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Award-Winning Poems: Summer 2008

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Welcome to our Summer 2008 selection of award-winning poems. These quarterly specials are included with your free Winning Writers Newsletter subscription. We'll release our next regular newsletter on June 15.
Winning Writers Named One of the Writer's Digest "101 Best Sites" for 2008
We are pleased to be listed among this year's "101 Best Sites" by Writer's Digest. Over 2,100 nominations were received. This is our fourth year in a row on this list. Thanks to everyone who supported our nomination!
Lost one of our newsletters? Message garbled in transmission? Graphics distorted? Not to worry. All our recent newsletters and specials are posted online at http://www.winningwriters.com/news
FEATURED SPONSOR'S MESSAGE
Closing This Month
Ellen LaForge Poetry Prize
Postmark Deadline: June 30
Established in 1983 as the Grolier Prize, the Ellen LaForge Poetry Prize is open to all poets who have not yet published a book of poetry, including small press, chapbook or trade book. The winner receives $1,000 and two copies of the poetry prize Annual. Up to six poems by the winner and four by each of three runners-up are chosen for publication in the Annual.
Submit your manuscript, in duplicate, of up to six poems, no more than 12 double-spaced pages. Your name must not appear in this manuscript. On a separate cover sheet, provide your name and contact information, including email address and poem titles. Entry fee: $10, payable to The Ellen LaForge Memorial Poetry Foundation. Please mail your entry to:
The Ellen LaForge Memorial Poetry Foundation
1770 Massachusetts Avenue, PMB 345
Cambridge, MA 02140-2808
Submissions must be unpublished elsewhere. No simultaneous submissions. Winner and runners-up are notified by October 1. Copies of the Annual are available from the Foundation at the above address.
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RECENT HONORS FOR OUR NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIBERS
Congratulations to Harrison Solow. Her essay "Bendithion" was a winner of the Pushcart Prize, one of the most prestigious awards for poems, stories and essays appearing in small-press publications. Within the essay, Harrison explores the town of Lampeter, the singer Timothy Evans, and Welshness, and writes about the University, its centrality to the town, and her uneasy beginnings there contrasted to the ease of life in Lampeter. The essay was recently published, along with an accompanying CD of Timothy Evans singing, in the literary journal AGNI. "Bendithion", which means "blessings" in Welsh, was selected as a winner from more than 8,000 entries nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Read the press release here.
Congratulations to Karen Mondale. Her poem "Joe, 1960" won honorable mention in the 2008 James H. Nash Poetry Contest, a members-only contest from the St. Louis Poetry Center. She kindly shares it with us below. She writes, "The poem describes the challenges to inter-racial friendship and trust in 1960. Joe was Joseph C. Bailey, the Philadelphia sculptor and my very dear friend."
RECENT HONORS FOR POETRY CONTEST INSIDER SUBSCRIBERS
Congratulations to Marianna Busching. Her poem "Ode to the Innards" won the 2007 Guy Owen Poetry Prize from Southern Poetry Review. The next deadline for this $1,000 award is June 15.
Congratulations to Susan Lewis. Her chapbook Animal Husbandry has been accepted for publication by Finishing Line Press, a publisher she found in this newsletter.
Congratulations to Sheri Hunt. She won third prize in the 2008 Texas Laughing Gull Writing Contest for her poem "Laughing Gulls", which she has kindly permitted us to reprint below. This contest from the Art Center for the Islands offers $100 apiece for poetry, fiction and essays by authors aged 18+. The most recent deadline was February 29.
RECENT PUBLICATION CREDITS FOR OUR SUBSCRIBERS
Norbert Hirschhorn's second full-length poetry collection, Mourning in the Presence of a Corpse, has just been published by Dar al Jadeed Press of Beirut, Lebanon. In addition, his chapbook The Terrible Crystal is now available from UK-based publisher Hearing Eye. Dr. Hirschhorn is offering discounted prices for Winning Writers subscribers who wish to purchase his books; contact him at bertzpoet@yahoo.com.
Alegria Imperial's poem "Revenant" was published in the May 2008 issue of The Cortland Review. Her poem "Abrazos" was published in the April 2008 issue of PoeticDiversity: The Litzine of Los Angeles. In March, her poems "Rage" and "Deserter" were posted on the Poets Against the War site. In addition, her personal essays were accepted by the web journals Timeless Spirit and Tiny Lights.
