Love’s Thorns

12.12.23

Love poems have a long and storied literary history. “The Love Song for Shu-Sin,” composed in ancient Mesopotamia for use in fertility rituals, is considered by some to be the oldest love poem found in text form. “Song of Songs” from the Old Testament of the Bible celebrates the romantic and sexual love between two people. In more recent times, poets have been testing the limits of the love poem. Nate Marshall’s “palindrome” imagines an estranged lover’s life rewound like a film as the subject becomes “unpregnant” and the speaker “unlearn[s]” her name. In Sharon Olds’s “The Flurry,” two parents discuss how to tell their children they’re getting a divorce. Think of a relationship in your life that resists easy categorization and write a love poem that attempts to capture this complexity. Whether the subject is the distant love of a parental figure or the one who got away, resist the easy associations that come with the emotion and dive into love’s thorny contradictions.

That Was Then

12.7.23

Last month, musician André 3000, best known as one half of the Atlanta hip-hop duo Outkast, released his first solo album, New Blue Sun. The instrumental jazz album features the artist playing flute on songs improvised in real time, a surprising turn for fans of the renowned and reclusive rapper whose last album with Outkast was in 2003. In a recent GQ video interview, the music legend speaks about authenticity as a creator and how he doesn’t feel compelled to rap about anything in his life. “I’m forty-eight years old,” he says. “And things that happen in my life, like, what are you talking about? ‘I got to go get a colonoscopy.’” Write a personal essay about how your own literary output has evolved over the years. How can you connect your creative predilections and urgencies at specific times in your life with the state of your physical body or physical space?

Vibes

12.6.23

“What creates the vibe of a room? The other people inside it: the combined resonance of their voices,” write authors Sofia Samatar and Kate Zambreno in the introduction to their collaborative nonfiction book, Tone (Columbia University Press, 2023). A study on the use of tone in literary works, the authors consider how even if a room is empty, “there is a trace in the air of those who have recently left.” Begin a short story that takes place over the course of several scenes set in different places. Jot down notes for what you imagine happened in each environment before your story’s scene takes place there. How might subtle traces of those who have recently left the locale still linger and affect the tone or atmosphere of your story?

Whiting Foundation Announces 2023 Creative Nonfiction Grant Winners

Ten writers have won the Whiting Foundation’s Creative Nonfiction Grant for 2023. Now in its eighth year, the $40,000 prize aims to support multi-year book projects. Unlike the $50,000 Whiting Awards for emerging writers, authors can apply for the Creative Nonfiction Grant; judges award applicants whose work “displays singularity of voice, arresting narrative vision, a clear contribution to our culture at large, and in-depth, quality research,” according to a statement from the foundation.

The winners include Nicholas Boggs for James Baldwin: A Love Story, a consideration of Baldwin’s relationships with his mentor, lover, and two artistic collaborators, forthcoming from Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Eiren Caffall for The Mourner’s Bestiary, which investigates the loss of marine ecosystems in the Gulf of Maine and the Long Island Sound alongside the story of a family’s battle with a serious illness and the author’s own family history of a genetic kidney disease, forthcoming from Row House Publishing; Sarah Chihaya for Bibliophobia, a blend of literary criticism and memoir examining readers’—including the author’s—affective relationships with books, forthcoming from Random House; Alexander Clapp for Waste Wars: A Journey Through the World of Globalized Trash, a journalistic examination of the international garbage business and its geopolitical consequences, forthcoming from Little, Brown; Kendra Taira Field for The Stories We Tell, which investigates African American family narratives from the Middle Passage to the present, forthcoming from W. W. Norton; Molly O’Toole for The Route: The Untold Story of the New Migrant Underground, which explores a migrant passage from Brazil to the U.S.–Mexico border, forthcoming from Crown; Dom Phillips with collaborators for How to Save the Amazon: Ask the People Who Know, a “character-driven” narrative of travel through the imperiled rainforest, forthcoming from Manilla Press, an imprint of Bonnier Books in the United Kingdom; Carrie Schuettpelz for The Indian Card: A Journey Through America’s Native Identity Problem, about the nuances of Indigenous ethnicity in the U.S., forthcoming from Flatiron Books; Sonia Shah for Special: The Rise and Fall of a Beastly Idea, which troubles the notion of human exceptionalism among other animals, forthcoming from Bloomsbury; and Reggie Ugwu for Brilliance Is All We Have: Black Filmmakers and the Fight for the Soul of America, a deep-dive into the history of Black American cinema, forthcoming from Bloomsbury.

Each of the winning projects underwent two first-round readers, who considered the “substance, narrative skill, quality of research, and impact” of the work. Sixteen finalists were evaluated by a panel of four judges, who chose the final ten grantees based on how the grant would contribute to the book. Experts in the field of work under consideration, readers and judges served anonymously to keep them from feeling pressure to choose any one work over another.

“This year’s grantees are doing venturous work, reporting from often hostile places on complex matters of deep import to us all,” Courtney Hodell, Whiting’s director of literary programs, said in a statement. “For some, the journey is an inward one. All these writers are animated by a drive for beauty as well as truth, and this combination is what makes books endure. Whiting is thrilled to support such risk-taking.”

To learn more about the Whiting Foundation’s Creative Nonfiction Grant, visit the foundation’s website. Check out the Grants & Awards database and Submission Calendar for more contests in poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and translation. 

