Author: Denise Low
ISBN: 9781953743374
–Alison Hicks, Judge
•Arteries by Laura Lee Washburn
•The Will to Punish by Michael Poage
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Title: House of Grace, House of Blood Author: Denise Low ISBN: 9781953743374 “A stunning work of poetic witness and imagination. Low’s poetry sings out of documentary texts, oral histories, family stories, and personal interrogation and reflection, illuminating the 1782 massacre by renegade western Pennsylvania militia of Native Lenape (including women and children) converted to the pacifist Moravian faith in Gnadenhutten, Ohio (literally house or hut of Grace).” –Alison Hicks, Judge Finalists: •Arteries by Laura Lee Washburn •The Will to Punish by Michael Poage Alison Hicks has published four poetry collections, including the 2021 Birdy Poetry Prize from Meadowlark Press, a novella, and an anthology. Her work has appeared in Eclipse, Gargoyle, Permafrost, and Poet Lore, among other journals. She was named a finalist for the 2021 Beullah Rose Prize from Smartish Pace, an Editor's Choice selection in the Philadelphia Stories National Poetry Prize, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Green Hills Literary Lantern, Quartet Journal, and Nude Bruce Review. She is 1982 graduate of Bryn Mawr College, and received an M.F.A. in Creative Writing with a concentration in fiction in 1987 from the University of Arizona, where she held a University Fellowship, the Anonymous Scholarship, and was a second-place winner of the Downs Award for Fiction. She is certified to lead creative writing workshops following the Amherst Writers & Artists method pioneered by Pat Schneider. In 1996, she founded Greater Philadelphia Workshop Studio to support writers in the development of their individual voices and in the practice of their craft. GPWS offers community-based creative writing workshops and personal consultation using the Amherst Writers & Artists method. For the first time, we are announcing finalists in our book awards categories prior to the announcement of our winners at the 2025 Fall Gathering (Writing Retreat) at Rock Springs Ranch on Sunday, October 5. This has been quite an undertaking. We are grateful to all of the individuals who volunteered to serve on our reading committees. 2025 Nelson Poetry Book Award Finalists House of Grace, House of Blood, by Denise Low Why the Will to Punish? by Michael Poage Arteries, by Laura Lee Washburn Congratulations, Denise, Michael, and Laura!
The following question came up during our 2nd Tuesday Social. It is an important distinction and we wanted to clarify for new members.
Q: I was waiting to submit my published book to the contest on April 1, and now I see that the "preferred deadline" for submission was March 1. Am I too late to enter? A: Good question! This is an important change to the 2025 contest guidelines. First, members need to be aware that there are two sets of contests that Kansas Authors Club sponsors annually. The first is our Book Awards. We have eight awards for PUBLISHED books. In 2025, eligible books were published between June 1, 2023 and December 31, 2024. We are honoring the June 15 deadline, but as we are introducing the announcement of finalists for this contest, we would prefer to receive your entries ASAP. Click here for Book Awards guidelines. Read the whole thing before entering! ONLY Kansas Authors Club members are eligible for the Book Awards contests. It is OKAY to join today and submit your book for the competition. The second set of contests are our Annual Literary Contests with categories for youth and adult writers. These contests are open to all Kansas Authors Club members (regardless of where you live) and to ANY Kansas resident. If you live in the state of Kansas, you do not need to be a member, but adults will have to pay a little more to enter the contest. There is no charge for youth to enter the contests. Eligible entries for this contest are short, never-before-published pieces of prose and poetry (there are several categories, review the guidelines for specifics). Submissions for the Literary Contest are always open from April 1 to June 15. Start on this page and take the time to read the guidelines before you submit. Check out the video at the bottom of the page that walks you through the submission process. To all members who have published a book June 1, 2023 to December 31, 2024. Please carefully review our updated consolidated Book Award Guidelines before entering a 2025 book contest. Significant changes have taken place.
Published Book Awards Eight Categories Cash Awards For the 2025 Award Year Submissions Accepted: NOW through March 1, 2025 (encouraged), June 15 (final) Insomnia in Another Townby Lisa M. Hase-Jackson "The cover of this book attracted me right away, and that was only the beginning. Hase-Jackson does a beautiful job of turning memory into poetry. She uses a variety of forms including pantoum, free-verse, and even prose poetry to give insight into family, farming, and the human soul. A beautiful collection." Judge Kat Fox, English Faculty at Emporia State University Created by Raymond and Margaret Nelson – Dr. Raymond Nelson and Margaret Nelson joined KAC in 1979. Both served in various offices, including state president, Raymond from 1984-1986, and Margaret Nelson from 1994-1995. The couple began awarding the Nelson Poetry Book Award in 2002.
