Scroll Down to find prize poems from 2000-1987 (National and Central New York Prizes)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ First Prize, Year 2000. Stephen Dobyns, Judge The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award
Tornado
by Elaine W. Christensen
We were swimming, my sister and I, the only way one survives summer in Kansas, trying to stand on our hands in the shallow end, toes pointed above the water line, when everything -- children;s voices, splashing, mothers calling, the lifeguard's whistle -- stopped.
In slow motion I turned my head and saw it, coming fast, a funnel cloud twisting, writhing, the entire horizon to the east having risen up behind it, black and evil.
What I'd heard was true, nothing in that whole flat world moved, or sang, or whimpered, even the water that lapped the pool went still. Earth sucked in her breath, forgot how to inch forward. The wheel, notched and greased wouldn't catch, wouldn't shift to the next invoilable beat. Never had I seen black like that black.
Years later when I lay on the ultrasound table nine months pregnant thinking, I am still that same summer girl, and the nurse couldn't find a heartbeat on the screen, yet he was there floating inside me, my stomach stretched with his shape, I knew, once before, I'd felt the earth stop.
I was able to run then, my sister and I, our wet towels plastered against us, our bare feel slapping the sidewalk.
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First Prize, 1999. Ellen Bryant Voigt, Judge. The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award
Reading the River
by Charles Atkinson
In ghostlier demarcations, keener sounds --Wallace Stevens
i.
Buried her years ago, so you're not listening when the sound recurs; you're walking upriver against the mind's chatter. Whatever you did was not good enough. Still, she took you here as a child: pay attention, her quiet finger said -- the world has a pulse, a breath. Ahead, a marmot's squeak, the serious baritone of water dropping on stone, and that faint familiar sound: muffled stirring -- insistent whisper you ought to know.
ii.
Easier to name the pines --Jeffrey, Lodgepole -- than to follow it back and in. Easier to give the place a human story: how brief green is,
how listless the river will be in October, the cottonwoods stripped, how soon cold will take it by the throat, snow smother it.
Kingfisher scolds upstream, yellow butterflies stagger down -- these are metaphors. They hunt and migrate. The sound hurts the temples.
iii.
Further up toward the mutter of water falling you know it: her whisk caressing a bowl at dawn -- the mother you spent so long blaming.
A flycatcher whistles, a merganser riffles the eddy -- things she loved, all of them saying let it rest, let it be.
You couldn't, till you said the harsh things. Now you have words, no one to give them to. Overhead, water bends off a ledge, stutters in a granite cistern and on downstream.
iv.
A hundred, two hundred feet up, firs & cedars barely sigh. A splinter beats in your palm, a spiderweb across the face. Mosquitoes
skirl at the ears. Downriver, your grown sons compose their complaints, their honest hurts to charge you with. You can almost hear the stones grating. Upstream, her whisk still shirrs in the back-purling water -- this, this. Why does it make you so happy?
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First Prize, 1998. Andrew Hudgins, Judge The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award
Judas Tree
by Patric Pepper
Judas took a scrap of leather And made himself a handy noose. Then in lovely April weather Choked himself. with some excuse.
He bent the branch and idly turned. A hungry sparrow viewed the deed. Nothing to eat and nothing learned. She foraged on for mustard seed.
After lunch we cut him down. Since he was seven days deceased. We dumped him just beyond the town And gave the feral dogs a feast.
They scattered Judas past the wall. Femurs, and dung, and flecks of leather. That's mostly what we now recall, That and perfect April weather.
And petals soft as Salome's cheek. Spatter of spring across the land, Redbud. the tree that for a week Held Judas in its bleeding hand.
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First Prize, 1997 Michael Burkard, Judge The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award
The Organ of Promise
by L. J. Kay
The ice is a haze that would invade thin hearts. She settles in a comer to look for reason with a spoon. her fingers becoming red leaf greetings fanning the cafe tea, making birds out of steam. Seeing a friend. her music rises high above the morning, as inside her the organ of promise rings like the face of the moon to the other side of the room, with the grey hymn thoughtfully turned to pleasure. Theirs is almost a winter insight with another woman, the very old unknown woman. who makes a living only walking by the window of the cafe as she just did, looking in; while the two friends talk about ancestors at Big Bend, Hanging Rock, The Hearing Creek, and other places; and interiors sing in their faces about how to live long and medieval, and the organ of promise is playing again: "be infinite. and bless the four humors of blood and water, bile and phlegm, now, this awful winter."
