Area High School Students
Win James Jones Literary Society
Essay Contest
Winners of the first annual James Jones Literary Society Valentine's
Day essay contest at Marshall and Robinson high schools, based on the
Jones short story, "The Valentine," have been announced. The short
story tells the story of a young boy setting out to save the money for
a box of Valentine candy for a girl who hardly knows he exists and the
humiliation he feels from her rejection after he finally hands her the
box at school on Valentine's Day and then runs to the cloakroom to hide
his embarrassment.
MHS senior Cody Hutchinson was awarded $50 and a certificate for
writing the winning essay; and RHS student Ashtin Blagrave has been
awarded $75 and a certificate for her winning essay. The prizes are
based on the number of total entries. Ten or more entries from a
school, producing five finalists, would garner $75 for first place, $50
for second place and $25 for third place
with the other two finalists receiving an honorable mention
certificate. With
fewer than five entries from one school, the only prize is $50 for
first place.
"I am proud of the three students who accepted the challenge of
expressing feelings regarding the James Jones short story," MHS
principal John Hasten wrote when he submitted the school's entries. "I
found the story interesting and the responses well done."
RHS English teacher Janelle Oxford assigned the story to one of her
classes and invited James Jones Literary Society honorary board member
Helen Howe to speak to the class. Howe, a retired English teacher from
Lincoln Trail College (LTC), taught the Valentine Day story in her
classes for years and was an early friend of James Jones.
"(Students) continued talking about your visit with us even yet today!"
Oxford wrote Howe several days later. "These students from Robinson
experienced James Jones firsthand through your stories and insight into
his work and life.
I am excited to read my students' essays -- so many fell in love with
'The
Valentine.'"
Howe was excited about the contest and the reception she received, too.
"It was certainly a pleasant experience for me," she said. "I was
treated with much respect and appreciation by both the teacher and her
class. I'm looking forward to awarding the prizes."
Besides Hutchinson and Blagrave, who will also receive a year's
membership in the JJLS and have their winning essays published in the
society's newsletter and possibly in local newspapers, Chris Shane
Maurer and Lindsay England submitted
entries from Marshall High School; and Matthew Miller from Robinson
High
School received $50 and a certificate for second place; Jason
Holtzhouser, received $25 and a certificate for third place; and Snow
Rush and Andrew Hill
received honorable mentions for their entries.
Hutchinson and Blagrave will also be invited to read their winning
essays at the Virginia Theatre in Champaign on Nov. 11 at the annual
James Jones Symposium, where the annual $10,000 First Novel Fellowship
will be awarded. The Society has given the latter award to talented,
unpublished fiction writers for the past 13 years, with 11 of them
resulting in the publication of their novel with major publishing
houses.
In keeping with James Jones and his mentor Lowney Handy's support and
encouragement of promising new writers, the James Jones Literary
Society has recently teamed up with the Illinois State Library's
Illinois Center for the Book (ICB) to co-sponsor its Emerging Writers
competition. The James Jones Short Story Contest
will soon be announced on the Center for the Books' Web site and will
have
an early summer deadline. Winning writers will be announced and
awards
presented on Nov. 18 at the ICB's annual Book Fair at the Gwendolyn
Brooks
State Library in Springfield, on which James Jones' name is etched in
stone.
The $500 James Jones Creative Writing Award at Lincoln Trail College
will soon be expanded to include more residents of Clark and Crawford
counties, as well. Details will be announced for that contest in the
near future.
"My father would be pleased about these contests in his name to support
and encourage young writers," said novelist Kaylie Jones, the late
author's
daughter and a board member of the Society. "And he'd particularly be
happy
about 'The Valentine' contest because the story was one of his
favorites."