Canada’s Griffin
Prize was created in 2000 to encourage excellence in poetry. It’s awarded to “first edition books of poetry written in, or translated
into, English and submitted from anywhere in the world.” Both an
international and Canadian prize is awarded each year – and it’s the
biggest monetary prize in the world for poetry – Canadian $65,000 for each
award, or about US $50,000 at current exchange rates.
This year, the
international prize was awarded to American Norman
Dubie for his The
Quotations of Bone, published in 2015, and the Canadian prize to Liz
Howell for her Infinite
Citizen of the Shaking Tent.
To Continue reading,
please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.
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