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First Prize, Poetpourri, 1996 Judged by the Comstock Writers' Group
The Lost Art
by David Robertson
When writing lit the way, when the sentences rose up from the encroachment of evening and lit the length of an avenue with lamps ornate as vines. . .
when paragraphs flashed across the waters sweeping the night with arms of silver, a lighthouse fixed as a star above a ruinolls coast or a beacon on a headland to guide by . . .
when the lines heaped from roadside stones, from the weather-worn, the single-syllabled, stood where the path divides at a crossing. . .
when the argument grew, a grove of trees, a length of columns, rows planted on level ground and a space was left down the middle, an open aisle -
remember this writing, how it shone on the page. And do not forget the silences that breathed from each comer and the darkness that went on outside after the end came in and shut the door.
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First Place, 1995, Poetpourri Judged by the Comstock Writers' Group
fragment (1)
by F. Bjornson Stock
(1) (fragment of a declaration of love Hoang Dang Kien made to his wife, Bui Suoi Ninh:)
the sound of rain taking you away into roots where you cannot taste bread and your mother cannot call you back by offering another birth cord. i hear the long flute of your spine under mangrove recognize you in water that hints of jasmine. Ninh, I still wear green at night, smoke, search for you, leave lights burning. your lips have raised this fine, wet character water cannot erase from my skin. moonlight against your skin lures me closer to pearly eggs, a carp, mud-winged, ripe, i risk the bow hunter's shaft aimed at my tear-shaped body. in a hundred years who will remember i hungered for you, collapsed in springtime? will the lunar sheen under my orbits, the temple body i offered you, love, turn up printed on rice paper inside a curio shop in Hue? who will dust the glint of my impression or will they buy this negative for the moon: heavy, lacquered, frame pressing fish body under a glass circle?
i am drifting toward the sea's broken froth, your body light beneath my quivering surface.
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First Prize, 1994 Poetpourri Judged by the Comstock Writers' Group
Written by Linda Keegan:
Nodding To Strangers
(for my son Brian who lived one day in October)
A sudden breeze and October leaves fly as if they do not know they are dying. They fall and form cushions, thick and plush to soften the finality of death for those who will follow, cover all the diverging paths so there is no sign that anyone was ever here. One birch, weakened now and empty except for one swollen sac of twigs that once held the baby robin, leans 9n a strong oak.
I run a slow finger from my pubis to my navel along that scar left over, touch you, always again, for the first time. I tell you that the younger man and woman over there are not your brother and sister, that this man over here is not your father. I tell you that I walk out here in the rural part of the county every year on this day posing as your mother, nodding to strangers. I am tempted to stay here. to bed down in these leaves where the paths converge, where the riches of the past are now the richness of the earth, where the sycamore has fallen and in its death will provide a fine home for the flicker.
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First Prize, 1993 Poetpourri Judged by the Comstock Writers' Group
We Had Come For a May Visit
by Mona Toscano-Paschke
"Don't scowl. Don't scowl and don't hold your hand like that...."
My mother hurls truths at my son. like an angry farmer throwing chemicals at an infertile field. her reiteration scorches my son's brow. The tension kinks his middle finger. He says nothing. He raises his contorted hand to his balding forehead. He does this repeatedly. The "Don'ts" rise up to a March typhoon.
We had come for a May visit. We had come to visit with my parents. We had come hoping for a holiday.
My mother is telling the truth. My mother always tells the truth. And just like scorching lime, the truth smacks the tendrils of my son's delayed adolescence. He is twenty going on thirteen. He is an aborted Spring reverting back to a thawless Winter
Why can't my mother see the reversion? Why can't she admit what my father has whispered to me -- "Some seeds never develop..."? And, if she could, wouldn't she see what my son is-- a ganglionic peony -- A blood red ball of a blossom pocked before it blooms? Why can't she love him as he is -- Frozen? Ruptured? Where he is -- lost, lost in his season, his shrinking season? * * * I look outside and can no longer smell the lilacs.
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First Prize 1992 Poetpourri National Contest Judged by the Comstock Writers’ Group
Written by Eileen Daly Moeller
The Hunger Angels
first came to her when her parents were fighting.
Light as hummingbirds, little hollow seashells, they whispered their cravings, showed her the invisible zipper that kept her father from speaking and the rope that bound him tightly to his mother with its undertow of loneliness.
They took baths in his beer, made fun of the grandmother's white heron poses at the kitchen table where meat had been a precious commodity.
