In honor of
National Poetry Month, Poet Lore, a publication of The Writer's Center,
co-sponsored a poetry contest with the Enoch Pratt Free Library of Baltimore,
Maryland. Chosen from a select pool of Maryland poets, the judges, Poet Lore
editors Ethelbert Miller and Jody Bolz, honored four outstanding local poets:
Mya Green, Emily Card, Randolph Pfaff, and Margaret S. Mullins. The three place
winners will be published in the Fall/Winter issue of Poet Lore. The
winning poet, Mya Green, will read her poem, “Responsibility”, at the CityLit
Festival in Baltimore on April 12 and her poem has been made into a display at
the Pratt Central Library.
1st Place: Mya Green
Mya Green is originally from Tuscaloosa, Alabama. She is an independent editorial consultant who earned both her BA in Liberal Arts and MFA in Writing from Sarah Lawrence College (Bronxville, New York). She served as poetry contest director and editor for LUMINA Journal Volume XI and acted as a liaison for Sarah Lawrence’s 9th Annual Poetry Festival, where she also opened for 2012 National Book Award winner, Nikky Finney.
Here is an excerpt from her winning poem, "Responsibility":
Feel the vibrations, she'd say. Deep South extracted
from my throat before it could root. We are not of the tribe,
we are a nation: fifteen burials at every stopping place,
sickness with each mile. Little Wolf says
the shaman woman walks in front of my mother
carrying a woven blanket, white. That I am late,
that I am never late.
2nd Place: Emily Card
but I have flown home for the harvest moon,
pedaled my bicycle barefoot every dusk
and stopping, stood
impaled on the spoked shadow
of a wheel that was always in the path ahead,
always dragging another wheel behind.
3rd Place: Randolph Pfaff
Randolph Pfaff is a writer, editor, and visual artist living in Baltimore. His work has been featured in Poet Lore, PANK, H_NGM_N, Revolver, and Heavy Feather Review, among others. He edits the literary journal apt and runs the small press Aforementioned Productions.
Here is an excerpt from his winning poem, "Contiguous":
I am opening this story
with the sound of fun--
sing-alongs on FM radio,
and the erratic drumbeat
of highway wind
pulsing through car windows.
I am showing you a picture
so you'll see what it was like
to be confined in this kind of freedom.
Honorable Mention: Margaret S. Mullins
Margaret S. Mullins divides her time between rural Maryland and downtown Baltimore. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, the editor of Manorborn 2009: The Water Issue (Abecedarian Press) and author of Family Constellation (Finishing Line Press, 2012.) Her work has appeared in New Verse News, Persimmon Tree, Alehouse, Loch Raven Review, Creekwalker, Magnapoets, The Sun, Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, Sugar Mule, OVS, and Writer's Almanac among others, and been read by Garrison Keillor on NPR.
To learn more about the Enoch Pratt Free Library, please visit: http://www.prattlibrary.org
To keep up with Poet Lore in its anniversary year, please visit us on Facebook.
1st Place: Mya Green
Mya Green is originally from Tuscaloosa, Alabama. She is an independent editorial consultant who earned both her BA in Liberal Arts and MFA in Writing from Sarah Lawrence College (Bronxville, New York). She served as poetry contest director and editor for LUMINA Journal Volume XI and acted as a liaison for Sarah Lawrence’s 9th Annual Poetry Festival, where she also opened for 2012 National Book Award winner, Nikky Finney.
Here is an excerpt from her winning poem, "Responsibility":
Feel the vibrations, she'd say. Deep South extracted
from my throat before it could root. We are not of the tribe,
we are a nation: fifteen burials at every stopping place,
sickness with each mile. Little Wolf says
the shaman woman walks in front of my mother
carrying a woven blanket, white. That I am late,
that I am never late.
2nd Place: Emily Card
Emily
grew up on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and spent her childhood combing the
beaches of Assateague Island. She loves to seek out new experiences and
moves often, having lived in Canterbury, England, and Boston,
Massachusetts. She currently works as a manager at a law firm in
Baltimore, Maryland. She studied literature and design but also enjoys
whetting her mind on the sharp edges of science and politics. Though
previously unpublished, Emily likes to write image-rich poems that draw upon
her experiences as a 26-year-old wanderer.
Here is an excerpt from her winning poem, "Saudade":
Here is an excerpt from her winning poem, "Saudade":
but I have flown home for the harvest moon,
pedaled my bicycle barefoot every dusk
and stopping, stood
impaled on the spoked shadow
of a wheel that was always in the path ahead,
always dragging another wheel behind.
3rd Place: Randolph Pfaff
Randolph Pfaff is a writer, editor, and visual artist living in Baltimore. His work has been featured in Poet Lore, PANK, H_NGM_N, Revolver, and Heavy Feather Review, among others. He edits the literary journal apt and runs the small press Aforementioned Productions.
Here is an excerpt from his winning poem, "Contiguous":
I am opening this story
with the sound of fun--
sing-alongs on FM radio,
and the erratic drumbeat
of highway wind
pulsing through car windows.
I am showing you a picture
so you'll see what it was like
to be confined in this kind of freedom.
Honorable Mention: Margaret S. Mullins
Margaret S. Mullins divides her time between rural Maryland and downtown Baltimore. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, the editor of Manorborn 2009: The Water Issue (Abecedarian Press) and author of Family Constellation (Finishing Line Press, 2012.) Her work has appeared in New Verse News, Persimmon Tree, Alehouse, Loch Raven Review, Creekwalker, Magnapoets, The Sun, Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, Sugar Mule, OVS, and Writer's Almanac among others, and been read by Garrison Keillor on NPR.
To learn more about the Enoch Pratt Free Library, please visit: http://www.prattlibrary.org
To keep up with Poet Lore in its anniversary year, please visit us on Facebook.
Wow! Congratulations to all the winners! I love their works, and I really think everyone on the list deserves to win, though I've found some favorites just after reading the excerpts. Anyway, thanks for sharing the works of the winners! More power to the library!
ReplyDeleteLucius Campbell @ Skild