poetry

April: Accepting Submissions for the Second Ralph Angel Poetry Prize

For the month of April, Foundlings Press will accept submissions for the Ralph Angel Poetry Prize. This year’s guest judge is David St. John. The winning poet will receive a $250 award and a limited edition broadside publication of the winning poem. Submission is free and open to all.

SELECTION AND PRIZE

The winner of the Ralph Angel Poetry Prize will receive $250 and publication of a limited-edition run of letterpress broadsides of the winning poem. The broadsides will be available for sale exclusively at FoundlingsPress.com until the run sells out.

HOW TO SUBMIT

  • Entry is free

  • Send only one poem as a PDF attachment to publisher@foundlingspress.com

  • Submissions must be previously unpublished

  • Entry window opens March 31 at 11:59pm ET and closes April 30 at 11:59pm ET

  • We will disregard submissions that arrive outside that window

MARY RUEFLE PICKS INAUGURAL RALPH ANGEL POETRY PRIZE WINNER MARGARITA SERAFIMOVA

Foundlings Press introduced the Ralph Angel Poetry Prize in 2021, with the blessing of Mary Angel and assistance from generous friends. Mary Ruefle, a close friend of Ralph Angel and of the press, served as the first guest judge. She selected Margarita Serafimova. Margarita’s poem “The Biologists” is available as a limited-edition broadside now.

ABOUT DAVID ST. JOHN

David St. John is an American poet. He has been honored, over the course of his career, with many prizes for poets, including: both the Rome Prize Fellowship and the Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters; the O. B. Hardison Prize (a career award for teaching and poetic achievement) from The Folger Shakespeare Library; and the George Drury Smith Lifetime Achievement Award from the Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Foundation.

He is the author of eleven collections of poetry (including Study for the World’s Body, nominated for The National Book Award in Poetry), most recently The Last Troubadour: New and Selected Poems, as well as a volume of essays, interviews and reviews entitled Where the Angels Come Toward Us. He is the co-editor of American Hybrid: A Norton Anthology of New Poetry and the editor of The Selected Levis and The Darkening Trapeze: Last Poems of Larry Levis.

David St. John has written libretti for the opera, THE FACE, and for the choral symphony, THE SHORE. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2016) and named a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets (2017). David St. John is University Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Chair of English at The University of Southern California. He lives with his wife, poet and essayist Anna Journey, in Venice Beach, California.

More here.

David St. John

ABOUT RALPH ANGEL

Ralph Angel (1951-2020) was an American poet, translator, and educator. He was born in Seattle, Washington, as a second-generation American of Sephardic Jewish descent. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Washington and his Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of California, Irvine. He went on to become the Edith R. White Distinguished Professor at the University of Redlands, where he shaped the Creative Writing Department and taught for 39 years, and he was a beloved member of the MFA in Writing faculty at Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Angel’s published works included Anxious Latitudes (Wesleyan University Press, 1986); Neither World (Miami University Press, 1995), which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets; Twice Removed (Sarabande Books, 2001), which was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Award and was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award; Exceptions and Melancholies: Poems 1986-2006 (Sarabande Books, 2006), honored with the 2007 PEN USA Award for Poetry; and Your Moon (New Issues Poetry & Prose, 2013), which was awarded the 2013 Green Rose Poetry Prize. His translation of the Federico García Lorca collection, Poema del cante jondo / Poem of the Deep Song, (Sarabande Books, 2006) received a Willis Barnstone Poetry Translation Prize.

Angel’s poems have appeared in scores of magazines, and have been collected in numerous anthologies, including The Plume Anthology of Poetry, Pratik International, The Heart's Many Doors, The Best American Poetry, American Hybrid, Poets of the New Century, and Forgotten Language. Other awards included a gift from the Elgin Cox Trust, a Pushcart Prize, the Gertrude Stein Award, a Fulbright Foundation fellowship, and the Bess Hokin Award of the Modern Poetry Association.

Angel was a friend of Foundlings Press and contributed to the Strays series. His collection in Strays Pack 2 was his final publication before his passing on March 6, 2020.

Foundlings Press Publisher Aidan Ryan says: I remember vividly speaking with Ralph over the phone, in the first days of the new year, about his contribution to our series. His voice was like his poems: patient, clear, direct, with a laugh always waiting in the wings. Here was a celebrated poet, a senior statesman of poetry, taking a call from a stranger and offering his work (without any chance of acclaim or fair remuneration) to an upstart, unproven little press from Buffalo. I remember the gratitude, amazement, and and relief I felt when Ralph so immediately understood our spirit as a press and the thrust of the Strays project. And what a gift his poems were.

