
Kunitz Medal Call for Nominations
Know someone who’s passionate about poetry and is regularly working towards bringing access to the city? Nominate your favorite poetry activist! See below for details!
Stanley Kunitz Medal Award

On behalf of the Stanley Kunitz bequest to the Worcester County Poetry Association, the Medal committee is pleased to announce the opening of nominations for the 2023 Stanley Kunitz Medal, the ninth to be awarded since 2015.
The medal is presented annually to a person with a strong Worcester County (Massachusetts) connection who best exemplifies Stanley Kunitz’s lifelong commitment to poetry and poets. The award recognizes an individual’s total commitment to poetry as Kunitz lived it: teaching poetry, mentoring poets, speaking poetry, publishing poetry, and supporting organizations which nurture poetry.
Letters of nomination should provide detailed support explaining how the nominee nurtured poetry as defined above. Because the yearly award is singular and cannot honor all worthy applicants, past nominations may be reactivated for 2023 once nominators notify the committee chair to keep the nomination active.
Nominations should be mailed to The Stanley Kunitz Medal, c/o Worcester County Poetry Association, P.O. Box 804, Worcester, MA 01613 between December 1, 2022 and March 31, 2023. The award announcement will be made in the late spring of 2023, followed by a ceremony coinciding with Kunitz’s birthday the last week of July at the Worcester Historical Museum. Please visit www.worcestercountypoetry.org Programs/Stanley Kunitz Medal for more details.
The 2023 Stanley Kunitz Medal committee wishes to recognize and thank the following volunteers who have served to bestow this honor in the past: Rodger Martin, chair (2013-2021), Kent Ljungquist (2017-2021), Karen Sharpe (2019-2021), Robert Steele (2015-2016), and E. Robert Cronin (2015-2018).
Congratulations to Oliver de la Paz, Worcester’s New Poet Laureate!

[Photo credit: Meredith Pugh]
City manager Batista announced the results of this year’s search for a poet laureate. The winner is Oliver de la Paz.
Oliver de la Paz is the Poet Laureate of Worcester, MA for 2023-2025. He is the author and editor of seven books: Names Above Houses, Furious Lullaby, Requiem for the Orchard, Post Subject: A Fable, and The Boy in the Labyrinth, a finalist for the Massachusetts Book Award in Poetry. His newest work, The Diaspora Sonnets, is forthcoming from Liveright Press in 2023. With Stacey Lynn Brown he co-edited A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry. Oliver serves as the co-chair of the Kundiman advisory board. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Poetry,
American Poetry Review, and elsewhere. He has received grants from the NEA, NYFA, the Artist’s Trust, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and has been awarded multiple Pushcart Prizes. He teaches at the College of the Holy Cross and in the Low-Residency MFA Program at PLU.
Here is a write up done by Worcester Magazine about de la Paz, as well as a link to some of his poems.
Announcing the Frank O’Hara Prize Contest Launch
WCPA’s annual contest the Frank O’Hara Prize will open on January 1st 2023. Please head over to our [Contest Page] to read about rules and regulations.
A Tale of Two Cities: Second Anthology Published
A Tale of Two Cities: Worcester, MA & Worcester, England just published their second anthology of call and response poems between the two cities. You can find the paperback on Amazon.

Poet Town at Worcester Magazine is back!
Submit your poems to Poet Town, Worcester Magazine’s new and continued space for poetry. To submit, email Margaret Smith at msmith@wickedlocal.com with ‘Poet Town’ in the subject line.

