Four Quartets Prize

The Four Quartets Prize is an award of the Poetry Society of America, presented annually since 2018 in partnership with the T. S. Eliot Foundation. It is "first and foremost a celebration of the multi-part poem, which includes entire volumes composed of a unified sequence as well as novels in verse and book-length verse narratives."[1]

Background

The awards are named for T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets, written over a four-year period. The award recognizes the 75th anniversary of Eliot's New York publisher first collecting them in a single volume in 1943.[2][3]

Eligibility

The prize is awarded for a unified and complete sequence of poems.[4] Examples of existing sequences that would fit the category:[1]

  • Gwendolyn Brooks, A Street in Bronzeville (1945), or The Anniad (1950)
  • John Berryman, 77 Dream Poems (1964), or His Toy, His Dream, His Rest (1968)

Winners receive a prize of $20,000; three finalists (including the eventual winner) receive $1,000 apiece.[5] The prize does not require that nominees have an existing body of work or reach a certain age.[2]

The Four Quartets Prize was first presented in 2018 to Danez Smith for their sonnet "summer, somewhere."

Four Quartets winners and finalists

Winners are listed first, highlighted and with a double dagger.

Year Poet Work
2025 Dobby Gibson Hold Everything (Graywolf Press)
CAConrad Listen to the Golden Boomerang Return (Wave Books)
Morgan Võ "To Market” from The Selkie (The Song Cave)
2024 Robyn Schiff Information Desk: An Epic (Penguin)
Dong Li The Orange Tree (University of Chicago Press)
Paisley Rekdal West: A Translation (Copper Canyon Press)
2023 Courtney Faye Taylor Concentrate (Graywolf Press)
Brenda Hillman “The Sickness & the World Soul” from her collection In a Few Minutes Before Later (Wesleyan University Press)
Gabriel Ojeda-Sagué Madness (Nightboat Books)
2022 Muriel Leung Imagine Us, The Swarm (Nightboat Books)
Desiree C. Bailey What Noise Against the Cane (Yale University Press)
Forrest Gander “Twice Alive” from his book Twice Alive (New Directions)
2021 John Murillo “A Refusal to Mourn the Deaths, by Gunfire, of Three Men in Brooklyn” from Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry (Four Way Books)
Don Mee Choi  DMZ Colony (Wave Books)
Srikanth Reddy Underworld Lit  (Wave Books)
2020 Brian Teare “Toxics Release Inventory (Essay on Man)” from his collection Doomstead Days (Nightboat Books)
Ilya Kaminsky  Deaf Republic (Graywolf Press)
Prageeta Sharma Grief Sequence (Wave Books)
2019 Dante Micheaux The Circus (Indolent Books)
Catherine Barnett "Accursed Questions" from Human Hours (Graywolf Press)
Meredith Stricker anemochore (Newfound Press)
2018[2] Danez Smith "summer, somewhere" from Don't Call Us Dead (Graywolf Books)
Geoffrey G. O'Brien "Experience in Groups" from Experience in Groups (Wave Books)
Kathleen Peirce Vault: A Poem (New Michigan Press)

References

  1. ^ a b "Four Quartets Prize - Poetry Society of America". www.poetrysociety.org. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c Harriet Staff (April 16, 2018). "Danez Smith Wins Inaugural Four Quartets Prize". Poetry Foundation. Poetry Foundation. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  3. ^ Kirk, Russell (2008). Eliot and His Age: T.S. Eliot's Moral Imagination in the Twentieth Century. ISI Books. p. 239. OCLC 80106144.
  4. ^ Hertzel, Laurie (April 13, 2018). "Minneapolis poet Danez Smith wins Four Quartets Prize". Star Tribune. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  5. ^ "Inaugural Four Quartets Prize Finalists Announced - Poetry Society of America". www.poetrysociety.org. Retrieved September 20, 2018.

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