Thursday, June 25, 2009

Christopher Buckley Wins 2009

Tampa Review Prize for Poetry


Poet Christopher Buckley of Lompoc, California, has won the 2009 Tampa Review Prize for Poetry. He receives a $2,000 cash award and book publication by the University of Tampa Press for his winning manuscript, Rolling the Bones. His book will be released simultaneously in hardback and quality paperback editions in early 2010.


Buckley is a widely published writer with several other major recent awards to his credit. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in Poetry for 2007-2008, and received the James Dickey Prize for 2008 from Five Points literary journal. He has also been the recipient of a Fulbright Award in Creative Writing to the former Yugoslavia, four Pushcart Prizes, two awards from the Poetry Society of America, and two NEA grants in poetry.

Tampa Review judges praised Rolling the Bones for its “local identity and global reach” in a manuscript “sensitive to political, economic, spiritual, and philosophical nuance.”

“Buckley offers thoughtful meditations on our part in a cosmic game in which a roll of the dice or the bones in California can rattle the foundations in Ecuador or Egypt," the judges wrote. “Buckley’s poems are dense with carefully observed details, heavy with rich images. Always evocative, sometimes surreal, Buckley renders even the most quotidian experience as something memorable, occasionally sublime.”

Judges of the Tampa Review Prize for Poetry also identified ten finalists for the 2009 prize. They are:

D. C. Berry of Oxford, Mississippi, for “Cancer, The Cellphone Texts”;
Alan Feldman of Framingham, Massachusetts, for “Beloved Young”;
Gary Fincke of Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania, for “The History of Permanence”;
Ed Frankel of Los Angeles, California, for “After Spicer”;
Jeffrey Greene of Paris, France, for “Beautiful Monsters”;
Frannie Lindsay of Belmont, Massachusetts, for “The Urn Garden”;
George Looney of Erie, Pennsylvania, for “A History of What Music Can Do”;
Martin Ott of Los Angeles, California, for “Children of Interrogation”;
Peter Serchuk of Los Angeles, California, for “What Remains”; and
Brian Walpert of Palmerston North, New Zealand, for “A History of Glass.”

Buckley was raised in Santa Barbara, Calif., and educated at St. Mary’s College (BA), San Diego State University (MA), and the University of California Irvine (MFA). His most recent books of poetry are Modern History: Prose Poems 1987-2007 (Tupelo Press, 2008), Flying Backbone: The Georgia O’Keeffe Poems (Blue Light Press, 2008), and And the Sea (Sheep Meadow Press, 2006). His poetry has appeared in The New Yorker, Antaeus, American Poetry Review, The Hudson Review, The Nation, The Iowa Review, Gettysburg Review, Ploughshares, The Georgia Review, The Kenyon Review, The Southern Review, Crazyhorse, Seneca Review, The Sewanee Review, Quarterly West, New Letters, TriQuarterly, Prairie Schooner, FIELD, and POETRY. He is also the author of a dozen additional books of poetry, two collections of creative nonfiction, and several critical studies and anthologies. He is Professor in the Creative Writing Department at the University of California Riverside.

A selection of poems from Rolling the Bones will appear as a “sneak preview” in one of the next issues of Tampa Review, the award-winning hardback literary journal published by the University of Tampa Press. The book is scheduled for release in Spring 2010, and a reading tour of Florida to celebrate its publication is planned for National Poetry Month in April 2010, sponsored by the Florida Literary Arts Coalition.

The Tampa Review Prize for Poetry is given annually for a previously unpublished booklength manuscript. Judging is by the editors of Tampa Review, who are members of the faculty at the University of Tampa. Submissions are now being accepted for 2010. Entries must follow published guidelines and must be postmarked by December 31, 2009.

Guidelines are available at http://tampareview.ut.edu or by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to The Tampa Review Prize for Poetry, University of Tampa Press, 401 West Kennedy Blvd., Tampa, FL 33606.

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