The winners of the 2012 Caselberg Trust
International Poetry Prize have been announced. This year's competition was judged
by Wellington poet James Brown.
First place went to 'All the Things I never knew', by Tim Upperton (left) of
Palmerston North, and 'The Tithonus Doll', by Micah Timona Ferris, of
Christchurch was placed second. The winners receive $500 and $250 respectively,
and their entries will be published in May in Landfall 223.
The five Highly Commended entries came from Therese Lloyd (Paekakariki),
Natasha Dennerstein (Wellington), Mary Cresswell (Paraparaumu), Cliff Fell
(Motueka), and Carolyn McCurdie (Dunedin). Their poems, along with the two
winning entries, will be published on the Caselberg Trust website during May (www.caselbergtrust.org)
.
The second annual Caselberg Trust competition, which was again judged blind,
attracted nearly 200 entries from around New Zealand and overseas. James Brown,
in his report, said that the winning poem 'makes excellent use of rhyme and
rhythm to mimic popular song, and the moments when the lines disrupt the
expected rhythm are perhaps even stronger. An aging Bobbie Gentry strumming her
former hit is a perfect image of nostalgia...'
The judge praised 'The Tithonus doll' as 'a fine lyric poem' in which the
unrequited love felt by a ventriloquist's doll for her master was 'beautifully
rendered'.
James Brown is himself an award-winning poet, editor, and writer of short
fiction. His latest collection of poems will be published by Victoria
University Press in July this year.
Tim Upperton's poems have appeared in many New Zealand and American literary
magazines and in various anthologies, including Best New Zealand Poems.
His first collection of poems, A House on Fire was published by Steele
Roberts in 2009. He also reviews for the Dominion Post and the New
Zealand Listener.
Micah Timona Ferris, born in Switzerland with dual Swiss and New Zealand
citizenship, has a BA from the University of Canterbury and an MA from Victoria
University. In 2011 she won the Macmillan Brown Prize for Writers and her
poetry and short fiction have been published in various NZ and international
journals.
In addition to fostering writers and artists in a variety of ways, the
Caselberg Trust operates an artist residence at Broad Bay on the Otago
Peninsula. The Trust's inaugural 'Creative Connections' residency is currently
held by the Featherston artist Megan Jane Campbell.
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