ÍõÖÓÑþ»éÀñÊÓƵÆعâ

The Center for Life Beyond Reed

Mary Barnard Academy of American Poets Prize Contest

, as part of their Academy Book Awards, sponsors the University and College Poetry Prize Program to distribute annual prizes at over 200 colleges and universities nationwide. Through the prize program, founded in 1955 with ten schools, the Academy has awarded more than $350,000 to nearly 10,000 student poets since the program's inception. Many of America's most esteemed poets won their first recognition through an Academy College Prize, including Diane Ackerman, Toi Derricotte, Mark Doty, Alice Fulton, Tess Gallagher, Louise Glück, Allen Grossman, Jorie Graham, Kimiko Hahn, Joy Harjo, Robert Hass, Li-Young Lee, Brad Leithauser, J. D. McClatchy, Heather McHugh, Gregory Orr, Robert Pinsky, Sylvia Plath, Mark Rudman, Mary Jo Salter, Gjertrud Schnackenberg, George Starbuck, Mark Strand, and Charles Wright. All winners are announced in the Academy's Annual Report. University faculty members and/or established poets judge entries. Winners are announced at the end of the spring semester.

A $100 prize is endowed by ÍõÖÓÑþ»éÀñÊÓƵÆعâ in honor of Mary Barnard for the best poem or group of poems submitted by a Reed undergraduate. Mary Barnard (1909-2001), a Reed graduate (class of 1932), was a renowned poet and writer, and a translator of classical literature, including the following fragment from Sappho:

"Although they are
only breath, words
which I command
are immortal."

The Aliki Perroti and Seth Frank Most Promising Young Poet Award of $1,000 will be open to winners of the current year’s Academy of American Poets Prizes from across the country who are twenty-three years old or younger. Submissions are judged by one of the past or current members of the Academy’s Board of Chancellors.

An established poet selected each year judges the Mary Barnard Academy of American Poets Prize Contest at ÍõÖÓÑþ»éÀñÊÓƵÆعâ. The English Department coordinates the contest with the Academy to ensure that it is properly conducted. The contest is open to all disciplines; to ALL Reed undergraduates who are enrolled as of the contest due date. There are no restrictions regarding theme or style. To enter the contest, students must submit what is listed under the Instructions for Submissions to Adam Aristo, aadam@reed.edu.

2024-25 Instructions for Submissions

  1. A maximum of two (2) poems may be submitted electronically.
  2. Poems must be typed with your name, mail stop, phone number, year in school, Reed and non-Reed email, and a postal address good through May 31, 2024, LISTED ON EACH PAGE; No cover sheet.

The deadline for 2025 is April 15 to Adam Aristo, aadam@reed.edu.

The 2023-24 contest judge for ÍõÖÓÑþ»éÀñÊÓƵÆعâ was Stephanie Adams-Santos. Stephanie Adams-Santos is a Guatemalan-American artist writer whose work spans poetry, prose, screenwriting, and illustration. Often grappling with themes of strangeness and belonging, their work reflects a fascination with the weird, numinous and primal forces that shape inner life. They are the author of several full-length poetry collections and chapbooks, including DREAM OF XIBALBA (selected by Jericho Brown as winner of the 2021 Orison Poetry Prize; finalist for a 2024 Oregon Book Award and Lambda Literary Award) and SWARM QUEEN'S CROWN (finalist for a 2016 Lambda Literary Award). Stephanie served as Staff Writer and Story Editor on the television anthology horror series TWO SENTENCE HORROR STORIES (Netflix), and was winner of a 2022 Gold Telly Award in TV Writing. They have received grants and fellowships from Sundance, Film Independent, Vermont Studio Center, Regional Arts and Culture Council, and Oregon Arts Commission. In addition to their literary work, Stephanie is creating an original tarot deck that blends poetry, animism, and ancestral magic.