•  $20 Winning Prize

•  $10 for Honorable Mentions

•  Eligible for Pushcart Prize nomination
•  Free Entry
•  Prior Publication Okay
•  Ends Sunday, Results by Next Sunday

Each week's Winner will receive a $20 cash prize, sent via PayPal to the user's registered e-mail address. Entry is free.

There may occasionally be one or more additional poems that receive an Honorable Mention. This will not necessarily be awarded every week, but when awarded, the poet(s) will receive a $10 cash prize, sent via PayPal to the user's registered e-mail address. All Winners and Honorable Mentions will be eligible to be included in future print anthologies.

Any type of poem is welcome! Formal or informal, long or short, rhyme or free verse, haiku or epic—we like all kinds of poems. Original translations are also welcome and will be evaluated as English poems. However, please include the original poem with any translations.

Each week's winner will be selected by Poetry Nook's editorial staff within seven days of contest end. Contest winners can be found in the Contest Winners forum; Honorable Mentions can be found in the Honorable Mentions forum. We read the poems with an eye to their overall impact, not for any particular style, form, or subject matter. We're looking for poems that will grab us right from the beginning and linger in our imagination. Things like vivid and concrete language, fresh perspectives, rhythm, lyricism, vibrant imagery, and human understanding can help, but are not necessarily decisive: it is the organic impression and memorability that matters.

Note: Most literary magazines consider web-published poems to be "published" and will not consider those poems, so if you want to publish a poem in a literary magazine, we recommend that you wait until it is published and are allowed to re-publish before submitting here. Poems submitted to a contest cannot be removed once the contest is over.

Rules
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1. Any length.
2. Any theme.
3. You must be a registered user of this site to post (registration is free).
4. By posting you certify that this is your own work, you hold the copyright, and you are granting us permission to publish it on our site and in a printed anthology.
5. Prior publication is fine, as long as you hold the rights to republish. Please credit the prior publication beneath the poem, in italics.
6. Posting on social media or other sites is encouraged. We actively follow user likes and insightful comments on the poems.
7. Non-English poems are welcome as long as you have an English translation beneath it. You are welcome to submit your own translation of public domain foreign poems or poems where you have received written permission to translate. We will evaluate these translations as English poems and will not consider the original. However, please include the original poem with any translations.
8. Winners will be announced within seven days of the contest end. For example, if the contest ends on Sunday, the winner will be announced by the following Sunday.
9. Payments will be made only via Paypal, sent to your registered email address. The recipient is responsible for any Paypal fees. We will not send payment by any other method.
10. No feedback will be provided if your poem did not get chosen.
11. If your poem did not get chosen in a given week, you are welcome to resubmit it in a subsequent week.
12. Poets with winning or honorable mention poems are welcome to enter subsequent contests with a different poem. A poem that has already won or earned an honorable mention will be disqualifiied if entered into  subsequent contest.
13. We recommend copying your poem into the editor from Notepad or some other program that does not add text markup for best formatting results. Please review your formatting after posting to make sure it looks how you want it to look. In the worst case scenario, if you can't get line breaks to work correctly, please disable rich text.
14. Every contest begins on Monday at 12:00 AM and ends on Sunday at 11:59 PM (New York time).

Thank you for participating! We look forward to reading your work.

Michael Burch, Editor (contests ending 1-3; e.g., 361-363)
Rie Sheridan Rose, Editor (contests ending 4-6; e.g., 364-366)
Khuzaima Ali, Editor (contests ending 7-0; e.g., 367-370)

The editors can participate only in contests they do not judge.

Monday, July 8, 2024 to Monday, July 15, 2024
Contest type: 
Poetry contest
Poem Name Submitted By Likes Comments
Round The Corner MyNAh_27 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
We Are Living In An Endless House Of Mirrors Madeline Rosales 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Growing Up Thea Alexander 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Love, Made to Order Abdul Malik Mandani 1 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Riga JP Davies 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Hunters Prey Claudia Cross 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
I'm not defeated yet LCN 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Posthumous Elisa 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
The Three Funerals Declan Boushy 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Charred Heart: a poem for Mary Casey Lawrence 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Broken Twizzle48 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Simply Utterly Apart 咕咕郭 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Far and Away Thompson Emate 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Gawain hazel_gliipps 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
Stone Jungle: The Capital and the Soul ELAINE SILVA MELO 1 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
out of the cave jreinhart 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]
FAIR LADY OF THE MORNING SKY Delasia Vanterpool 0 [field_honorable_mention][field_winner]

Comments

Declan Boushy's picture
To whom it may concern, Respectfully, my poem, “The Three Funerals”, is one single coherent poem (about the stages of (a) soul(s) coming into being and living). It is a single poem, truly, in the same way that “The Waste Land” by T. S. Eliot is a single poem and “Not So Far As The Forest” by Edna St. Vincent Millay is a single poem; there are countless other examples. I will note that these aforementioned poems, along with their (in the case of “The Waste Land”, section-title-phrase bearing) Roman numeraled sections, also have changes in structure and rhyme scheme throughout. Respectfully, if you cannot recognize my poem as a single poem, I will withdraw it from this contest.

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