Please realize that this is a chapbook competition for 20-40 pages of poetry. Entries with fewer than 20 pages will simply be discarded.
In
1979, a tornado swept through her town of Wichita Falls, taking her
home and everything she owned. Among the things she lost were her life's
work, handwritten poems kept in a closet.
Mary
died in 2010, and here at Casey Shay Press, we have decided, in her
memory, to publish one poet each year. It is our hope that by
encouraging poets to send their work out into the world, we can
help keep others from sudden loss, be it a natural disaster, a technical
failure that destroys a hard drive, or a personal loss in the theft of
the laptop or computer.
The winner of the
Mary Ballard Poetry Chapbook Prize will receive $500 and 25 printed
copies of the chapbook. The chapbook will be sold in both physical and
electronic versions via a publishing contract with Casey Shay Press.
There is NO fee to enter this contest, but each entrant may submit only one manuscript.
Rule for Entries:
Deadline: June 30, 2014
- The Mary Ballard Poetry Chapbook Prize is open to all poets, published or unpublished.
- The prize is open to international entries, although the poetry should be in English.
- Manuscripts may be either a collection of poems or one long poem and should be a minimum of 20 pages and a maximum of 40 pages (not including the title page).
- Poems should adhere to a theme, however loosely.
- We consider themes for adults as well as collections for children.
- Individual poems may be previously published, but poems should not have been published as a group in any form, including self-published collections.
- No more than 10% of the poetry should have been posted to the poet's own blog or web site previously, and print and digital rights to any published poems should have reverted to the author to be eligible.
- All poems should be single spaced and typed in size 12 Times New Roman or similar font.
- Each manuscript should include a title page. This page should include the title, a one-sentence explanation of the chapbook's theme, and contact information on the poet. Please use your real name for your submission. If you prefer to use a pseudonym on your chapbook, you may list that as well and we will use it on public contest results.
- If any poems have been previously published, please indicate their titles and where they were published.
- If the poet already participates in readings, poetry groups, or writers' organizations, we would love to hear about that, but it is optional.
- The reading period for the 2015 competition begins on April 1, 2014. Entries must be submitted by June 30, 2014. Submissions will only be considered if received between those dates.
- The quarter-finalists will be announced July 31, 2014. Semi finalists Aug. 30. Finalists Sept. 30. The winner will be chosen by a celebrity poet judge, and we can't always be sure when the judging will be completed, but hopefully by Nov. 1.
- We are all-electronic. Fill out this form to submit your entry:
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(Old contest)
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Take a look at our previous winners:
Uncommon Clay by Darlene Franklin-Campbell, judged by Jay Parini, author of The Last Station, Robert Frost: A Life, and numerous poetry collections.
You can read free samples of her work at Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
Seven Times to Leave by Jeannette Angell, judged by Fred Marchant, Director of the Creative Writing Program at Suffolk University and author of The Looking House.
Read her work at Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
Splitting the Velvet Dark by Elaine Mott, judged by Dorothea Lasky, professor of poetry at Columbia University's School of the Arts, and the author of three full-length collections of poems.
Read her work on Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
Is it required that the poems be entered single space following one after another, or may the poems be separated, as in one per page? Some of my poems are less than a page, while others are two pages long. I want to ensure my submission conforms to the length requirements.
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to make sure I understood this rule: "No more than 10% of the poetry should have been posted to the poet's own blog or web site previously, and print and digital rights to any published poems should have reverted to the author to be eligible." Does this mean less than 10% of the poems should be previously published anywhere, or just on a personal blog? Thanks
ReplyDeletePS: LOVE Splitting the Velvet Dark!!
I have read "Splitting The Velvet Dark" and can easily see why it was chosen: a beautiful compilation of poems which serve as a diary. I was deeply honored when the author's son asked me to read it. Stunning.
ReplyDelete