Closing This Month
Margaret Reid Poetry Contest for Traditional Verse
Postmark Deadline: June 30
Now in its fifth year, this contest seeks poetry in traditional verse forms such as sonnets and free verse. Both published and unpublished poems are welcome. Fourteen cash prizes totaling $5,250 will be awarded, including a top prize of $2,000. The entry fee is $6 for every 25 lines you submit. Submit online or by mail. This contest is sponsored by Tom Howard Books and assisted by Winning Writers. Judges: John H. Reid and Dee C. Konrad. See the complete guidelines and past winners.
Tom Howard/John H. Reid Poetry Contest
Postmark Deadline: September 30
Now in its sixth year, this contest seeks poems in any style, theme or genre. Both published and unpublished poems are welcome. Fourteen cash prizes totaling $5,250 will be awarded, including a top prize of $2,000. The entry fee is $6 for every 25 lines you submit. Submit online or by mail. Early submission encouraged. This contest is sponsored by Tom Howard Books and assisted by Winning Writers. Judges: John H. Reid and Dee C. Konrad. See the complete guidelines and past winners.
TRY POETRY CONTEST INSIDER
If you enjoy using The Best Free Poetry Contests, consider upgrading to Poetry Contest Insider. The Best Free Poetry Contests profiles the 150 or so poetry contests that are free to enter. With your Poetry Contest Insider subscription, you'll get access to all of our 750+ poetry contest profiles, plus over 100 of the best prose contests. Search and sort contests by deadline, prize, fee, recommendation level and more. Access to Poetry Contest Insider is just $7.95 per quarter, with a free 10-day trial at the start. Cancel at any time.
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PLANTATION OF THE MAD
by R.T. Smith
Winner of the 2006 Guy Owen Prize
Postmark Deadline: June 15
This long-running award from Southern Poetry Review offers $1,000 for unpublished poems. In language as jazzy and manic as his subject, Smith's prizewinning poem tells the tale of Charles "Buddy" Bolden, a legendary New Orleans musician who ended his days in an asylum.
HOLY GHOST and AFTER THE ACCIDENT
by Brian Brodeur
Winner of the 2007 Akron Poetry Prize
Postmark Deadline: June 30
This open manuscript contest includes $1,000 and publication by the University of Akron Press. In these poems from Brodeur's prizewinning Other Latitudes, closely observed moments of family life unfold in slow motion, invested with a significance that hovers just out of reach.
HORIZON LINE
by Ely Shipley
Winner of the 2007 Barrow Street Press Book Contest
Postmark Deadline: June 30
This prestigious open manuscript contest from a press that is friendly to experimental poetry offers $1,000 and publication. Shipley's Boy With Flowers won the 2007 award. In this poem, an aunt's story about the scar on her neck plunges the child into a dizzying meditation on the fragile boundaries between memory and experience, the body and the world.
We are gathering a growing library of award-winning poems in Poetry Contest Insider, over 90 to date. Enjoy a wide range of today's best work. Sign up for a free trial.
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2002 WAR POETRY CONTEST—FINALIST
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER WITH APPLES
by Victor Lodato
In the attic at 6 De Lairessestraat,
skillful young men work under low light.
In their hands: pens, carbon paper, blades.
An attic in Amsterdam, 1942,
where the false identity cards are made—
for Jews, or men
slated for forced labor in Germany.
Small apples drowse uneaten on a table;
a thin woman is hungry but will not eat.
With her daughter she has come for cards.
Her husband has been taken.
In the attic, a good man in a black sweater
braces her with his large hands.
He is giving her all his strength
to keep her from shaking.
She has just cried and, in a moment,
will cry again. Her daughter
looks directly into the lens,
the beginning of a smile on her lips:
sitting sideways in a chair, her hands
rest calmly on its curved back.
Shocking how light she looks,
how composed in her knitted sweater.
Rarely has she had the chance
to smile for a camera. She knows
she is pretty and one day
will be beautiful. The camera
pulls her into the future.
She is beyond the still life of the table,
the wreck of the present. Beyond her mother.
She flirts with the eye of the black box.
Yes, she is vain—a vain child,
a gorgeous vain child in the attic
of 6 De Lairessestraat. The mother cries,
but it is the girl, beautiful girl,
who adheres to the rules of tragedy—
arranging her clear face for capture
so that we may see her disregard
apples, blades, teacups, the lost mother,
the card with her new name
that will not take her very far.
Copyright 2002 Victor Lodato
This poem was a finalist in the 2002 War Poetry Contest sponsored by Winning Writers. See the judge's comments on the winning poems from this contest.
