Morse Poetry Prize

The Samuel French Morse Poetry Prize, in honor of Samuel French Morse, is a literary award given to an American author's first or second book of poetry.

The annual prize was established in 1983 and sponsored by Northeastern University. Once selected by a recognized poet, the awarded poet received $1000, and the work received publication by Northeastern University Press, and distribution through the University Press of New England. Prize-winning books were published with a striped cover design, characteristic of the Morse Poetry Prize.[1]

The award was suspended in 2009, due to difficulties with financial sustainability.[2]

Winners

gollark: What *is* the competition?
gollark: pypypypypypypy
gollark: I'd prefer a nice online thing I don't have to pay for...
gollark: How are you meant to go past knowing sort of basic haskell (monads, syntax, preludey stuff) to writing fancy code and understanding what weird stuff like "comonads" are?
gollark: ```Breaking the Space-Time Barrier with Haskell:Time-Traveling and Debugging in CodeWorld (GSoC)```

See also

References

  1. "Samuel French Morse Poetry Prize Is Suspended". Poets & Writers Magazine. April 16, 2009. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  2. "Northeastern suspends Morse poetry prize". Boston Globe. April 17, 2009. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
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