And she watched them crowding onto her mother's silverware. They were the mayonnaise that oozed out of sandwiches. When Mother tried to find a silence they would gather in her hair stirring up the racket of memory: the abuses, the abandonment, the hard work that made her want to disappear into cooking pots and gourmet magazines full of creamy sauces.
The girl watched her mother tangle herself in loneliness wondering how the angels multiplied so quickly, why they all had Mother's face in miniature.
Put us in your hope chest, they said to the girl when she was eight years old. Someday you will open it and we will have grown from white wisps into pasty dumplings with wings. We will keep you fidgety company.
And in her innocence she welcomed them, glad to be included, not knowing how else the story might have gone.
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First Prize, 1991 Poetpourri Central New York Contest judged by CWG The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award (no more Central New York Contests held after 1991)
Lullaby For A Showgirl
by Jennifer Miller
Miranda de la Rosa sang the blues in crystal ball gowns, held his trophies high because he was the best. She would have buried him spiraled inside a feather boa, beneath a lame' headdress twice his height. Miranda de la Rosa, you lost your shimmy in these last few months. Belonging in the arms of a dark and silent man - he found himself here, feeding on her good intentions. Tumbling in Lena Horne, struggling with sips of thick gray soup they hoped for one more day. Caressing the cobwebs of his hair, She heard of Puerto Rico - tasted the nectar of papaya and passion, sucked sugarcane between her teeth, smelled sand and salt and red crabs washed ashore. "I will die in the arms of my mother" he told her, though together they knew her young, paid arms would catch his fall. She spoke no Spanish, was often late and always burned the rice. She is cleaning out his closet now, finding outfits that a nice girl wouldn't wear. He is strewn about her on his bedroom floor in yards of sequined silk and padded bras. She drags a pair of long black gloves up high on to her arm. She plans a trip to see the red crabs washed ashore.
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First Prize 1991 Poetpourri National Contest The Dorothy Damon Award Judged by the Comstock Writers’ Group
Written by Gayle Elen Harvey
The Moon's Waltzing Alone (for Diane)
in deserted kitchens. Its arms are filled with bitterroot, cut summer roses. My mother gives me a sprig of pink blossoms, the rings from her finger.
I'm bewildered by dreams where the dead grow ageless as emeralds. Stars flash like glass jars of seed. Sister, the stars have no parents and only a few, close relatives. Their light travels through the body of the sky like a cancer.
How many mothers and fathers are drifting, confused, in their sepia shadows? All these years and they're still sad companions, shyly embracing. I want to go with them over these hills and into the roosting darkness. How hard it is to relinquish the sharp grip. Again and again they dismiss us, leave us behind with bad weather, small scraps of wing. Only their love, like a thing never done, burns through into morning.
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First Prize, 1991 Poetpourri Central New York Contest judged by CWG The Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Poetry Award
Snakebit by K. C. Byrnes
They were lying coiled like a rattler on the shelf in the cloth cave of my daughter's closet, a plastic circle of twenty-eight pills, spiraling in on themselves, her childhood lying bit, dying, before me.
Household shocks are the worst. The sex-letter with script of flame, the accident scream of the late phone, the lump rearing up unsought in the bathroom mirror. The beloved world, scuffed and soft, hurtles away and an alien world sidles up, dressed in the same old things, but smelling metallic and smiling with yellow eyes.
Mothers remain virgins to hard knowing as long as denial keeps and the world permits. We keep children clothed, sane, sober, safe. We sleep wrapped thinly in our stories. And when truth calls on us in drag, or in a pimp's plumed hat, or covered in blood or vomit, the child-mother crumples, and someone ancient and fierce, mother-of-sorrows, heart of titanium, steps in.
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First Prize 1990, Poetpourri National Contest (The Dorothy Damon Award) Judged by the Comstock Writers' Group
Written by Wendy M. Mnookin
Changing Places
On July 10, 1989, Shaun Peterson was caught in an auger while working on the family farm. It took his father twenty minutes to disentangle him from the machinery. He died a few hours later.
Shaun! the father calls from sleep, and the boy takes shape, sweating and grimy, glad to be called. That day, it must have been 100 degrees in the silo, but the father felt as if a biting wind blew over him, severing him from any thoughts. Soon Shaun can shower for supper. This time no heavy purple curtain falls between him and the man working methodically from foot to calf to knee, inching his way along muscle and bone. Like the curtain in the school's Christmas play - what was Shaun? a shepherd? -- and the father in the audience, clapping dutifully. Now he's on stage, leaning on his own staff for the long trek. He throws himself into the scene, and it doesn't matter that no ram will emerge from the thicket. This is what's asked, this is what's required. That day he stood apart, looking down at himself as he choked on a thick haze of corn dust. Now he looks right at Shaun, who walks off stage without knowing the machine's steady reach. The father leans into the embrace.