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SPONSORS' MESSAGES
Lucidity Poetry Journal
Lucidity Poetry Journal, now in its 23rd year of publication, is seeking poems dealing with all the facets of human experience such as life, love, loss, joy, sorrow, hope, disappointment—all those elements faced by people in human relationships and daily events. We want poems that are lucid and clear in diction and deal with everyday issues, avoiding vulgarities and jabberwocky. We also avoid political and religious verse, as well as purely nature poems: butterflies, sunsets, birds, etc. We are open to any format: formal or free verse but it is important to read our guidelines before submitting poetry. We do not consider email submissions.
If your work is accepted for publication, you will receive a modest payment (from $1 to $15), plus a free copy of that issue. We do charge a small entry/reading fee to pay the publication and postage expenses of our journal. Please email us for submission details or visit our website: lucidityjournal.00books.com (the 00 are zeros). In addition to our twice-yearly journal, we also publish chapbooks for poets at a reasonable cost if you wish to have your poems in a book. Contact us for details and prices.
Response has been excellent to a new concept in publishing that we have developed which we call a Mini-Chapbook, featuring a 12-page booklet containing 8 of your poems with an attractive cover showing title, your name and illustration. These booklets are great for mailing or giveaways, and are far cheaper than a greeting card. Send $1 for a sample of the Mini-Chapbook. It's an easy way to get your poems in print in a professional venue.
For more information, please write to Lucidity Poetry Journal, Ted Badger–Editor, 14781 Memorial Drive, No. 10, Houston, TX 77079-5210, USA, or email tedbadger1@yahoo.com.
Retreat for Writers in Beautiful Western Massachusetts
Inviting poets, fiction writers, memoirists, and all writers. Wellspring House is a beautiful and tranquil retreat whose ambience has been lauded by former residents as utterly conducive to creativity. Carol Dine calls it "my haven and my heaven". We are nestled in Ashfield, population 1,800, one of the "hilltowns" between the Berkshires and the Connecticut River. Amherst and Northampton and the five colleges—Amherst, Smith, Hampshire, Mt. Holyoke and the UMass flagship campus—are within a 35-minute drive. Ashfield has three eateries, two churches, a library, a music store, a hardware store which sells excellent ice cream, a feminist press (Paris), and a resident theater company (Double Edge). Ashfield Lake is a five-minute walk.
Wellspring House has five rooms for residents (two suitable for couples), two baths on the second floor, and an upstairs sitting room. Downstairs is a communal kitchen and eating area for residents, a spacious living room with a fireplace and a half bath (see pictures). The house is surrounded by a large patio, flower and vegetable gardens, fruit trees and five acres of woods. We supply linens, coffee and tea—and bikes! Fee: $175/week.
For more information, please email your hosts, Ann and Preston Browning, at browning@wellspringhouse.net, call 413-628-3276, or mail Wellspring House, P.O. Box 2006, Ashfield, MA 01330. www.wellspringhouse.net
Guests say:
"I want to thank you for a wonderful three weeks at Wellspring House. It proved to be my most productive period in five or six years. You have done an amazing job of putting together a beautiful conducive environment. The gorgeous common area, the sunny bedrooms, and the surrounding Berkshires with all their various colors and moods—these are all elements I will cherish in memory."
"For the invaluable time, space and freedom you provide at Wellspring House, I thank you."
"Wellspring House: An island of tranquility in an ocean of tumult."
"I had a very productive visit. The house, the town, the hosts—all were so beautiful to experience, and were truly a wellspring of inspiration."
"What a deeply romantic setting in which to write, stroll and sleep. We loved the books downstairs, the art in the hallways, and the breeze in this room upstairs. We hope all are inspired to create and enjoy the beauty around them."
June Open Reading Period For Full-Length Poetry Manuscripts
Steel Toe Books
Steel Toe Books publishes full-length, single-author poetry collections. We look for workmanship (economical use of language, high-energy verbs, precise literal descriptions, original figurative language, poems carefully arranged as a book); a unique style and/or a distinctive voice; clarity; emotional impact; humor (word plays, hyperbole, comic timing); performability (a Steel Toe poet is at home on the stage as well as on the page). We don't want dry verse, purposely obscure language, poetry by people who are so wary of being called "sentimental" that they steer away from any recognizable human emotions, or poetry that takes itself so seriously that it's unintentionally funny.
