2025 Commonwealth Short Story Prize shortlist announced

World’s most global literature prize shortlists 25 writers from 18 countries, including SA’s Stephen M Finn

15 April 2025 - 13:19
By Ruth Killick
The world’s most global short story prize has developed a strong reputation for discovering new writers and bringing them to a global audience.
Image: Supplied The world’s most global short story prize has developed a strong reputation for discovering new writers and bringing them to a global audience.

An international judging panel has shortlisted 25 outstanding stories for the world’s most global literature prize, the Commonwealth Short Story Prize.

The shortlisted writers hail from 18 countries across the Commonwealth and will all move through to the next round of judging. Five regional winners each representing the five regions of the Commonwealth will be announced on May 14, and the overall winner will be announced on June 25.

The shortlisted stories conjure a wide range of scenarios, from a soldier at an unnamed border to a Beijing taxi driver with a vulnerable passenger, from a mother who turns to desperate measures to escape her abusive husband to a football-mad young boy and a “sacred” Tamarind tree with a hidden secret. Many stories feature journeys — young people starting new lives overseas; an elderly woman travelling to the capital to campaign for the rights of her people; a crushing final voyage on a sinking slave ship.

There are tales of exploitation, racism, greed, arrogance and betrayal, but also unexpected kindness, humour, courage and resistance, and the unexpected effects of small actions.   

The Commonwealth Short Story Prize is awarded annually for the best piece of unpublished short fiction from any of the Commonwealth’s 56 member states. It is the most accessible and international of all writing competitions. In addition to English, entries can be submitted in Bengali, Chinese, Creole, French, Greek, Malay, Maltese, Portuguese, Samoan, Swahili, Tamil and Turkish.  

The stories on the 2025 shortlist were selected from a total of record-breaking 7,920 entries from 54 Commonwealth countries, almost 10% higher than 2024. Two Commonwealth countries, Antigua & Barbuda and Saint Lucia, have authors on the shortlist for the first time. The shortlisted writers range in age from 21 to 75 and all but one have never been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize before.

Chair of the judges, writer and filmmaker Dr Vilsoni Hereniko from Rotuma, Fiji, said: “A great story moves us, causes us to think and sometimes changes us. When a whole life, or a slice of life, is distilled into a short story, we marvel at the writer’s ability to find the perfect sequence of events and fit them into the short story form.

“The shortlist of relevant, vibrant and essential reading is made up of the best 25 stories from a pool of almost 8,000 entries. Together they demonstrate why the short story form must continue to be supported and promoted. As chair, and on behalf of the esteemed jury, I congratulate and thank the Commonwealth Foundation for keeping the competition alive and thriving.”

Dr Anne T Gallagher AO, director-general of the Commonwealth Foundation, the intergovernmental organisation which administers the prize, commended everyone who entered stories in 2025, saying: “Every writer who entered this year’s prize deserves our congratulations. The breadth of voices, perspectives and experiences is awe-inspiring, and a powerful reminder of the creative energy that unites us as a Commonwealth of people.

“We congratulate those who made the shortlist. Their work speaks not only to our shared challenges but also to our hopes and aspirations. Through the prize we continue to nurture and elevate storytelling that crosses borders and generations, testimony to our belief in the transformative power of literature to forge understanding and inspire change.”

2025 shortlist in full

AFRICA

  • The Flute Player by Priscilla Ametorpe Goka (Ghana)
  • A Room Full of Teddy Bears by Dorechi (Kenya)
  • The Sun isn’t Dead Yet by Vashish Jaunky (Mauritius)  (translated by Edwige-Renée Dro from the French Le soleil n'est pas encore mort)
  • The mothers by Olákìtán T Aládéṣuyì (Nigeria)
  • Broken String by Stephen M Finn (SA)                    
  • Mothers Not Appearing in Search by Joshua Lubwama (Uganda)

ASIA  

  • An Eye and a Leg by Faria  Basher (Bangladesh)
  • Mrs Gaonkar’s Girls by Parul Kaushik (India)
  • Tamarind by Tino de Sa (India)
  • The Dot by Tahoor Bari (Pakistan)

CANADA AND EUROPE

  • Descend by Chanel Sutherland (Canada/Saint Vincent and the Grenadines)
  • Nualu Nu by Damhnait Monaghan (Canada/Ireland)
  • The Crossing by David Frankel (UK)
  • Bread and Butter by Dushi Rasiah (UK)
  • Beasts by Tess Little (UK)

CARIBBEAN

  • Jumbie Pond by Joanne C Hillhouse (Antigua and Barbuda)
  • Margot’s Run by Subraj Singh (Guyana)
  • Pomp and Circumstance by Kellie Magnus (Jamaica)
  • Redeye Cat by Jessie Mayers (Saint Lucia)

PACIFIC

  • Crab Sticks and Lobster Rolls by Kathleen Ridgwell (Australia)
  • The Drum and the Bell by Keith Goh Johnson (Australia)
  • Threads of Truth by Lachlan Alexander (Australia)
  • The Pale Blue Dot by Angela Pope (New Zealand)
  • We’ll meet again by Maria Samuela (New Zealand)
  • Final Effort of the Wind by Gillian Leasunia Katoanga (Samoa/New Zealand)                

Article provided by Ruth Killick on behalf of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize