Judge Stephanie M. Wytovich selected the winners of this year’s SFPA Poetry Contest. Prizes were offered in three divisions: Dwarf (≤10 lines), Short, and Long (50+ lines).
2024 Contest Judge: Stephanie M. Wytovich
Stephanie M. Wytovich is an American poet, novelist, and essayist. Her work has been showcased in numerous magazines and anthologies such as Weird Tales, Nightmare Magazine, Southwest Review, Year's Best Hardcore Horror: Volume 2, The Best Horror of the Year: Volume 8 & 15, as well as many others.
Wytovich is the Poetry Editor for Raw Dog Screaming Press, and an adjunct at Western Connecticut State University, Southern New Hampshire University, and Point Park University. She is a recipient of the Elizabeth Matchett Stover Memorial Award, the 2021 Ladies of Horror Fiction Writers Grant, and has received the Rocky Wood Memorial Scholarship for non-fiction writing.
Wytovich is a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, an active member of the Horror Writers Association, and a graduate of Seton Hill University’s MFA program for Writing Popular Fiction. Her Bram Stoker Award-winning poetry collection, Brothel, earned a home with Raw Dog Screaming Press alongside Hysteria: A Collection of Madness, Mourning Jewelry, An Exorcism of Angels, Sheet Music to My Acoustic Nightmare, and The Apocalyptic Mannequin. Her debut novel, The Eighth, is published with Dark Regions Press, and her nonfiction craft book for speculative poetry, Writing Poetry in the Dark, is available now from Raw Dog Screaming Press.
Her 2023 poetry collection, On the Subject of Blackberries, is out now.
Angela Yuriko Smith is a third-generation Ryukyuan-American, award-winning poet, author, and publisher with 20+ years in newspapers. Publisher of Space & Time magazine (est. 1966), two-time Bram Stoker Awards® Winner, and an HWA Mentor of the Year, she shares Authortunities, a free weekly calendar of author opportunities at authortunities.substack.com.
Contest chair Angela Yuriko Smith received 416 entries (148 dwarf-length, 202 short, and 66 long poems) from around the world.
Stephanie M Wytovich says:
This entire experience was a lot of fun, and I feel so inspired to write some science fiction here soon. Thank you for the opportunity!
I contemplate event horizons cold center of the galaxy my ship a foreign object slows to infinity time stretched, a moment compressing me unnoticed cosmic speck
Judge’s comments: I immediately fell in love with the opening line: "I contemplate event horizons." This idea of being obsessed and entranced by a black hole and following that allure with a meditation on the brief moment of our mortality was humbling and beautifully done. I also appreciated the poet's attention to line and how they played with form to show a dwindling effect with the disappearance of words, light...and life.
Colleen Anderson lives in Vancouver, BC and has a BFA in writing. Her works have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Aurora, Rhysling and Dwarf Stars Awards in poetry, and longlisted for the Stoker Award in fiction. She has edited three anthologies and guest edited Eye to the Telescope.She has served on both Stoker Award and British Fantasy Award juries, and received BC Arts Council and Canada Council grants for her writing. Her works have seen print in numerous venues, including Polu Texni, HWA Poetry Showcases, Shadow Atlas and Heroic Fantasy Quarterly. Her poetry collection I Dreamed a World is being published by LVP Publications..
Second Place, Dwarf Form
She Reveals Herself
by Tabor Skreslet
In space-time’s womanly curves all-consuming desire of singularities long gestations violent births of stars she paints the nursery with fire and darkness plucks a lullaby on quantum strings
Judge’s comments: I appreciated the contrast of violence and beauty in creation and how they showed motherhood can be monstrous but nurturing. My favorite lines were "long gestations/ violent births of stars/ she paints the nursery." This read as a piece detailing comfort and hope. It said that even though there may be pain, something beautiful can be on the other side. It's a reminder to keep going, even when it feels like we can't.
Tabor Skreslet is a physician, scientist, teacher, and writer. She grew up in Egypt and now lives in Charlottesville, Virginia. Her poetry has appeared in Cordella, Oracle, and Intima.
Third Place, Dwarf Form
Perpetual Care
by Christopher Ripley Newell
If two graveyards listen for each other across the lake and hear nothing they send gifts of apple blossoms, longer days, autumn rain, murders of crows when frost asks life to walk slower alongside death.
Judge’s comments: As I celebrate the Autumn solstice, this piece gives me everything I honor and find peace regarding the relationship between magic and death. The idea of graveyards listening and sending gifts to one another fills me with an otherworldly peace, and the way the poet handled seasonal imagery and solitude was wonderfully done.
Short Form
Winner, Short Form
i watch shelley duvall’s faerie tale theatre when i am afraid of what’s to come
by Kailey Tedesco
bustled in frog prince & love-tunnel eyeliner, a godmother glosses my mouth-cuts. her gold-leaf makes
my voice halo & it hennins over my fear of the neighbor who flips & folds his eyelids. i grow by repetition,
my body an imp supping its own happily. a homily is how ever-afters are a matter of hair & makeup. i’m 1/3 once-upon-a-time
on my father’s side. my mother warns me to never suffer accidentally. i can smell lolly-thickets in the viral video of
the star who repeats the word hello over 25 times. i can almost lick the cookie rooms, taste the taffy hatchet.
i have the same varicose veins as her acetate tiara. at confession, i am a spinner of sin.
the truth is i feel guilty having not been born in time for the evening program, or its reruns. i mimic a dress
rehearsal, pull the cord on the booth-curtain & let every hole of caning inspire a new episode.
Judge’s comments: The way nostalgia was used as armor against anxiety, all woven through the fantastical experience of watching a show, resonated deeply with me. From a craft standpoint, though, I appreciated the intense imagery, the lack of capitalization (to enforce whimsy and the resonance of childhood), and the diction was unique in a masterful way. My favorite lines are: "I'm 1/3 once upon a time/ on my father's side. my mother warns me to never suffer/accidently.
You caught me plugging my axe into the wall—escape is immanent, not permanent.
You, the brute, and me the double-misfit. all pinch & wallow in front; all paper- doll behind me.
I get moody with the radium weaponry. The staircase I slip down overlays the staircase your shoes thundered,
waking us rudely. We wallflower & charge the attic. I’m in love with four & twenty blackbirds
baked into another yesterday’s pie. You were alive when I ate it, dead by the time I was buried in the crust. I’m one
of the birds, eating the eating. You love a feast & I love its faux-feathers on me like static.
Take my clothes off. Take off my sinew & keep my veins intact for threading. In another life, I’m a rapture-
outfit left to fondle what’s left of the dirt. Six lives ago we’ll find each other nude & taken. Wait a little longer
& my lipstick will come coded in a color i’ve never predicted. I’ll use it to kiss the blade that kisses
your forehead once and for all.
Judge’s comments: Conceptually, this piece had a little bit of everything for me, and I adored that it was sold as a bodice ripper; including the format and price in the title was a nice touch, and one that made me feel like I was shopping for poetry at an intergalactic grocery store where I just so happened to stumble upon this while waiting in line. When I read the following lines, though, in the spirit of the tone of this piece, I swooned: "I’m in love with four/& twenty blackbirds/baked into another yesterday’s pie./You were alive when I ate it,/dead by the time I was buried/in the crust. I’m one/of the birds, eating/the eating. It's fairy tale, it's science fiction, it's erotica. It's a win.
Third Place, Short Form
Reading Arthur C. Clarke, Sipping Hot Cocoa
by Jonathan Pessant
I remember you crying at Christmas, unwrapping
Rendezvous with Rama in your Saturn V pajamas.
The paperback copy still smelled of grandfather’s cherry pipe tobacco,
each cloud warm in the infrared, heavy enough to turn tears to snow.
*
You write to me each night while you work dawn to dawn
on the James Webb Sunshield. Each word is like the ’98 snowstorm
we got found in. All hope like ’08. It’s night here in ’20. Good
she says, I’m looking forward; stars need total dark to be seen.
Judge’s comments: This piece is so strong in its sense of memory and human connection. I could smell the cherry pipe tobacco and hot cocoa while reading it. I can distinctly remember my first time reading Arthur C. Clarke, and that final line in the poem celebrates everything I love about science fiction: "stars need total dark to be seen."
Long Form
Winner, Long Form
A Maiden's Grimoire
by Fija Callaghan
Tᴏ ʙᴇᴄᴏᴍᴇ ʙᴇᴀᴜᴛɪғᴜʟ
At the first blush of sunrise, on the first light of Maye, gather dewdrops from the roses that greet the morning sun. (The better if these roses be grown and tended by your hands.) Then you may baythe your face, throat, rosebud lips, eyes that yet have seen no hardship. And for a full turn of the year you will glow with the radiance of stars.
Tᴏ sᴇᴇ ᴀ ғᴜᴛᴜʀᴇ ʟᴏᴠᴇʀ On the eve of Midsummers, when the sun dips away into those rocky highlands of the night, one may gather rose hips and rowan berries, Saint John’s flower, bind them with scarlet thread and linen stained in maiden blood. Seal this parcel with a kiss, seal it with words of longing to call forth dreams of passion on this Midsummers’ night.
Tᴏ ᴅɪssᴜᴀᴅᴇ ᴀ ʀᴏᴍᴀɴᴛɪᴄ ʀɪᴠᴀʟ Contrive to catch a pocketful of linen, silk, or lace that adorns the milken shape who haunts his dreams at night. Soak this swatch in sea-brine for a full turn of the moon (this to cool and cure those insolent desires). And, should the ocean’s chill summon some small maladie into her skin and bones, or the sea salt strip away the softness of her skin, know these be the perils of the maelstrom of love.
Tᴏ ɪɴᴄɪᴛᴇ ᴅᴇsɪʀᴇ ɪɴ ᴀɴᴏᴛʜᴇʀ To catch his eye, one need only carry Maye blooms in one’s purse and wear a thread of scarlet silk woven in one’s hair. To catch his lips, lay down thorns within the crevice of his steps, and until sunrise all his paths will lead only to you. To catch his heart is a different sort of game; for this you’ll need to offer a fresh heart in return. Into this go nine small pins. Let its blood mingle with your own; understand that love is sacrifice.
Tᴏ ᴅɪsᴘᴇʟ ᴍᴀʟɪᴄɪᴏᴜs ɢᴏssɪᴘ At times, when one’s contentment glows brighter than the moonlight glows, whispers may follow; mistruths, accusations. To quiet these defoulments, take something that they have shed: hair, teeth, blood upon a snuffrag; wrap in candle wax and shape into a woman, or a man. Bind its eyes with ribbon black so that they may no longer see what does not concern them. Bind its mouth in silence.
Tᴏ ᴄᴀsᴛ ᴀɴ ᴜɴᴡᴀɴᴛᴇᴅ ʙᴀʙᴇ ғʀᴏᴍ ᴛʜᴇ ᴡᴏᴍʙ To dismiss an uninvited guest given root by your desire, drink a tea of pennyroyal, nettle leaf and bramble fruit brewed atop a midnight flame. Sit unclothed beneath the moon. Let its light caress the body you so freely gave. Take those pins stained rust in heartblood, bury them within the earth, where, in the end, all things must return.
Tᴏ ᴘᴜɴɪsʜ ᴀ ʟᴏᴠᴇʀ ᴡʜᴏ ʜᴀs sᴛʀᴀʏᴇᴅ If you find his love should wane as the fullness of your belly wanes, and his eyes turn to flowers yet unravaged by the storms of life, take thorns from the blackthorn tree, mandrake’s root and spiders’ legs, soil from a crossroads where an honest man was hanged; grind them to a powder which he may drink, unknowing, for seven days and seven nights. From the seventh slumber he will not wake, he will not stir, but spend his years in stillness and dream only of you.
Tᴏ ᴇɴsᴜʀᴇ sᴀғᴇᴛʏ ᴡʜɪʟsᴛ ᴛʀᴀᴠᴇʟʟɪɴɢ A time may come, my darling, when poppets and silk ribbons will no longer be enough to staunch the tide of fear, when they come for you with rope and iron and flame. Take to the deer roads, the rabbit roads, the serpent roads, through fen and brae and brier. Shed the clothes they gave you, and the name. Wrap your arms in willow, carry bloodstone in your purse. Walk the streams and rivers ’till the current brings you home.
Tᴏ ᴘʀᴏᴛᴇᴄᴛ ᴏɴᴇ’s ʜᴏᴍᴇ ғʀᴏᴍ ᴇɴᴇᴍɪᴇs Whatever shape your haven be: a tower filled with mirrors, or a cottage in the wild wood scented with gingerbread and spun-sugar glass; keep it safe from prying eyes. Hang holly in the doorway, yarrow in the window eaves. Spread hearth-ash in the entrance. Beset the path with nails to betide those who would harm. Befriend the wolves that wander, and the crows. Rest. Heal.
Tᴏ ᴍᴇɴᴅ ᴀ ʙʀᴏᴋᴇɴ ʜᴇᴀʀᴛ In the solace of the darkness, light a fire of alder wood; for, like lovers, tarnished mothers, alders understand what it is to bleed. Listen to the wolves’ song, drink the sweet scent of the wood. Scribe your story on a sheet of paper, parchment, wax. Then, consign it to the flame. It will not burn your pain away, but it might make you feel better for a while. Think not of the love you held and lost, nor the babe you cast away, nor the maiden you once were. Leave that road behind. There is so much world to explore.
Judge’s comments: This piece transported me to a small cottage in the woods, where I found a spell book deep beneath a creaky floorboard. I loved how the poet formatted the poem to resemble a grimoire while continuing to weave a narrative about love, loss, and betrayal. This was positively enchanting, and their dedication to imagery played a significant role in that, as did their knowledge of occult botany.
Second Place, Long Form
Stasis in Hyperdrive
by Clarabelle Miray Fields
she is dreaming again lost in the lifeblood of a cold cryochamber’s womb dreaming of a world she knew long ago, where roads curving in darkness could actually lead her home
she passes the light-years in silence stars breaking down, slowly born anew
and in their muted reflections are the beckoning of old city lights, promises held in the neon of forgotten skylines
familiar names flashing across her neural pathways like fire like moths trapped in the heart of artificial flame
memories she chases through now-endless night remembering a time when her smaller self would gaze up at the bellies of stars breathing air into her own naked lungs and she would dream
dream of running beyond the dark dream of worlds she had yet to name the light-years long and cold and deep
but here she knows no names there are only unfamiliar asterisms and a blackness beyond all dark
blind and deaf she does not even breathe her hardwired umbilicus feeding fluid into a dormant heart dry tongue undulating with the echoes of atrophying speech
she is dead but still she dreams
dreams of earth her mother’s heat a womb lulling her into welcome sleep rocking her warmly in beating tides
Judge’s comments: This piece was so profoundly sad. I kept thinking of the times when, as a child, I'd look up at the sky and have these big, existential discussions with myself about space. There's something nostalgic here, and I think it exists in the moments when we first start to contemplate our mortality and recognize how fragile we are as humans. The poet writes: "she is dead/but she still dreams." That line is everything I love about looking at the stars.