Ralph left behind an incredible body of work, but he also left a legacy of support, guidance, and inspiration for younger poets as well as his contemporaries. I’m happy that, with Mary Angel’s blessing and assistance, we can honor Ralph in a way that feels continuous with his life’s work: By recognizing, honoring, and encouraging the work of other poets.

More information about Ralph and his poetry is available at https://ralphangel.com/.

In Memory of Ralph Angel

Mary Ruefle Selects Margarita Serafimova for the Inaugural Ralph Angel Poetry Prize

Foundlings Press is pleased to announce that Margarita Serafimova has won the inaugural Ralph Angel poetry prize, judged by Mary Ruefle.

The inaugural contest saw over 200 submissions. Ruefle and the reading group selected a longlist, a shortlist, and three finalists in addition to Serafimova, whose poem “The Biologists” takes top honors. Foundlings Press will publish “The Biologists” in a limited-edition letterpress broadside produced at Western New York Book Arts Center and available from FoundlingsPress.com.

About the Winner: Margarita Serafimova

Margarita Serafimova is the winner of the 2020 biennial Tony Quagliano/ Hawai’i Council for the Humanities International Award for innovative poetry 'recognizing an accomplished poet with an outstanding body of work', 2020 and 2021 Pushcart nominee and a finalist in nine other U.S. and international poetry contests. She has four collections in Bulgarian and two in English, ‘A Surgery of A Star’ (2020) and ‘Еn-tîm’ ('The Forest') (2021). Her work appears widely, including at Nashville Review, LIT, Agenda Poetry, Poetry South, Steam Ticket, Waxwing, Reunion Dallas, Trafika Europe, Obra/ Artifact, Botticelli, Shrew, Noble/ Gas, Great Weather for Media, Landfill, Nixes Mate. Visit.

Finalists

  • Jack Christian

  • Dara Yen Elerath

  • Alina Stefanescu

Shortlist

  • Emily Alexander

  • Jen Ashburn

  • Frances Cannon

  • Will Cordiero

  • TJ DiFrancesco

  • Stephanie Yue Duhem

  • Sam Ferrante

  • Joan Glass

  • Jonathan Hoel

  • Victoria Hudson

  • Saba Keramati

  • Paul Kopp

  • Edward Krzeminski

  • Özge Lena

  • Ojo Taiye

  • Fathima Zahra

Longlist

  • Sarah Ghazal Ali

  • Kyle Anderson

  • Sara Backer

  • Ansie Baird

  • S. Erin Batiste

  • Sayan Aich Bhowmik

  • Prince Bush

  • Willa Carroll

  • Jeffrey Chang

  • Martin Cossio

  • Sean Thomas Dougherty

  • Jehanne Dubrow

  • Aidan Forster

  • Lesley Graham

  • Anya Groner

  • Gabrielle Grace Hogan

  • Leah Kaminski

  • Jakob Maier

  • Dan Mallette

  • Cassidy McFadzean

  • Matt Mitchell

  • Anne Myles

  • Maya Owen

  • Jody Stewart

  • Marion Winik

  • Rachel Franklin Wood

About The Ralph Angel Poetry Prize

The Ralph Angel Poetry Prize honors the memory of the late Ralph Angel, a poet, teacher, and friend to many—including Foundlings Press. The prize recognizes a single poem; the winning poet receives a $250 award and a limited edition broadside publication of the winning poem. Mary Ruefle judged the inaugural prize, introduced in spring 2021.

Foundlings Press will produce the broadsides at Western New York Book Arts Center and they will be available for sale exclusively at FoundlingsPress.com until the run sells out.

About Ralph Angel

Ralph Angel (1951-2020) was an American poet, translator, and educator. He was born in Seattle, Washington, as a second-generation American of Sephardic Jewish descent. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Washington and his Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of California, Irvine. He went on to become the Edith R. White Distinguished Professor at the University of Redlands, where he shaped the Creative Writing Department and taught for 39 years, and he was a beloved member of the MFA in Writing faculty at Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Angel’s published works included Anxious Latitudes (Wesleyan University Press, 1986); Neither World (Miami University Press, 1995), which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets; Twice Removed (Sarabande Books, 2001), which was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Award and was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award; Exceptions and Melancholies: Poems 1986-2006 (Sarabande Books, 2006), honored with the 2007 PEN USA Award for Poetry; and Your Moon (New Issues Poetry & Prose, 2013), which was awarded the 2013 Green Rose Poetry Prize. His translation of the Federico García Lorca collection, Poema del cante jondo / Poem of the Deep Song, (Sarabande Books, 2006) received a Willis Barnstone Poetry Translation Prize.