Our submission process
Steel Toe has no reading fee, but we ask everyone who submits to purchase one of our existing titles directly from us. All titles are $12 each. Please include $1.50 shipping and handling for each book ordered. Kentucky residents must also include an additional $0.84 per book for state sales tax. On the Steel Toe Books online order form, please select one or more books to order and complete the form. (The Steel Toe website works best with Internet Explorer, by the way.) Print out the completed form and send it along with the following:
- a check or money order for the selected book
- a copy of your manuscript for consideration
- an acknowledgements page
- a cover page with your contact information
- a self-addressed stamped envelope (SASE) for notification
Mail your packet to:
Steel Toe Books
c/o Tom C. Hunley
Department of English
Western Kentucky University
1906 College Heights Boulevard, No. 11086
Bowling Green, KY 42101-1086
Deadline Extended!
Rhyming Christian Poetry Contest
Postmark Deadline: June 15
Total prizes: $1,000. Entry fee: $15 per poem. Enter up to 10 poems.
If you're a Christian who writes rhyming poetry on Christian topics, this contest is for you. We offer two categories, both requiring rhyming poetry. Classical Christian Poetry accepts entries that are 28 lines in length or less, and are written in the style of famous Christian poets such as Fanny Crosby and Charles Wesley. Rhyming Poetry accepts other rhyming poetry that is not quite so strictly structured. This contest is open to poets of Christian faith, and sponsored by Utmost Christian Writers Foundation, a non-profit association for the support and encouragement of Christian poets. Click for the complete guidelines.
Please enjoy "To Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo" by Tracy Lee Rittmueller, 2007 honorable mention in the Rhyming Poetry category:
To Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo
by Tracy Lee Rittmueller
From a country you never saw yet you explained,
because nothing under the sun is ever new;
From a woman you never loved however you pained
your mother and lovers, for I, a woman, too,
am body, mind, heart, spirit and wandering
Soul. I've watched summer's various green-gold days
vanish with regrets, like all forgiven past.
I long to sing God's sky-bright praise.
My soul has searched, word by word, for rest,
yet did not find the theme to quench my pondering...
[poem continues here]
Closing This Month
2008 Autumn House Poetry Prize and Autumn House Fiction Prize
Postmark Deadline: June 30
The winners will receive book publication, a $1,000 advance against royalties, and a $1,500 travel grant to participate in the 2009
Autumn House Master Authors Series in Pittsburgh. All finalists will be considered for publication. Final judge for the Poetry Prize is Naomi Shihab Nye. Final judge for the Fiction Prize is Sharon Dilworth (see profile).
All full-length collections of poetry 50-80 pages are eligible. Fiction submissions should be approximately 200-300 pages. All fiction sub-genres (short stories, short-shorts, novellas, or any combination of sub-genres) are eligible. Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope (SASE) for contest results. Autumn House Press assumes no responsibility for lost or damaged manuscripts. All entries must be clearly marked "Poetry Prize" or "Fiction Prize" on the outside envelope. $25 entry fee (check or money order) must be enclosed. Send manuscript and fee to:
Autumn House Press
P.O. Box 60100
Pittsburgh, PA 15211
Click for the complete guidelines. Please note: Manuscripts will not be returned.
Please enjoy this selection from Let it be a Dark Roux: New and Selected Poems by Sheryl St. Germain, published by Autumn House Press. Parts of this book were a finalist in the 2006 Autumn House Poetry Contest.
The Erotic
by Sheryl St. Germain
I scatter corn around the yard and wait
for them to come at dawn and dusk,
two or three does together with twin
fawns, gangly, falling down. Sometimes
bucks come — alone, suspicious, male.
They are young, mostly. I watch them
in the dark of my own house
with binoculars, like a lonely woman
might watch a man undress
from a far window.
Bob says that the erotic
is hardly ever sexual, only
when we're lucky.
O how I want that luck!
I wait for the moment I love best
when their white tails go up
in warning, erect and full
as a loved one you stroke
but don't let come.
Copyright 2007 by Sheryl St. Germain
Closing This Month
The Litchfield Review Writing Contest
Postmark Deadline: June 30
We seek poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction for our semi-annual magazine competition. Prose entries should be 3,000 words or less. Poetry entries may be of any length.
To be considered for both publication and a cash prize, please enclose $10 with each essay, short story, or set of 1-3 poems. Enclose $15 and you may submit an unlimited number of entries. Mail your manuscripts to:
The Litchfield Review
7 Bonna Street
Beacon Falls, CT 06403
For more information and news about our ongoing writing contests, please check our website, www.thelitchfieldreview.com, or email Theresa C. Vara at tvdannen@sbcglobal.net.