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First Prize, 1990 Poetpourri Central New York Contest judged by CWG
Greeting a Neighbor at the Grocery
by Mary Stebbins
Black feathers beat on my face, fanning a glacial chill. Grey flesh hangs from your skull like melting slush, betraying a core of cold magma gathering strength to erupt: dull blood clotting beyond tomorrow. Quickly, I turn away, hiding the naked head, dark wings, and sudden plunge reflected for you still flight of my eyes.
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First Prize, 1989 Poetpourri National Contest Judged by the Comstock Writers’ Group
Tattoos by Natalie Kenvin
Floating carp, rampant dragons, tigers that ripple with a flick of skin, They are like stencils of milk on burlap. They lash their tails In the brightness of pain. Insolent stencils that pin memory to a tree, a rose. Soaked, caustic wires, they hum blue above minute streams of blood. They are the curves Where dreams grieve and tilt up to light. Headstones on skin, They are hard appetites of bitterness
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First Prize, Poetpourri 1989 Central New York Contest, judged by CWG, 2 poems tied:
Hunting
by Eva M. Dadlez
Diane, chalk-white, all angles and virtue; bird-boned, honed-down, bleached out with moonlight, darts and rustles in the shadows hissing for her dogs. Every night, the same old thing. She forgets they died aeons ago, when the world was fat and green, their bones constellations by now. So she skitters among the trash cans, the carports, frantic, howling for her former cohorts, compatriots in bygone ecstasies, to come, come quickly and wolf down the night while it's young. Finally, cornered for the hundred-millionth time by incipient morning she limps and quivers to a halt, strings her bow with one old hair and tries to play it like a harp -- a twanging wah-wah, a waning be-bop of the wood, fingers snapping as she tries to twist them into lover's knots.
Leda Revised
by Eva M. Dadlez
Oh no, it can't have been a swan: web-footed, bottom-heavy and duck-billed, bobbing and floating like some ludicrous beach toy. If gods indeed assumed deliberate disguises, if gods were birds that hunted for unnatural prey, then they'd be something hot and sudden sharply hurtled from the heavens: fitted out with razor beak, fitted up with razor talons, fast as photons, sleek and accurate as scalpels. Such incidents of stooping to consort mere vertical incisions across the whorled and wadded firmament of things, its length unfurled and torn beneath the beating wings, its sundered fabric leaking rubies: warm and luscious, a crimson coruscation of ambrosia fit for plundering gods to gorge on. So, one terrific burst of electrochemical discharge and it's all over but. for the faint boom-booming susuration of the flushed and quivering clouds: stolen thunder.
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First Prize, 1988 Poetpourri National Awards, judged by CWG
Death Tide
by Susan Manchester
Before breath left he asked to keep slippers off feet that lay stiff on the stool like magnets drawn to naked metal, skin broken over swelling. An ocean
in those toes, dammed and waiting, turned purple until the flood began and each leg became a reservoir, each hand a bloated pond. And
for a time I thought his lungs would float on the lake that rose within, until they too had had their fill and soon -- too soon -- began to sink beneath the surface. No amount
of air could satisfy them. Even so he eased into a wave to drown, the pewter tide that filled his eyes unrippled gray, and silent.
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First Prize 1988 Poetpourri Central New York Contest, judged by CWG
Cancer by Katharyn Howd Machan, formerly known as Katharyn Machan Aal
Even as we spoke, it began: piece of moon cratering your breath. How does stone grow? Cell by cell, death whispering your name: woman o woman o curve of round breast. What's your sign? Not the lion lurching drunk toward meat, not the lady lascivious in fruity blue. Month of shell and claw, the sea a taste of birth remembered, sudden waves turning you in their tide.
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First Place, Poetpourri 1987, Issue #1 Judged by The Comstock Writers' Group
Some Few Dawns
by Alton Bruce As though our candle lit the sun And caught the sky in flower Some few dawns - I recollect Astonished me with power As though the pyramids were built On stilts - instead of sands As though I poured Niagara out And caught it in my hands As though God's kitten cuffed the Earth Across Creation's floor As though I climbed atop myself And rattled Heaven's door It strains the heart's credulity To think love held such sway And yet - in all its gentle might Could not contrive to stay
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