Are Free Poetry Contests Scams? Original Post: 6 June 2012
I checked out the FAQs and other parts of the contest’s web site. Yes, there was no fee required for the contest and, although they made no payment for the use of my poem in their book, I was not required to pay a fee for my poem, if selected, to be published. I could purchase a copy of the book, but absolutely nothing was said about its price. Or how much the bio fee was if I wanted to toot my horn in addition to becoming a published author. So, just like when I get one of those e-mails from the sister of the cousin of the next-door neighbor of the former president of Nigeria seeking my help, I was a bit suspicious. I did a Google search looking for reviews of this organization. I got a lot of hits when I included “scam” in the search criteria. Many people were saying, “No, this is not a scam. I’m becoming a published author and I want that book so that all my friends and relatives will know that I’ve been published – no matter how much it costs. After all, if it’s available from Amazon.com, it must be legit.” Many thought the price of the book was a bit much, but the fact that their poem was in it was enough for them to disregard this red flag. It broke my heart to see that many of these were teenagers. I went to Amazon and found that the retail price was “only” about seventy bucks for any of a plethora of their books on various poetry topics. For comparison, I suggest that you check out the prices for books by a poet like Robert Frost. A few reviewers pointed out that although this was not illegal, and so perhaps not a true scam, a rose by any other name is still a rose. Today, print-on-demand publishers can easily create a book that anyone can put up for sale at on-line venues. If you won’t find it on the shelf at your nearest Books-a-Million, beware. True, you’ll consider yourself a “published author,” but so what? Your friends or your grandmother may not know the difference, but real editors and publishers know that such books mean nothing in the publishing world. You should too. For one site that lists places to avoid, click here. Likewise, watch out for sites that want to publish your prize-winning photographs, then sell you the beautiful book that they appear in – so that you’ll become a “published” photographer. I don’t know if any “publishers” that do this for short stories, since you can’t get many short stories into a single volume, but I wouldn’t be surprised to find them out there looking for the unwary.
Keep reading/keep writing – Jack |
![]() |