Laura Lee Washburn is the Director of Creative Writing at Pittsburg State University in Kansas, and the author of This Good Warm Place: 10th Anniversary Expanded Edition (March Street), Watching the Contortionists (Palanquin Chapbook Prize), and The Book of Stolen Images (Meadowlark Press, 2023). Harbor Review’s chapbook prize is named in her honor, and she’s the president of Small Harbor Publishing’s Board of Directors. Her degrees are from Old Dominion University, where she interned for the Associated Writing Programs Newsletter, and Arizona State University. Born in Virginia Beach, Virginia, she has also lived and worked in Arizona and in Missouri. From her home in Pittsburg, Kansas, she edits The Coop: A Poetry Cooperative. Judge was Joseph Harrington, who teaches at the University of Kansas. He is the author of Of Some Sky (BlazeVOX Books 2018); Goodnight Whoever’s Listening (Essay Press 2015); Things Come On (an amneoir)(Wesleyan UP 2011); and the critical work Poetry and the Public (Wesleyan UP 2002). His creative work has appeared in BAX: The Best American Experimental Writing 2016, Colorado Review, The Rumpus, Hotel America, Tupelo Quarterly, and elsewhere. From 2019-2023, he maintained a real-time verse-chronicle of the climate crisis, at The Poem of Our Climate and Writing Out of Time. Nelson Poetry Book Award Gravedigger’s Daughter by Cheryl Unruh Note from the Judge: Cheryl Unruh’s Gravedigger’s Daughter stands as a testament to how great writing uses particulars to capture the universal. While few readers may have helped to prepare graves as a child or know what the summer sky looks like from their depths, Unruh’s beautifully crafted reflections unearth the relatable joys and confusions of youth, love, and loss. While each poem preserves a carefully honed memory, the collection as a whole carries the reader through a lifetime with touching humor and heartbreaking grace. It is an intimate look into a specific family, but it stirs familiar emotions that have the magic to conjure readers’ own pasts. Dr. Julia Galm 2022 Nelson Poetry Book Judge Dr. Julia Galm is a Communications instructor at Cloud County Community College, where she works with budding writers to help them hone their skills and voices. She has helped to revitalize CCCC’s creative and artistic journal, The Silver Lining, and she is a board member of the Brown Grand Opera House. Though a recent transplant to Kansas, she has fallen in love with the rolling grasslands of her new home.
You are Invited: April 12 Author Talk by Janice Northerns (Zoom - Advance Registration Required)4/8/2022
Finding Both Anchor and Sail through Ekphrastic Writing Whether you are new to ekphrasis or an old hand at it, the practice can offer both a concrete anchor to start a piece as well as a sail to push your writing in a new direction. Janice Northerns will read several ekphrastic poems from her award-winning collection Some Electric Hum and share tips to help you take ekphrastic writing to the next level. The discussion will be geared toward prose writers as well as poets. Optional: Those who plan to attend are invited to write ahead of time a poem or flash prose piece responding to the painting “Four Sunflowers Gone to Seed” by Vincent Van Gogh (1887). You can view the painting at this museum link: https://krollermuller.nl/en/vincent-van-gogh-four-sunflowers-gone-to-seed-1 Join us via Zoom on Tuesday, April 12, 7:00pm IMPORTANT: You must register in advance to attend this meeting. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Some Electric Hum is available from all major online retailers. See website for buy buttons: Janice Northerns, of Liberal, is the author of Some Electric Hum, winner of the 2021 KAC Nelson Poetry Book Award, the KU Byron Caldwell Smith Book Award, and a WILLA Literary Award Finalist in Poetry. The author grew up on a farm in rural West Texas and holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Texas Tech University, where she received the Robert S. Newton Award for Creative Writing. Her work has been widely published in literary journals. Honors include a Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts residency, a Sewanee Writers’ Conference scholarship, and numerous awards for individual poems. Janice and her husband moved to Liberal in 1998, where she taught English at Seward County Community College before retiring in 2019 to write full-time. The landscapes and people of West Texas and southwest Kansas are a steady source of inspiration for her poetry. Book Description: “Some Electric Hum reads … like a treatise on the ways communities are crafted by wanting, having, and then letting go. … This book exemplifies her skill in giving language to those fragile and ephemeral experiences of connection, as well as her determination to understand how connection might be felt in the barely perceptible hum of a completed circuit, closed but still alive with alternating electric currents.” — Dr. Sandra Cox, judge for the Nelson Poetry Book Award Some Electric Hum |
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