MarieWriter
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2012
- Posts
- 179
Here's what you do. Allow all participants to nominate three Lit authors as judges. Post the list, and then allow all participants to strike one person from the list--no reason has to be given. From the remaining pool, contact the three first authors from and see if they're interested. Keep going down the list until you have three 'yes' answers.
OR-- and this is the litigator in me.... We do pick three, known or unknown- we have a written criteria to refer to.... BUT, the three, then pick between themselves which ONE will not be a judge, but rather a judge for any appeals. So if the panel scores someone low on something, but that author wants to appeal the score, then it goes before the appellate judge... an example of that might be a down score based upon grammar- easily to appeal because someone might miss a grammar rule or issue... and no one but the judges know who was who and which was which. You could alternate judges from the group and you could even alternate story types, NOT limiting ones self to the overall categories of Lit... i.e. something like flash fiction, or a story in which one character is a redhead-- anything you wanted as part of the story criteria... Just a thought...

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). I make a special effort for these competitions. This time I've compiled comments on all the other stories which I'm looking forward to sharing. If the competition is judged and commented on by a panel, I won't do that because I'll feel like the job is being done by more competent others. 
