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Donald Justice Poetry Prize – sponsored by the Iris N. Spencer Poetry Awards at the West Chester University Poetry Center Dwarf Stars Award – annual award presented by the Science Fiction Poetry Association to the author of the best horror, fantasy, or science fiction poem of ten lines or fewer published in the previous year.
Winning manuscripts will reflect the thoughtful humanity and careful metrical craftsmanship of Richard Wilbur's poetry." The 2019 contest is being judged by Ned Balbo . [ 6 ] The award has an entry fee of $25 per manuscript, and the prize is $1000 plus publication. [ 7 ]
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Inc. (SFWA) have criticized the International Library of Poetry's business model, describing its practices as "deceptive and misleading" in that they misrepresented their activities as a contest based on the quality of poetry submitted, whereas in fact the quality had little or no influence on the outcome.
The words are lenses as winners of this month’s Cape Cod Times Poetry Contest capture images of the world around them. And what a world it is. “Wild Fennel” by Kathleen Casey.
Winners: Davey Volner from Columbia University and Kristina Martino from UMass Amherst; Rachel Kahn from Mount Holyoke College [6] Ariele le Grand from Spelman College; Heather Maki from Williams College; Sokunthary Svay from the City College of New York; 2003 (80th): Winner: Rachel Gainer from George Washington University
May 2—FERGUSON — Winners of the James Larkin Pearson Poetry Competition were announced and given their awards at Whippoorwill Academy and Village in Ferguson this weekend. North Carolina's 7th ...
The final nine then recite two poems, and the top three recite a third poem. Judges (who are usually poetry/literary celebrities) select the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place winners. The 1st place winner wins $20,000, the 2nd place winner wins $10,000, and the 3rd place winner wins $5,000. The 4th-9th place takes home $1,000.
The Famous Poets Society (also known as the Christian Poets Guild [1]) was a vanity press [2] [3] that organized a poetry contest and offered self-publishing services.. Despite the company's claims to have awarded over $425,000 in cash prizes to selected poets over 8 years, [4] nearly all writers who submitted works were accepted regardless of artistic merit, and they were required to buy the ...