9th Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize
Judge: Heather McHugh
The winner of the ninth Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize was Geoffrey Brock’s Voices Bright Flags.
Mr Brock, of Fayetteville, Arkansas, received a cheque for $3,000 and Waywiser published Voices Bright Flags, his second collection of poems, on 17 November 2013, when he read alongside Heather McHugh, the ninth contest’s judge, at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.
It took the press’s screening panel two months of careful reading, deliberation and discussion to narrow the field to the group of finalists which, stripped of all identifying reference, was then sent to Ms McHugh. Waywiser’s Editor-in-Chief, Philip Hoy, rang Mr Brock with Ms McHugh’s decision in the second week of March.
Our congratulations go not just to Geoffrey Brock and to those whose manuscripts reached the later stages of the contest – the finalists and semi-finalists are listed below – but to everyone else who entered. It is thanks to everyone who participated that the latest contest has been another resounding success.
More information about Geoffrey Brock and the other poets who made it as far as the semi-finals, together with examples of their work, can be read by clicking on the relevant links below.
Winner
Geoffrey Brock, Voices Bright Flags
Nominees
(in name order)
Andrew Cox, The Same Thing Twice
Kevin Craft, Vagrants & Accidentals
Kevin Cutrer, Lord’s Own Anointed
Julie Funderburk, The Door That Always Opens
Heather June Gibbons, Exploded View
Jessica Goodfellow, Mendeleev’s Mandala
Carrie Green, Double Brilliance
Johnny Horton, Changing Room
Jerome Luc Martin, The Gardening Fires
Matt McBride, City of Incandescent Light Bulbs
Sara Miller, Spellbound
Mary Moore, Flicker
Kathryn Nuernberger, Strange Cases
Phoebe Reeves, Helen of Bikini
David Ricks, If Symptoms Persist
Austin Segrest, Barrel Roll
Alissa Valles, Dr Salvage
Bob Watts, The Tendency of Bodies to Remain at Rest
Mike White, Arrangements for a Whale’s Heart
Philip White, Among Other Things
Brad Whitehurst, The Element We Live In