Grace Leven Prize for Poetry

The Grace Leven Prize for Poetry is an annual award given in the name of Grace Leven who died in 1922. It was established by William Baylebridge who "made a provision for an annual poetry prize in memory of 'my benefactress Grace Leven' and for the publication of his own work".[1] Grace was his mother's half-sister.[2]

The award is made to "the best volume of poetry published in the preceding twelve months by a writer either Australian-born, or naturalised in Australia and resident in Australia for not less than ten years".[2] It offers only a small monetary prize, but is highly regarded by poets.[3] It was first awarded in 1947,[4] with the recipient being Nan McDonald's Pacific Sea.

Winners

Rawshock by Toby Fitch
Autoethnographic by Michael Brennan
The Collected Blue Hills by Laurie Duggan
Jaguar's Dream by John Kinsella
Another Fine Morning in Paradise by Michael Sharkey
Phantom limb by David Musgrave
Patience, Mutiny by LK Holt
The Simplified World by Petra White
New and Selected Poems by Kevin Hart[7]
Path of Ghosts: poems 1986-93 by Jemal Sharah[8]
Empire of Grass by Gary Catalano
Peniel by Kevin Hart[7]
Selected Poems 1963-1983 by Robert Gray
The Amorous Cannibal by Chris Wallace-Crabbe
Judith Wright: Collected Poems, 1942-1970 by Judith Wright
Collected Poems 1936-1970 by James McAuley[14]

Notes

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 21, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.