Clarabelle Miray Fields is a writer, editor, and web developer native to Boulder, Colorado. She currently holds over 100 publications, with her work having recently appeared in the 2021 Rhysling Anthology, Corvid Queen, Circe's Cauldron, and elsewhere. She earned a BA in classical languages in 2018, summa cum laude, and studied abroad in the U.K. as a Fulbright Summer Institute participant. When not writing or coding, she enjoys exploring the great outdoors and getting lost under starry skies. You can find her online at clarabellefields.com.
Third Place, Long Form
Panopticon
by F. J. Bergmann
They were burning something— or someone—in the exercise yard again. Pink light glowed through the metaquartz walls, and flames licked the sky above them as if it were a divine nourishment, and clouds the immaculate breasts of angels.
Structures had been sterilized for tens of kilometers beyond a spiked perimeter. Supplies were transferred in via heavy drones; inmates dropped, not always safely, from helicopters; guards bred to serve on the premises, mined with implants.
Rumors of revolution swept through like a voiceless wind whenever flashes lit the horizon or buzzing filled the tainted air, and those remaining humans saw new oozing weals form on their skins, plastic manacles rotting to dust.
Foodpaste deliveries for men and beasts alike began to arrive pre-spoiled; security cameras recorded random executions, guns firing bursts of brilliance from the central observatory maybe meant only as spotlights. Skeletons burnt black.
The prison chaplains began to proselytize more aggressively, menacing any prisoners who failed to conceal their skepticism, telling them their end was near, pointing to the spiraling starfield, urging them to repent before it was too late.
It was always too late. No one could give those wretched beings back their wasted lives or repair the past. Even the dreaded priests of the Time Goddess said no man would be given a second chance. They spoke of eternal atonement, but we did our best to dare to hope for a different future.
We—prisoners together—agreed between us to rename every evil in our lives as if it were something wonderful and good; the central tower became fairycastle, glowing walls now lightglass, the hideous slop they fed us spicecake. Then we began telling stories to which even the guards listened.
Judge’s comments: A couple of years ago, I visited the Eastern State Penitentiary, which was built in the panopticon style. This idea of weaponized architecture, coupled with a violent dystopian world, is a terrifying image. I appreciated how the poet discussed the physical and psychological torture happening within this setting and thought the disassociation ending that brought in dreams of beauty was a clever transitory act/image to end on.
F.J. Bergmann is the poetry editor of Mobius: The Journal of Social Change, past editor of Star*Line, managing editor of MadHat Press, poetry editor for Weird House Press, and freelances as a copy editor and book designer. She lives in Wisconsin with a husband, intermittent daughters, cats and a horse, and imagines tragedies on or near exoplanets.
Her writing awards include SFPA Rhysling Awards for both long and short poems and SFPA Elgin Awards for two chapbooks: Out of the Black Forest (Centennial Press, 2012), a collection of conflated fairy tales, and A Catalogue of the Further Suns, first-contact reports from interstellar expeditions, winner of the 2017 Gold Line Press manuscript competition. She was a Writers of the Future winner. Venues where her poems have appeared include Abyss & Apex, Analog, Asimov’s SF, and elsewhere in the alphabet. She has competed at National Poetry Slam with the Madison Urban Spoken Word slam team. While lacking academic literary qualifications, she is kind to those so encumbered. She thinks imagination can compensate for anything.
Honorable Mentions
Dwarf Form
Desert Skies Motor Hotel by Mark C Childs
Haiku 6 by Tom Rogers
dragon child by Felicia Martínez
Short Form
Last Minute of Reentry, by Brian Richards
Wine tasting on the planet Ufahamu*, by Miguel O. Mitchell
when i die, by Corey Niles
Long Form
The Moons of TOI-1231 b, by Deborah L. Davitt
The Hologram La Divina Considers What It Is to Be a Monument on the Moon, by T.D. Walker
Dust Storm Montage (International Women’s Bioresearch Outpost, Gorgonum Chaos, Mars), by Kate Boyes