Guidelines
- 30 lines or fewer per poem
- no irregular formatting (flush left only, please)
- include a short bio, one or two sentences; if you like you can include a website/social media
- diverse topics/themes welcome, but please, no vulgar language, hate, violence, etc.
- at this time, publication is print-only, due to online formatting limitations. But please only send poems for which you currently have rights
- one-time rights; rights go back to you, but if published elsewhere, please acknowledge appearance in Worcester Magazine
- feel free to send up to five poems; if we accept multiple poems, they’ll roll out with an eye toward a robust rotation of different poets and voices
- we aim to respond about acceptance as quickly as possible, to let you know which poems we’ll use.
Black Women Poets Respond to the Brown Family Archive
Wonderful Worcester Black History Project & Antiquarian Society event
Join us as Worcester poets share their responses inspired by material from the Brown Family Collections, one of the earliest and largest intact nineteenth-century Black family’s libraries in America. The collections center around William and Martha Ann Brown, who were married in Worcester in 1850, and their son, Charles F. Brown. William Brown’s ancestors, the Moore family, and their descendants, the Goldsberry family, created and maintained an archive over several generations and have entrusted it to the American Antiquarian Society to be made available to aid the work of researchers, community members, artists, and poets for generations to come.
During this hybrid event, poets Ashley Wonder, Catherine Reed, and Xaulanda Thorpe will discuss their experience working with AAS archive material and items in the Brown Family Collections from which they drew inspiration. Both in-person and virtual attendees of this program will have the opportunity to view items used by the poets in addition to other material included in the collections such as books, family papers and correspondence, portraits, and photographs.
This hybrid program will be held in person at Antiquarian Hall and livestreamed to a virtual audience on Zoom. Closed captioning will be available for virtual attendees. Doors open at 6:30pm.
Deborah Hall is CEO of YWCA Central MA. She is also the founder of Worcester Black History Project and a member of the Advisory Committee for the Worcester Cultural Plan. Hall has over 30 years of experience working with survivors of domestic violence and addressing the intersection of race, gender, and community violence. She is a social justice advocate, an art lover, and has served in leadership positions for several programs throughout MA, RI, and MO addressing issues of homelessness, violence, and substance abuse.
Kimberly Toney is the Coordinating Curator for Native American and Indigenous Collections at Brown University Library. During her tenure at AAS as Head of Readers’ Services and Director of Indigenous Initiatives, Kimberly worked with the Brown Family Collection. She created a video for the Worcester Black History Project on William Brown and authored an article for Past Is Present on Martha Ann Brown.
Ashely Wonder has been writing and performing Spoken Word for over a decade with dynamic passion all over Massachusetts. She teaches workshops to various age groups hoping to inspire audiences around her to know that healing and liberation is possible.
Rev. Dr. Catherine H. Reed is the author of four books of poetry. Crossing Boundaries, Between Midnight and Dawn, Sankofa, and Fire Goes Out Without Wood. She was the former Associate Pastor of John Street Baptist Church and a retired Chaplain of The College of The Holy Cross.
Xaulanda Thorpe is a spoken word poet from Worcester, Massachusetts. She graduated from Boston University with a degree in biological anthropology in January 2020. During her time at BU, when she was not examining primate samples, she wrote short stories for Charcoal Magazine, a student-led publication. In 2021, Xaulanda’s poem was chosen for the African Burial Ground National Monument’s Still I Rise tribute to Maya Angelou.
WCPA office book and furniture giveaway

After five years at the Sprinkler Factory, the WCPA has moved its offices. We’ll share more about our new office space in the next newsletter; however, today, we are looking for help from our members and lovers of poetry to exit our old office.
We’re not asking you to help us move; everything we could take is already at its new home. No, we’ve been blessed with an abundance of books and furniture we don’t have room for as we downsize. We’d love for it to become part of your poetry library or collection.
Come to the old WCPA office at the Sprinkler Factory (38 Harlow Street, Worcester) on Saturday, 11/12/2022, and Saturday, 11/19/2022, for a “yard sale.” The doors will be open from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm on both days. Take some of our furniture to a new home, pick up a book or five for your winter reading, or just come to say “hello.”
We have a PDF inventory of what was available as of this past Sunday at this link. Have a question? Email wcpaboard@yahoo.com, and we’ll do our best to answer it.
The Worcester Review, Volume 43, is coming soon!
Volume 43 of The Worcester Review, the print journal of the Worcester County Poetry Association, includes poems by the winners and judge of the WCPA’s Frank O’Hara Contest and the winner of the college poetry contest Elizabeth Bishop Manuscript Prize; the second part of the feature “Artists in the Archive: Celebrating Twenty-five Years of Creative and Performing Artists and Writers Fellowships at the American Antiquarian Society,” edited by Kevin Wisniewski; and poetry and fiction by writers including Emma Bolden, JD Debris, Hannah Feustle, Eloise Klein Healey, Jose Hernandez Diaz, Rita Mookerjee, Gathondu Mwangi, and Lucy Zhang. Volume 43’s cover art is by Worcester artist Parker Milgram.
About the Cover Artist
Parker Milgram is a fine artist, author, and illustrator based in Massachusetts. Their art has been showcased in several exhibitions and was recently featured in Worcester Magazine. Parker loves to create original characters and is currently developing several picture books on themes of mental illness, grief, friendship, and neurodiversity. Find more of their work online at parkermilgram.com and @parkermilgram on Instagram.

Clark University Poetry Reading: Poets and Writers Reading Series