The Litchfield Review proudly congratulates Amy Nawrocki as the First Prize winner of The Litchfield Review Spring 2008 Writing Contest. Her poem "Annotating the Text" appears in the latest issue.
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Joe, 1960
by Karen Mondale
If he had come knocking at my door
and said
I'm sorry, did I wake you?
if he had come knocking at my door
and said
I was thinking about something...
Can we talk?
if he had come knocking at my door
and said
nothing
I would have let him in.
As it was
when I opened the door
and he stood there
slouched against the doorframe,
thumbs notched in the front pockets
of his jeans, smile sexing, posing
like a prostitute leans against a streetlight
and said
Hey sugar—here's your nigga-boy,
I closed the door
went back to bed
and tried to sleep.
When he came knocking at my door
in the morning
and said
Thank you.
I just had to know,
I shut the door behind me,
walked into the world with Joe,
aware
that we had been turned inside out
like a dirty shirt tossed into the washing machine
and come out
clean.
Copyright 2008 by Karen Mondale
This poem won honorable mention in the 2008 James H. Nash Poetry Contest, a members-only contest from the St. Louis Poetry Center.
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Laughing Gulls
by Sheri Hunt
Sand encrusted on brown toes sparkles like Lilliputian diamonds.
Velvet sunshine trickles through fingers of children seeking buried treasure.
Coconut and banana waft from anointed skin.
Nature's heartbeat
Tumbles on white foam
Where cool conquers heat.
Blue hues meet and mingle
Becoming a single palette
On the far-away horizon
Laughing birds,
Beautiful from afar,
Oblivious in flight.
Till I open my bag of Cheetos
And they turn my reverie
Into the stuff of horror movies.
Copyright 2008 by Sheri Hunt
This poem won third prize in the 2008 Texas Laughing Gull Writing Contest from the Art Center for the Islands.
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PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT
Literacy Opportunity for Safety Awareness Month
June is Safety Awareness Month
Imagine your child telling you about a safety lesson he had, urging you to buy a smoke alarm for the home. You get that alarm, but have no idea what to do with it because you can't read the instructions. Smoke alarms, carbon monoxide alarms, warning labels on common household products, even medications come with instructions that 30 million adults in the US cannot read or comprehend.
ProLiteracy and the Home Safety Council partnered to provide fire safety and disaster preparedness materials that can be used by adults at all reading levels. "The schools and fire and life safety educators are doing a great job of reaching the children," says Linda Church, ProLiteracy special projects associate director. "Unfortunately, one in five parents won't be able to read the safety materials they bring home. The Home Safety Literacy Project makes it possible for family members to learn together."
Most fire safety materials used by fire departments throughout the country are written at a 6th grade level. Free materials designed for adults with low literacy skills or adults learning English as a second language are available and would be great starting tools for lessons with your students.
For more on National Safety Month:
National Safety Council
Home Safety Council
Click for more information on literacy and public safety.
ProLiteracy supports adults and young people in the US and internationally who are learning to read, write, and do basic math by training instructors, publishing instructional materials, and advocating for resources and public policies that support them.
Support ProLiteracy's vital mission. Click
here to learn more. Click
here to contribute.
Send this page to a friend and we'll donate 15 cents to ProLiteracy for each friend you refer.
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2004 WERGLE FLOMP HUMOR POETRY CONTEST—THIRD PRIZE
ODE ON A GRECIAN FORMULA
by S.L. Pierrotti
Oh sacred libation of Narcissian (sp?) splendor,
From thee I reattain, through unpretentious market vendor,
Ebon locks once lost, that now renewed, quickly reengender,
And mend penis-vital connections with youth, once hindered.
The empowering single application of sanctified unction
More than libido-enhancing Viagra restores function.
The stygian night of repellent, slack-bellied age has flown,
The withered renewed! The palsied limb now rises on its own!
Lo, the Elysium of youthful, sweat-scented bodies beckons,
Upon the sacred vessel of efficacious deception your servant reckons!
Oh, formula of the gods, to your humble supplicant, I pray, bestow
The raven wings of Adonis above, the might of Jupiter's member below,
Enough to bring an eternal Olympian festival of adolescent sex,
If not, I'll try some botox next.
Copyright 2004 S.L. Pierrotti
Sent as a joke to poetry.com, this poem received third prize in the 2004 Wergle Flomp parody poetry contest sponsored by Winning Writers. See the judge's comments on winning poems from this contest.
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COMING IN OUR JUNE 15 NEWSLETTER
Best Free Poetry Contests for June 16-July 31
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