Photo credits: Boggs: Rachel Eliza Griffiths; Caffall: Jacob Hand; Chihaya: Beowulf Sheehan; Clapp: Markos Kovaios; Field: Alonso Nichols; O’Toole: Beth Mickalonis; Phillips: Alessandra Sampaio; Schuettpelz: Jess Barnett; Shah: Glenford Nuñez; Ugwu: Tony Cenicola.

Eponymous Poem

12.5.23

The thirteen lines of the late Molly Brodak’s self-titled poem read: “I am a good man. / The amount of fear / I am ok with / is insane. / I love many people / who don’t love me. / I don’t actually know / if that is true. / This is love. / It is a mass of ice / melting, I can’t hold / it and I have nowhere / to put it down.” Through a series of declarative, zigzagging statements, the short poem manages to touch upon a handful of intense emotions—doubt, fear, uncertainty, desperation, and helplessness—all tied together by the eponymous title. This week write a short self-titled poem. How can you bring your own deeply personal responses to questions about your life and relationships under poetic scrutiny in a way that represents your individuality?

Upcoming Contest Deadlines

Don’t let 2023 pass you by without trying your luck at a writing contest! Prizes with a December 15 deadline include a weeklong residency at Millay Arts in Austerlitz, New York, and $1,000 (including $500 for a reading in New York City) for a poetry chapbook; $1,500 and publication for a short story; and $1,000 and publication for a poetry collection. Read on to learn more, and best of luck to you!

Center for Book Arts
Poetry Chapbook Contest

A prize of $500 and letterpress publication by the Center for Book Arts is given annually for a poetry chapbook. The winner will also receive 10 copies of their chapbook, an additional $500 to give a reading with the contest judge at the Center for Book Arts in New York City in fall 2024, and a free weeklong residency at Millay Arts in Austerlitz, New York, for their Wintertide Rustic Retreat. Manuscripts written in another language are accepted when accompanied by an English translation. Entry fee: $30.

Gival Press
Poetry Award

A prize of $1,000 and publication by Gival Press will be given biennially for a book of poetry. Beverly Burch will judge. Entry fee: $20.

Longleaf Press
Book Contest

A prize of $1,000, publication by Longleaf Press, and 25 author copies is given annually for a poetry collection. The winner will also be invited to give a virtual reading in early 2024. Roger Weingarten will judge. Entry fee: $27.

Story
Story Foundation Prize

A prize of $1,500 and publication in Story is given annually for a short story. Entry fee: $25.

Willow Books
Literature Awards

Three prizes of $1,000 each and publication by Willow Books are given annually for a book of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction by BIPOC writers. Entry fee: $25.

Visit the contest websites for complete guidelines, and check out the Grants & Awards database and Submission Calendar for more contests in poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and translation.

Broken Bowl

11.30.23

In her essay “Memory and Delusion,” which appears in a 2015 volume of previously unpublished works titled Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings, Shirley Jackson writes about an occurrence one evening when a ceramic bowl in the room suddenly shatters and each of her guests—a musician, a chemistry teacher, and a painter—has a vastly different response. Jackson imagines that her observations, as well as her guests’ responses, will undoubtedly work their way into her writing, whether describing an exploded house, the complexities of feeling sudden shock, or deep loss. “I will keep the recollection of those scattered pieces, lying on the piano, and someday when I want a mental image of utter destruction the bowl will come back to me in one of a dozen ways,” Jackson writes. This week jot down notes of unusual occurrences you’ve encountered. Use your imagination to make vivid descriptions, while hewing as closely to what you genuinely observed. Save these descriptive gems for a future essay, story, or poem.

Storytelling Salve

11.29.23

“Poetry…is a form of salvation,” writes Najwan Darwish in his foreword to Chaos, Crossing (World Poetry Books, 2022), translated by Kareem James Abu-Zeid, the English-language debut of Olivia Elias, a poet of the Palestinian diaspora. “It may not make the pain tolerable, but it keeps the pain from becoming trite, banal,” writes Darwish, pointing to the way artmaking can save, vivify, protect, commemorate, and dignify lives. Adopt this empowering perspective and think back to an experience that brought you pain—perhaps an insecurity or fear, a difficult relationship with a loved one, or a distressing loss—and turn that pain into art by writing a short story that explores the specific, idiosyncratic essence of that memory. How can you use fiction and storytelling to transform your memory, and at the same time, protect its emotional truth?

Know Thyself

11.28.23

How well do we know ourselves? Studies done by psychologists over the past several decades have demonstrated that people often process information about the world around them through cognitive biases. The way in which an event is remembered can then lead to biased thinking and decision-making. Positive memory biases cause one to remember events more favorably than they actually were and view their overall past with a rosy outlook, while negative memory biases often occur when recalling an emotional event. Write a poem that approaches one memory from two different cognitive biases, playing with the ways in which an event or situation might be remembered differently depending on how it was experienced. Does this multivalent approach allow you to expand your initial perceptions of what happened?

The Art of Mealtime

11.23.23

Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija has a long history of rejecting traditional art objects and instead, cooks and serves food in museums and galleries as a way to construct communal environments and reconfigure the concepts of artmaking and art spaces. How do you view the intersection or overlap between everyday life activities and art? Write a personal essay that explores your own perceptions of how writing and other creative pursuits overlap with your daily living. What art or creativity can be found in the simple act of brushing your teeth or commuting to work? Are there larger themes, such as community, interpersonal relationships, identity, consumerism, and pleasure, that float to the surface when you examine the roots of mundane habits and routines?

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