Angel’s poems have appeared in scores of magazines, and have been collected in numerous anthologies, including The Plume Anthology of Poetry, Pratik International, The Heart's Many Doors, The Best American Poetry, American Hybrid, Poets of the New Century, and Forgotten Language. Other awards included a gift from the Elgin Cox Trust, a Pushcart Prize, the Gertrude Stein Award, a Fulbright Foundation fellowship, and the Bess Hokin Award of the Modern Poetry Association.

Angel was a friend of Foundlings Press and contributed to the Strays series. His collection in Strays Pack 2 was his final publication before his passing on March 6, 2020.

Watch Strays on Stage: Full Video

Julianne Neely and Rachelle Toarmino Live in Conversation; Recorded Reading by Mary Ruefle

On Saturday June 26, 2021, Foundlings Press launched Strays Pack 4 at the North Park Theatre in Buffalo, New York.

The event featured live readings and conversation from poets Julianne Neely and Rachelle Toarmino, plus a surprise recorded performance by Strays 4 packmate Mary Ruefle.

All three poets read from their Strays chapbooks (available for purchase here). Seated on the North Park’s historic stage and beneath the theatre’s golden dome, Neely and Toarmino also discussed each other’s work, the sonnet form and “broken sonnets,” repetition and punctuation, influences, “confessional” poetry, readings and misreadings of contemporary women poets, MFA and PhD programs and workshops, and their experiences reading and studying with Mary Ruefle.

Watch here:

Note: Reading starts at 8:59. Aidan’s introduction and Rachelle’s reading are difficult to hear due to mic placement and acoustics issues. Audio quality picks up during Julie’s reading; the discussion and Mary’s reading are entirely audible.

Gallery

Foundlings Press Announces 2021 Catalog and Subscription Service

OK, so we’re a little late. Although we’re almost four months into the new year, we’re pleased to announce our 2021 catalog. We hope you’ll agree that it was worth the wait.

Our 2021 lineup includes two full-length poetry collections, a bilingual anthology of poems and narratives from the Mexico-U.S. border, the 2021 Wallace Award winning chapbook, and the continuation of our Strays series with two new packs, featuring seven fantastic poets.

Additionally, for the first time, Foundlings is offering a tiered subscription model for book and merch purchases. While books, chapbooks, zines, and more will still be available directly on our website, friends and fans can subscribe through our Patreon page and automatically receive new titles as we release them: https://www.patreon.com/foundlingspress.

Full-length releases: Andrew Grace’s Sancta and Marta Del Pozo’s Hunger of Images

Our year kicks off in earnest in June with the release a new edition of Sancta by Andrew Grace, originally published in 2012 by Ahsahta Press, which ended its run last year. The book will feature a new cover design by our own Darren Canham, which we’re pleased to reveal today. Sancta is available now for pre-order and scheduled for shipment in June.

In August Foundlings will publish Hunger of Images by Marta del Pozo. The collection was originally published in 2016 a Spanish-language edition as Hambre de imágenes by Alhulia Press, and received the Antonio Gala poetry prize. Foundlings will publish a new bilingual edition of the book, featuring translations by the author. The book will also feature a new cover with original art by Claudio Abate, the late Italian photographer. Hunger of Images is available now for pre-order and scheduled to ship in August.

2021 Wallace Award Winner: Rachel Stempel’s Interiors

Foundlings Press has selected poet Rachel Stempel’s chapbook Interiors as the winner of the 2021 Wallace Award. Guest artist Julie Molloy will design original cover art for the manuscript, which will be out in winter 2021. We’ll be sharing more information about Rachel and their winning manuscript soon.

Anthology: Border poems and narratives

In December Foundlings will release a bilingual anthology of poems and narratives from the Mexico-U.S. border, edited by Gabriela Zavela and Peter Temes. Zavela is the Executive Director at Resource Center Matamoros and President and CEO of Asylum Seeker Network of Support. Temes the founder and president of the Institute for Innovation in Large Organizations (ILO) and the author of several books, including, with Gerry Crinnin, the poetry collection I Know You Know, and with Florin Rotar, We The People: Human Purpose in a Digital Age: A Guide to Digital Ethics for Individuals, Organizations and Robots of All Kinds. Together, Zavela and Temes have worked with migrant writers predominantly from the refugee camp at Matamoros, Mexico to collect poetry and personal narratives spanning over five years of migrant experiences.

