26th Annual Prizes – Winners Announced

26th Annual Arts & Letters Prizes Winners Announced. 

2025 Prizes Judges
Poetry: James Kimbrell
Creative Nonfiction: Anjali Enjeti
Fiction: Melissa Pritchard

Poetry, Creative Nonfiction, and Fiction Winners will appear on the Arts & Letters website in online Issue 49.

About the Prizes

For our prizes in fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction, we offer the winner a $1,000 prize and online publication. Our prizes are made possible through generous gifts to our prize endowments from Dr. Martin Lammon, Dr. Barry Darugar, Bahram and Fari Atefat, and other friends of Arts & Letters. If you are interested in contributing to our endowments, please contact us!

 

Unclassifiable Contest

Melissa Pritchard, judge of the fiction prize, on Daniel Hamilton’s “Searching for Bilohorivka”

 

A brilliant, unforgettable piece of fiction, “Searching for Bilohorivka,” explores the ambiguous intersection between modern technological warfare and an invisible global network of online computer civilians able to “view” and share details of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the Ukrainian resistance. We are introduced to the world of Open Source Intelligence or OSINT, by Stacey, a young, maritime insurance underwriter living in an American city named Springfield. Through her sophisticated computer skills, Stacey connects to a world of like-minded “tech-voyeurs,” or war “hobbyists,”  neither passive nor participating, but “something in between.” Like Stacy, they live secondary, obsessive online lives. Afforded the opportunity, they can decide whether or not to relay information they’ve gathered, potentially influencing small outcomes in the war. For Stacey, watching distant, violent deaths online becomes an exercise in ethical anesthesia – at what point might she go from passively viewing wartime atrocities to being a participant, acting from the safety of a computer screen in Springfield?
This is one of the best, most important stories about war and individual moral responsibility that I have ever read. “Searching for Bilohorivka” explores in precise, complex detail the morally numbing gray zone of modern technological warfare. The story’s perfect ending offers a humane grace note, a fragment of hope, both for Stacy and ourselves.

James Kimbrell, judge of the Rumi Prize for Poetry, on Will Dowd’s four poems, “Binge-worthy,” “The Senator’s Widow,” “Exit Interview,” and, “That One Childhood I Lived in a Haunted House”

 

These four poems are haunting and transporting, the voice intimate, intelligent, and the perceptions brimming with sensuality and depth. I found myself repeating lines (“the aroma of freshly mown grass at the cemetery”) without having tried to remember them. The competition was stiff, but these poems were simply remarkable for their originality in both conception and execution. This is a poet whose work I will eagerly follow.

Anjali Enjeti, judge of the Susan Afetat Prize for Creative Nonfiction, on Bea Chang’s “Requiem for a Bubble Tea”

 

In this astonishing accomplishment, “Requiem for a Bubble Tea,” the writer weaves a symphony of sounds and tastes into a searing saga about colonization, migration, ancestral history, and family, both in the homeland, Taiwan, and the diaspora. This essay satiates the mind, body, and soul. It is a triumphant treatise on the tongue, and how it forms, forgets, and rediscovers language, while longing for flavors from the past. “Requiem” exquisitely unspools how the commitment to connection and communication has the power to restore what has been lost. I’m immensely honored to select it to receive the Arts & Letters/Susan Atefat Prize for Creative Nonfiction.
The final issue of Arts & Letters will be published on the website Friday, May 9th

Arts & Letters Issue 49

The final issue of Arts & Letters, online Issue 49, will be entirely on the website, available to everyone, and released next Friday, May 9th. While this will be the last issue of Arts & Letters, the Georgia College MFA will be launching a new project and announcing more information on that shortly.

 

FINALISTS

26th Annual Arts & Letters Prize Finalists

Rumi Prize for Poetry: “Angel, Cop, G, Haiku” by Adam Bechtold, “How We Died Without Her Spoon” by Leila Farjami, “Strike” by Rebecca Foust, and “Patients I Cannot Forget” by Virginia LeBaron

Arts & Letters Prize for Fiction: “Evolved” by Trent Lewin

Susan Atefat Prize for Creative Nonfiction: “A Song for Our Lost Children” by Keya Mitra and “Secrets” by Sara Verstynen