Keats-Shelley Prize 2024

 Full details 

Submissions - Enter the Prize

The Keats-Shelley Poetry and Essay Prize is open to all.

Winners receive £1000. Two highly commended entrants in each category will receive £500.

Winning poems and essays will be published in The Keats-Shelley Review and on the Keats-Shelley website.

The chair of the judging panel is the acclaimed author and historian Tom Holland. Returning as judges for the Poetry Prize are poets Will Kemp and Professor Deryn Rees-Jones, and for the Essay Prize Professor Simon Bainbridge and Professor Sharon Ruston.

Winners will be revealed at the Keats-Shelley Awards in April 2025.

(Photo Credit: John Murray Collection, London)

Poetry Prize

2024’s Poetry Theme is “Exile”. This has been chosen to mark the 200th anniversary of Lord Byron’s death in Greece.

What exile from himself can flee?
To zones, though more and more remote,
Still, still pursues, where’er I be,
The blight of life—the demon Thought.
Lord Byron, Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage

POETRY RULES

Poets can interpret “Exile” freely. Poems can be serious or comic, experimental or traditional, but the judges advise that works drifting too far from the theme will not be considered.

Poems must:

  • be no more than 30 lines of text in length.
  • fit onto a single A4 page.

Entries must be original and contemporary in style. Plagiarism will not be accepted - including AI-generated entries. The poem must not have been published previously, either in print or online or in any other media, nor previously submitted to us.

Poetry judge Deryn Rees-Jones writes: ‘For me good poems adhere to no rules…except the one necessary to their own creation. Often a poem will stand out because of its precision and its ability to harness and also liberate a particular kind of energy. The poem will be able to say something that only it can say.’

Entry to the Poetry Prize: £10 per entry.

Essay Prize

Essays may be on any aspect of the writing and/or lives of the Romantics and their circles.

Essays should be no more than 3,000 words including quotations.

Entries must be original works. Plagiarism will not be accepted, including AI-generated work. All sources must be acknowledged. They must not have been published previously, either in print or online or in any other media, nor previously submitted to us.

Essay judge Professor Sharon Ruston writes: ‘I want to read a well-organised, lively, and well-expressed essay. It should be arguing a point and offer persuasive evidence in its case. We are also looking for someone who has a deep and creative interest in Keats, Shelley, or their circle.’

Entry to the Essay Prize is free.

Conditions of Entry

Prize Deadline 31st January 2025 at 10am (GMT).

All entries must be submitted via the website.

Please do not put your name on the entry. Poems and essays are sent to the judges anonymously.

Entries may be submitted from any part of the world, but must be in English and in Microsoft Word format.

HOW TO ENTER

Click the green button below and complete the Entry Form.

Remember to attach your entry and click the box agreeing to the GDPR and Copyright conditions. To complete the process, click the green ‘Submit Prize Entry’ button.

Your ID number will appear. This is confirmation that your entry has been received. Please make a note of it.

Entrants to the Keats-Shelley Poetry Prize must also pay the £10 entry fee.

Have a question about 2024’s Prize? Email: prizes@keats-shelley.org

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

DAW

Dark Edge Press

Polis Books