How to prepare your entry to Discoveries 2026
BY Discoveries
14th Oct 2025
Curtis Brown Creative and the Curtis Brown literary agency are delighted to partner with the Women’s Prize Trust and Audible to run Discoveries for a sixth year! This is an annual writing development programme and prize for unpublished women writers currently residing in the UK or Ireland. The prize accepts novels in any genre of adult fiction.
To enter, all you need to do is submit…
- The opening of your novel – up to 10,000 words
- A synopsis detailing the outline of your story – up to 1,000 words
Find out more about Discoveries, the prize packages on offer and how to enter here.
The 2026 judging panel is chaired by Kate Mosse, international bestselling novelist and Founder Director of the Women’s Prize. Kate is oined by award-winning and global bestselling author Dorothy Koomson (My Best Friend’s Girl, The Ice Cream Girls and most recently, Give Him To Me); peacebuilding practitioner and 2025 Women’s Prize for Fiction shortlisted author Dr Nussaibah Younis (Fundamentally); Curtis Brown literary agent Ciara Finan; and Founder and Managing Director of Curtis Brown Creative, Anna Davis.
When asked what they’re looking for from entrants, here’s what the judges said…
- ‘I want to encounter exciting voices. I want to find memorable characters, and I want to see the beginnings of a story, perhaps a question might be asked that I want to know the answer to.
It may well be that you will feel your work doesn't have all of these things, but if there's something there that just gets my attention and makes me want to read on, then I'm going to really want to put you through’ – Anna Davis - ‘Somebody who is telling their story authentically and honestly. It doesn't have to be polished. It doesn't have to be the most perfect thing. I just need to see that it's got a bit of heart to it.’ – Dorothy Koomson
- ‘First and foremost, something fresh, something that feels unread and unheard of. Interesting stories from different backgrounds, from women who have something new and creative to say.’ – Ciara Finan
- ‘I'm looking for a new voice. I'm looking for someone who's going to tell me an old story, but in a different way. But most of all, I'm looking for somebody who believes absolutely that the story she's telling could only be written by her.’ – Kate Mosse
- ‘The main thing I'm looking for in a Discoveries entry is promise. It doesn't have to be polished. It doesn't have to be perfect. I'm looking for a voice that's really fresh and exciting.
Someone who's tackling material I haven't seen before. Something that's just really original and interesting, and makes me want to read on.’ – Nussaibah Younis
Watch the judges' advice video here
So, how do you make sure you’re presenting your story and unique narrative voice in the best way? Here’s our advice on how to perfect your submission to Discoveries…
OPENING
The openings of books are incredibly important, a good opening will hook your reader and compel them to keep turning the pages.
Make your opening strong by:
- Getting quickly into your story. Writers often make the mistake of spending a lot of time on scene-setting or introducing characters one by one with lots of information about their personal histories before they actually start the real action of the story. Move straight into the action to engage the reader fully.
- Don’t open with clichés. We’d love to see something fresh, new and intriguing. At all costs avoid openings with people waking up in the morning, characters staggering around with hangovers or long passages about the weather or rather generic landscape. Give us something to hook us in immediately – something which makes the reader curious or establishes a mystery which must be solved.
- But … Openings don’t need to be explosive. An unusual exchange between characters can be as dramatic as a man bursting into a room with a gun. Your opening should set the tone for the novel which follows it.
- Establish the necessary context quickly. We need to know, rapidly, where we are as readers. If your novel is set in the past, drop some clues very early as to when the action takes place. If your story is told by a child, let us know fast how old your narrator is. Help us to settle quickly into your story so that we can lose ourselves in it…
- Read over your material on the page before you send it in. Yes, we do think it’s a good idea to print out your material on the page – old-style – and sit with a pen in your hand to make edits before you enter the competition. It’s also a good idea to read your work out loud to yourself to see how it sounds – particularly when you have lots of dialogue.
SYNOPSIS
We do know, of course, that it’s hard to write a great synopsis before you’ve finished writing your novel. But give it your best shot. We’d like to see one good page synopsis (up to 1,000 words but do keep it a bit shorter than that if you can – around 500 words should be adequate) to show us where your story is headed.
Here’s what you should include:
- One-line pitch. Start with a sentence which tells us what’s really at the heart of your story – this is, essentially, your one-line pitch. If that’s impossible for the kind of book you’re writing, head your synopsis up with a line from your novel which carries some of its flavour.
- Give us the brushstrokes of your story. We want to know the through-line of your plot. Try to be clear and concise, and don’t drop in lots and lots of character names, settings and minor events. If you have a twist in the tale, it’s up to you as to whether you want to include that in the synopsis, but we should certainly get the arc of your story.
- This is a prize for unfinished manuscripts, we understand that your story may develop and change – we aren’t expecting the synopsis you submit to be followed to the letter just be sure to give us the big picture of your narrative. Should you be long or shortlisted, an updated synopsis won’t affect your chances of winning.
- If possible (and without being too corny about it) try to get some of the tone of your novel into your synopsis so that it reads entertainingly and not like a characterless business document. A synopsis rarely works if it is written from the protagonist’s point of view or written in a first-person perspective. So, we recommend writing it in the third-person.
- Remember – this is an overview of your novel, not a detailed plan. We don’t need full chapter-breakdowns – just the key points of your story.
- Avoid putting in any value judgements about your own work. This isn’t a blurb on a published novel. Don’t tell us it’s going to be the next bestseller or that it’s gripping and moving etc. Frankly, we’ll be the judge of that!
TITLE
Make sure that you give your novel a title. It doesn’t matter if you change it later – it’s still better to have a working title than nothing. A title gives your book an identity. It will also make it much easier for the readers and judges to talk about it.
GENRE
Discoveries welcomes applications across all genres of adult fiction. Our entry form asks you to tick the genres that apply to your novel. Pick one or two genres (a hybrid of genres is welcome). If you can’t see your genre in the selection available in the entry form, don’t worry – pick the closest genre. You can always go on to include the genre in your synopsis. Be careful not to invent a genre that doesn’t exist. If you’re writing something that is difficult to categorise you might want to include a comparison title or two in your synopsis.
PROOFREAD
We’d love it if you could make sure that your work is pleasant for us to read. This is how we’d like you to do it:
- Remember to proofread. Check your spelling, grammar and punctuation.
- Make sure you include paragraph breaks and set your dialogue out correctly with a new line for each new speaker – all of this makes your material easier to read by our judges.
- Check that your word count does not exceed 10,000 words.
Best of luck preparing your submission to Discoveries 2026. We’re so excited to read your work!
Join us for a free Discoveries webinar! Your Novel: How to Get Started
Learn how to write a great opening that will inspire your readers to keep turning the page and uncover what the judges are looking for from submissions. Join our free webinar on Thursday 30 October 2025, 7.00pm to 8.30pm (UK time).