Strays returns: two packs, seven poets

Strays, our scrappy series of hand-bound micro-publications, will also continue, thanks to the generous support of the New York State Council on the Arts and its DEC Grant program, administered locally by Arts Services Initiative (ASI). Pack 4, out this summer, will feature original “stray” collections by Mary Ruefle, Julianne Neely, and Rachelle Toarmino. Pack 5, available for pre-order in December, will feature original poems by Derrick Austin and Jessica Fjeld along with Nicholas Rattner’s translations of the Spanish poet Juan Andrés García Román.

Strays Pack 4 is available now for pre-order.

Foundlings Press Subscription Service

All the titles mentioned above will be available for pre-order in our online store soon. Now, readers also have the option of subscribing to receive new titles automatically.

Since our beginnings as a magazine in 2015, Foundlings has been on an uneven journey toward a sustainable publishing model. As a small, volunteer-run operation without institutional backing or foundational grant support, we discovered that traditional small press publishing and distribution models would inevitably lead us to insolvency. We have been lucky, though, to welcome and grow a base of dedicated and supportive readers readers. To stay close to those readers, reach an even wider audience, and keep our book prices affordable, we’re now going to offer our titles via monthly subscriptions.

We’re debuting the following patron tiers through Patreon:

  1. Fans - Chip in $2/month for our eternal gratitude and recognition on a new patrons and supporters page of our website (under construction).

  2. Friends - For only $4/month, subscribe to our Strays series. That means you’ll get two packs a year - totaling six limited-edition original works by a wide variety of poets and writers.

  3. First Readers - For $8/month, subscribe to the Strays series, all of our full-length poetry releases, and our chapbooks - and get free digital downloads of all the hard copies we send you.

  4. Constant Strangers - For only $10/month, you won’t miss a thing* - we’ll send you every full-length title, chapbook, zine, limited edition release, Strays pack, and anthology or collection that we publish.

*Almost. This doesn’t include hardcovers or coffee table books. We’ve never published a hardcover edition or a coffee table book, but we might in the future.

Learn more and sign up to support at our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/foundlingspress.


Praise for Andrew Grace and Sancta

In Sancta, divinity irradiates. The afterlife approaches nuclear, dangerous and fascinating, a mysterium tremendum fascinans that can kill you  with overexposure. 

Kascha Semonovitch in The Rumpus 

Sancta dismantles the weighty abstractions of God, loss, redemption, and loneliness. And there, Grace finds himself standing in the middle of a wilderness. This is  the book’s thrilling core—a space that does not dissipate after study, that is steadfastly interior and exterior, self  and circumstance. 

Daniel Moysaenko in The Volta

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Praise for Marta del Pozo and Hunger of Images

It is a collection that rewards multiple rounds of reading, lingering, holding lines in suspension, dipping. The  effect of moving through the poems is like watching Marker’s San Soleil. There’s a mesmerizing drift into and  out of stages of consciousness, and rich philosophical ruminations on the ravenousness of the eye, along with the  vexed desire to represent, to seize and ingest the flux of experience as image(s). 

—Jenny Xie

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The Foundlings Press 2021 Lineup

Click through to learn more about Derrick Austin, Jessica Fjeld, Andrew Grace, Julianne Neely, Marta del Pozo, Nick Rattner, Juan Andrés García Román, Mary Ruefle, Rachel Stempel, Peter Temes, Rachelle Toarmino, and Gabriela Zavela.

About Foundlings Press

Foundlings Press is a literary publishing partnership based in Buffalo, New York. Foundlings earned a reputation as a pint-sized poetry powerhouse with the publication of the feted Constant Stranger: After Frank Stanford (2018), a seminal anthology with over 30 contributors; and for Strays, an ongoing series of micro-publications that brings together work in packs featuring three poets twice annually. The press has also developed a robust catalog of full-length books of poetry and chapbooks. Foundlings holds a biennial chapbook contest that pairs the winning poet with a guest artist and book designer, and also facilitates the annual Ralph Angel Poetry Prize, honoring one poem with a limited edition broadside publication.

Strays Packs 4 and 5 are possible through the generous support of NYSCA and ASI.

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Mary Ruefle to Judge Inaugural Ralph Angel Poetry Prize

We’re very pleased to share that Mary Ruefle will judge our inaugural Ralph Angel Poetry Prize.

