.
Prizes
First prize for the adult contest: $750
Prizes for adult finalists: $250
First prize for the student contest: $500
Prizes for 2nd and 3rd place student finalists: $100
Winners will be invited to appear at the Short Story Readings event in the fall.

We are happy to announce our winners of the 2025 short story Contest.
They are listed below with comments from reviewer Nate Brown:
Adult Winner: L.V. Pires
L.V. Pires (“January Light”)
“I knew that there was no other story for her in this moment. This was the only one. This was the truest one. This was the one that she could not escape.”
Lines like this are vivid and beautiful, and this story is filled with similar moments them. This is such a lovely, subtle story, one with a darkness at its heart that is amazingly countered by the story’s artful and deeply felt depiction of maternal love. This danger of the father figure is palpable, but the protagonist’s enduring belief in the power of story offers her–and we readers–hope. Kudos on this wonderful story.
Adult Finalists:
Melissa Ferguson (Couch”)
“All those lonely women and their power over us cornered girls fueling into our Hail Marys any whiff of distraught, our fear of damnation, our forbidden words. What if all those ladies—the stooped and the bawdy, and girls in jumpers and white tights, too—let loose our tongues and stood up for ourselves, wouldn’t we all break open? Scares me to this living day. “
Moments like this are what great fiction are made of. You swing for the fences here rhetorically and narratively, and there’s a huge payoff: this is both meaningful, engaging, and thoughtful while also being very entertaining. You do a wonderful job in this story of building tension, which makes the ending all that much better. Very nice work!
Student Winner: Anushkka Shukla (“Cardinal“)
A wildly imaginative but all-too-plausible speculative story that raises important questions about the limits of technology, the right to privacy, and the importance of feeling deeply in order to retain your humanity. Because the writer subtly builds this world, readers are drawn in, perhaps imagining their own teenage years (with all of its wonderfulness and weirdness and awfulness and nonsense) and what it felt like to mature emotionally. Or maybe we look around at contemporary technologies that, while efficient, feel a little heartless, a little robotic. This story is just the opposite: filled with original thinking, complex ethical considerations, and imaginative and subtle world building, “Cardinal,” is, in other words, an impressive contemporary work of speculative fiction that presents a scary vision of the near future even as it reminds us of the importance of truly trying to see and know the ones we love.
Student Finalists
Alina Admin (“A Story Before You Go”)
A wonderfully told story that’s both philosophically engaging and entertaining! This story smartly uses books as a metaphor for the population and death as an insatiable reader working his way through the library. The story feels fresh and original to me even as it absolutely captures the tone and style of a classic thriller tale. This is impressive writing!
Yuen Cao (“Echoes From the Deep”)
If Jaws made me scared to swim in the ocean, then “Echoes from the Deep” has likely turned me away from ever even thinking about taking a scuba diving lesson. This story is a true action thriller that’s wonderfully paced and so much fun to read. The ending’s ambiguity adds to the story’s mystique and compelled me to go back to the beginning to read it again. Nice writing!
Student Honorable Mentions
Alana Applebaum (“Cobblestones and’
Ballerinas”)
Keira Stumpf (“Escapism”)
The Short Story Contest encourages participants to craft compelling narratives that resonate with the timeless themes that F. Scott Fitzgerald explored in his own works.
2025 Submission Rules
Adult Contest
- Contest open to ALL residents of the DMV (DC Metro Area)
- FSF Members entry fee is free, $15 per entry for NON-MEMBERS
- Entries accepted March 1, 2025 through June 30, 2025
- There are no restrictions on subject matter
- Entries must be typed, 10 point or 12 point sized font, double-spaced, no more than 26 lines per page, one-inch margins and numbered pages
- All stories must be fewer than 4,000 words and unpublished
- Writer’s name should NOT appear on the first page.
- Place a title on the first page.
- The writer’s name should NOT appear on subsequent pages of the story. Any identifying information included on the cover page will be removed and a number will be assigned to the entry before it is sent to the judges
- Entries will be judged and will not be returned
Student Contest
- Contest open to ALL Montgomery County high school students
- Entry fee is FREE for ALL students
- Entries accepted March 1, 2025 through June 30, 2025
- There are no restrictions on subject matter
- Entries must be typed, 10 point or 12 point sized font, double-spaced, no more than 26 lines per page, one-inch margins and numbered pages
- All stories must be fewer than 4,000 words and unpublished
- Writer’s name should NOT appear on the first page.
- Place a title on the first page.
- The writer’s name should NOT appear on subsequent pages of the story. Any identifying information included on the cover page will be removed and a number will be assigned to the entry before it is sent to the judges
- Entries will be judged and will not be returned