Products tagged with 'popp award winner'
Muddy Kind of Love, A
A young girl dreams of becoming a circus performer and riding pink elephants in a sequined gown. A young boy hopes to use magic, a divining rod, to find his grandfather's trunk of gold buried on their land, so family stories say. But their exotic dreams eventually turn into the simpler life of farmers, though their simple life is never simple.
Their many stories are told in poems with achingly powerful expressive language in Carolyn Dahl's chapbook, A Muddy Kind of Love. Hand-letterpress printed, A Muddy Kind of Love is the 2020 Poetry of the Plains & Prairies Award winner.
Prairie Madness
About a year ago, Katherine Hoerth moved to Nebraska from Texas; her poems chronicle the experience of adjusting to life on the Great Plains amid the isolation and uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic. The term "prairie madness" feels, Hoerth observes, particularly fitting as it was once used to describe the "madness" of women pioneers of Nebraska and Kansas who endured extreme isolation.
Hoerth is an assistant professor of English at Lamar University and editor of Lamar University Literary Press. Her work has been published in journals such as The Georgia Review and Valparaiso Review. She is a member of the Texas Institute of Letters, and in 2015 she won the Helen C. Smith Prize for the best book of poetry in Texas.
Prairie Madness is the sixth volume of our Poetry of the Plains & Prairies letterpress chapbook series. Each copy is unique, with hand-assembled pressed flowers.
Surrender Dorothy
Surrender Dorothy’s earliest poems were born out of a desire to understand the author's place within the larger context of the Midwest and Kansas, and—thinking beyond borders—the Plains ecoregion.
From the author:
What does it mean to be a child of this particular area, filled as it is with ancient prairie land, its cultural associations, folks espousing “Midwestern Nice,” so much overlooked native wildlife, and acres upon acres of Big Agriculture? I found myself drawn to Wizard of Oz characters as a case study, they being so recognizable to people both inside and outside the region. There were layers of privilege to peel back, along with all of the backyards and pastures I’d come to know since my youth, and moments of thinking deeply about my ancestors (animal, plant, and otherwise) and their relationship with the same land. I needed to know more about that past so I could better understand my present, if we can ever locate such a thing.
My goal as a writer is to faithfully represent the voices and characters and narratives of a particular area. That representation can manifest in any number of ways, and so much of Surrender Dorothy arose within a surrealist vein since its messages related to climate change and apathy have nowhere else to turn. The poems are often dark and stark, but I think I achieved what I set out to do over the course of the poems being written.
About the Poetry of the Plains & Prairies Award:
Every January 17 through March 17, NDSU Press accepts chapbook-length poetry collections about life on the plains and prairies or North America. Surrender Dorothy is the seventh winner of our annual award. The winning collection is copyedited and letterpress printed by the Introduction to Publishing class at North Dakota State University. Each chapbook is hand-assembled and individually numbered. Each POPP Award chapbook is a unique, limited-edition publication.
POPP Award winners to date are:
- 2022 Surrender Dorothy, by Brett Salsbury (Nevada)
- 2021 Prairie Madness, by Katherine Hoerth (Nebraska)
- 2020 A Muddy Kind of Love, by Carolyn A. Dahl (Texas)
- 2019 Harvest Widows, by Nick Bertelson (Iowa)
- 2018 Destiny Manifested, by Bonnie Larson Staiger (North Dakota)
- 2017 Thunderbird, by Denise Lajimodiere (North Dakota)
- 2016 Land of Sunlit Ice, by Larry Woiwode (North Dakota)
Forgotten Frequencies
THE FIRST FORTY CUSTOMERS TO ORDER THIS TITLE FROM OUR ONLINE STORE WILL RECEIVE AN AUTOGRAPHED, LETTERPRESS PRINTED CARD FEATURING THE POEM "DECEMBER" FROM THIS COLLECTION.
Winner of the 2023 Poetry of the Plains & Prairies (POPP) Award
Volume 8 of the POPP Award Series
From the author:
I began writing Forgotten Frequencies while working as a country radio broadcaster in my hometown of Montevideo, Minnesota. During this time, I began to conceive of the poetic imagination as a kind of underground radio station of the soul, hosted by the muses. When I am lucky enough to catch the signal, I hear hymns and folk songs and sonnets, sounds of ancient glacial rivers, messages from fields, and voices from this region’s past. This book is a record of my attempts to transcribe this staticky inner music.
Brendan Stermer is a poet from Montevideo, Minnesota. His work is influenced by the rich literary and artistic tradition of the Upper Midwest. He is also the host and producer of Interesting People Reading Poetry, a podcast where artists and luminaries read a favorite poem and share what it means t them. He currently lives in East Grand Forks, Minnesota, and works as a writer exploring rural health issues across the country.
ISBN: 978-1-946163-62-2
Page count: 40
Picture Count: 2
Paperback, stitched
Publication Date: December 12, 2023
Forgotten Frequencies, Mug
11-oz. capacity
Dishwasher- & microwave-safe
Ceramic
White exterior
Ships directly from manufacturer
Surrender Dorothy, Mug
11-oz. capacity
Dishwasher- & microwave-safe
Ceramic
White exterior
Ships directly from manufacturer
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