We announced the prize, which honors the late poet Ralph Angel, in March. Submissions are open (and free) through April. The inaugural prize will recognize a single poem; the winning poet, selected by Mary Ruefle, will receive a $250 award and a limited edition broadside publication of the winning poem. The broadsides will be available for sale exclusively here at FoundlingsPress.com until the run sells out.

HOW TO SUBMIT

  • Entry is free

  • Send only one poem as a Word or PDF attachment to publisher@foundlingspress.com

  • Submissions must be previously unpublished

  • Entry window closes April 30 at 11:59pm ET

Ralph_Angel_1.jpg

ABOUT RALPH ANGEL

Ralph Angel (1951-2020) was an American poet, translator, and educator. He was born in Seattle, Washington, as a second-generation American of Sephardic Jewish descent. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Washington and his Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of California, Irvine. He went on to become the Edith R. White Distinguished Professor at the University of Redlands, where he shaped the Creative Writing Department and taught for 39 years, and he was a beloved member of the MFA in Writing faculty at Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Angel’s published works included Anxious Latitudes (Wesleyan University Press, 1986); Neither World (Miami University Press, 1995), which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets; Twice Removed (Sarabande Books, 2001), which was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Award and was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award; Exceptions and Melancholies: Poems 1986-2006 (Sarabande Books, 2006), honored with the 2007 PEN USA Award for Poetry; and Your Moon (New Issues Poetry & Prose, 2013), which was awarded the 2013 Green Rose Poetry Prize. His translation of the Federico García Lorca collection, Poema del cante jondo / Poem of the Deep Song, (Sarabande Books, 2006) received a Willis Barnstone Poetry Translation Prize.

Angel’s poems have appeared in scores of magazines, and have been collected in numerous anthologies, including The Plume Anthology of Poetry, Pratik International, The Heart's Many Doors, The Best American Poetry, American Hybrid, Poets of the New Century, and Forgotten Language. Other awards included a gift from the Elgin Cox Trust, a Pushcart Prize, the Gertrude Stein Award, a Fulbright Foundation fellowship, and the Bess Hokin Award of the Modern Poetry Association.

Angel was a friend of Foundlings Press and contributed to the Strays series. His collection in Strays Pack 2 was his final publication before his passing on March 6, 2020.

Foundlings Press Publisher Aidan Ryan says: I remember vividly speaking with Ralph over the phone, in the first days of the new year, about his contribution to our series. His voice was like his poems: patient, clear, direct, with a laugh always waiting in the wings. Here was a celebrated poet, a senior statesman of poetry, taking a call from a stranger and offering his work (without any chance of acclaim or fair remuneration) to an upstart, unproven little press from Buffalo. I remember the gratitude, amazement, and and relief I felt when Ralph so immediately understood our spirit as a press and the thrust of the Strays project. And what a gift his poems were.

Ralph left behind an incredible body of work, but he also left a legacy of support, guidance, and inspiration for younger poets as well as his contemporaries. I’m happy that, with Mary Angel’s blessing and assistance, we can honor Ralph in a way that feels continuous with his life’s work: By recognizing, honoring, and encouraging the work of other poets.

More information about Ralph and his poetry is available at https://ralphangel.online/

Mary Ruefle | Photo Credit: Matt Valentine

Mary Ruefle | Photo Credit: Matt Valentine

ABOUT MARY RUEFLE

Mary Ruefle is the author of many books, including Dunce (Wave Books, 2019), My Private Property (Wave Books, 2016), Trances of the Blast (Wave Books, 2013), Madness, Rack, and Honey: Collected Lectures (Wave Books, 2012), a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism, and Selected Poems (Wave Books, 2010), winner of the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. She has also published a comic book, Go Home and Go to Bed (Pilot Books/Orange Table Comics, 2007), and is an erasure artist, whose treatments of nineteenth century texts have been exhibited in museums and galleries and published in A Little White Shadow (Wave Books, 2006). Ruefle is the recipient of numerous honors, including the Robert Creeley Award, an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, and a Whiting Award. She lives in Bennington, Vermont.

More information about Mary and her poetry is available at http://maryruefle.com/.

Zack Grabosky and Gerry Crinnin in Coversation: Video

Poets talk Grabosky’s Blazes, Binghamton, and more

Zack Grabosky, author of the poetry collection Blazes, connected over Zoom for a conversation with Gerry Crinnin, fellow poet and compatriot from their days in the SUNY Binghamton Creative Writing Program. Zack read several poems from Blazes and talked with Gerry about the genesis of the book, his travels through New York and Pennsylvania, fatherhood, and other poets they both studied under and befriended, like the great Milton Kessler.

Watch

Get Blazes

Buy your copy directly from Foundlings Press, from SPD, or from your local independent bookseller.

Rick Jackson Remembers Ralph Angel

Earlier this year we mourned the passing of the poet and beloved teacher Ralph Angel. Ralph contributed a chapbook of extraordinary poems to Strays Pack 2. This was, tragically, his final publication; he passed away unexpectedly on March 6, 2020.

Ralph was the Edith R. White Distinguished Professor at the University of Redlands and a member of the MFA in Writing faculty at Vermont College of Fine Arts. His fellow VCFA faculty member, the poet Richard Jackson, wrote a beautiful remembrance for Ralph in the latest issue of the VCFA magazine.

Rick writes about the “intimate distance” of Ralph’s poetry, captured so movingly in his Strays contribution. Rick cites an untitled poem from the collection. The poem “starts off with all the bustle of everyday life,” he writes:

… then moves to ashes, tears, “whispering aspens,” and ends: “an angel comes and taps / my lips.” An angel. How fitting. How consoling to think so. The invisible, the silence. The absent presence.

Read Rick’s tribute here.

Following Ralph’s footsteps, Rick will be a featured poet in Strays Pack 3, which we’ll release this December 15.

We’re out of Ralph’s limited-edition chapbook, but there are still copies available through SPD.

The Wallace Award Returns: Foundlings Announces Third Biannual Chapbook Competition Featuring Artist Julie Molloy

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Please note: Submissions for the third biennial Wallace Award are now closed. Foundlings Press will announce the winner in spring 2021. Please check back in December 2022 for the return of our chapbook contest.

The Wallace Award is back.

Only open for submissions once every two years, Foundlings Press offers the Wallace Award to an outstanding poetry chapbook, publishing the winning manuscript with cover art by a guest designer.

This year’s guest designer is Julie Molloy, whose work first charmed and enchanted us at a Peach Mag event in 2018. We left with a painting and with the hope that we might get to collaborate someday.

That day has come. Following previous guest artists Stephen Fitzmaurice (2017) and Edreys Wajed (2019), Julie will team up with Foundlings Press and the eventual winner of the 2021 Wallace Award to produce cover art for the winning manuscript, which Foundlings will publish in fall/winter 2021.

Submissions

Submissions for the third biannual Wallace Award chapbook contest are open from 16 November 2020 to 31 January 2021. Foundlings will announce the final selection in spring 2021.

Requirements

  • Length: 20-70 pages

  • Format: Word or PDF, remove any/all identifying information

  • Style: N/A - we’ll read anything, but please familiarize yourself with our catalog

Entry

Entry is $5, payable through the Foundlings website (link below). Need-based fee-waivers are available—no documentation needed; just email us. Once you’ve paid your submission fee, email your chapbook manuscript as a Word or PDF document to publisher@foundlingspress.com.

Enter here.

More about Julie Molloy

Julie Molloy is an illustrator, designer and art director at Block Club, an award-winning branding and strategy agency in Buffalo. Her gallery work debuted in 2014 in her solo show, Inside Voices, a series exploring the relationship between our public faces and private lives. She has since been featured in The Public and elsewhere, displayed her work at events with partners like Peach Mag, and taken on a wide variety of illustration projects, including designing the cover of Matthew Bookin’s chapbook Palace (Ghost City Press, 2018) and many private commissions. Based in Buffalo, she is currently living and working in Mexico City.

View: https://www.juliemolloy.com/

Follow:https://www.instagram.com/juleeclip/

Blazes Launch: November 7 at Duende

Join Foundlings on Saturday, Nov. 7, 7pm at Duende’s outdoor Watu Cantina for a reading to celebrate the launch of Blazes, the debut collection by poet Zack Graboksy.

Guests can enjoy food and drink from the cantina and sit at an appropriate distance around the venue’s outdoor stage, south of downtown Buffalo and in the shadow of the grain silos. Zack—coming up from Carlisle, PA—will read from his new collection and copies of Blazes and other Foundlings titles will be available for purchase.

We’re requiring masks for anyone moving about the venue, and requesting them for seated guests who aren’t eating or drinking. We’ll also be following and enforcing the latest Erie County health guidelines and notifying guests of any changes to the same in the weeks and days leading up to our event.

Click here for more info about Blazes.

Click here to RSVP to the event.

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