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Monday, March 18, 2024
Congratulations, Alicia Rebecca Myers, 2024 Birdy Poetry Prize Winner!
We are overjoyed to announce the winner of the
Friday, December 31, 2021
2021 Recap!
We made it!
What a year, folks. We are thankful for your readership and support today and every day of the year. This year, Meadowlark published 13 very different books, debuted 105 Meadowlark Reader, and kicked off Meadowlark Poetry Press. Wow! All thanks to you, readers and writers alike, we get to keep going.
We are proud to look back on the year, with publications and awards that only show the tip of the iceberg of what it means to be a part of the Meadowlark family. Here are some of the major highlights:
- Publications
Ava: A Year of adventure in the life of an American Avocet by Mandy Kern
Echoes in the Hallways by James Kenyon
A Cat Named Fatima by James Kenyon (official release: January 2022)
- Awards
- Selected Poems: 2000-2020 by JC Mehta - Best Book Award Urban Poetry
- The Big Quiet by Lisa Stewart - "It Looks Like a Million" Design Award, Kansas Authors Club
- The Big Quiet by Lisa Stewart - Thorpe Menn Literary Excellence Award, Kansas City AAUW
- The Big Quiet by Lisa Stewart - High Plains Book Award Finalist
- Opulence, Kansas by Julie Stielstra - High Plains Book Award Winner, YA category
- Opulence, Kansas by Julie Stielstra - Midwest Book Awards Winner, YA Fiction Category
- Selected Poems: 2000-2020 by JC Mehta - Human Relations Indie Book Awards Honorable Mention Winner (Personal Challenge Poetry)
- All Hallows’ Shadows by Michael D. Graves - Kansas Notable Book Award
- All Hallows' Shadows by Michael D. Graves - Midwest Book Awards Finalist, Mystery Category
- A Time for Tears by Jerilynn Jones Henrikson - Midwest Book Awards Finalist, YA Fiction Category
Monday, November 22, 2021
THE 18TH ANNUAL BEST BOOK AWARDS ANNOUNCE 2021 AWARD RECIPIENTS
Mainstream & Independent Titles Score Top Honors HarperCollins, Penguin Random House, John Wiley and Sons, Rowman & Littlefield, Revell/Baker Publishing, Macmillan Publishers, Routledge/Taylor and Francis, Sounds True, HCI Press, New World Library, Lake Union Publishing, She Writes Press, American Psychological Association, NYU Press, Oxford University Press, John Hopkins University Press and hundreds of Independent Houses contribute to this year’s Outstanding Competition! |
LOS ANGELES – American Book Fest has announced the winners and finalists of The 2021 Best Book Awards on November 16, 2021. Over 400 winners and finalists were announced in over 90 categories. Awards were presented for titles published in 2019-2021. Jeffrey Keen, President and CEO of American Book Fest said this year’s contest yielded over 2,000 entries from mainstream and independent publishers, which were then narrowed down to over 400 winners and finalists. Keen says of the awards, now in their 19th year, “The 2021 results represent a phenomenal mix of books from a wide array of publishers throughout the United States. Our success begins with the enthusiastic participation of authors and publishers and continues with our distinguished panel of industry judges who bring to the table their extensive editorial, PR, marketing, and design expertise." Winners and finalists traversed the publishing landscape: HarperCollins, Penguin Random House, John Wiley and Sons, Rowman & Littlefield, Revell/Baker Publishing, Macmillan Publishers, Routledge/Taylor and Francis, Sounds True, HCI Press, New World Library, Lake Union Publishing, She Writes Press, American Psychological Association, NYU Press, Oxford University Press, John Hopkins University Press and hundreds of Independent Houses contribute to this year’s outstanding competition! American Book Fest is an online publication providing coverage for books from mainstream and independent publishers to the world online community. American Book Fest has an active social media presence with over 133,000 current Facebook fans. Poetry: Urban Selected Poems: 2000-2020 by JC Mehta, curated & edited by Brenna Crotty Meadowlark Books See full results here. |
Thursday, November 4, 2021
Knowing Is a Branching Trail: Launch Event Recording, Excerpt, Birdy Reminder
The winner of the contest will receive $1,000 cash and publication by Meadowlark Books, including 50 copies of the completed book. All entries will be considered for standard Meadowlark Books publishing contract offers, as well. Meadowlark welcomes entries from across the U.S.
Full-length poetry manuscripts (55 page minimum, 90+ pages preferred) will be considered. Poems may be previously published in journals and/or anthologies, but not in full-length, single-author volumes. Poets are eligible to enter, regardless of publishing history. Previous winners are NOT eligible to enter.
Previous winners and finalists include:
- A Certain Kind of Forgiveness by Carol Kapaun Ratchenski (winner 2019)
- Valentine by Ruth Maus (finalist 2019)
- Selected Poems: 2000-2020 by JC Mehta (winner 2020)
- Kansas Poems by Brian Daldorph (finalist 2020)
- Knowing Is a Branching Trail by Alison Hicks (winner 2021)
- Lilac & Sawdust by Kenneth Pobo (finalist 2021)
Submission Deadline: Dec. 1
Submission Fee: $25
Thursday, May 6, 2021
Meadowlark poet, JC Mehta, takes home 27 award wins!
Congratulations to Meadowlark Poet Jessica Mehta (2020 Birdy winner) on their recent award wins at the Human Relations Indie Book Awards!

All of these books can be ordered at Jessica's website: thischerokeerose.com. There, you'll also find Jessica's upcoming events, a documentary about their life, audio and video recordings of Jessica reading, and more!
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
THANK YOU! Birdy Poetry Prize announcement & event highlights
The Birdy Poetry Prize Readings & Announcement Event was a BLAST! We heard from each of our Birdy poets, JC Mehta (Selected Poems 2000-2020), Brian Daldorph (Kansas Poems), Carol Kapaun Ratchenski (A Certain Kind of Forgiveness), and Ruth Maus (Valentine), as well as our 2021 winner (see below), Poet Laureate of Kansas Huascar Medina, Publisher Tracy Million Simmons, Publicist Linzi Garcia, and many friends and family members from across the nation (and perhaps even the seas)!
Meadowlark Publisher Tracy Million Simmons announced the semi-finalists and finalists for the 2021 Birdy Poetry Prize.
Friday, March 12, 2021
TOMORROW! Hear from your Birdy poets!
Tomorrow is the event we've all been waiting for! Starting at 6 p.m., hear from each of the previous winners and finalists of the Birdy Poetry Prize, including JC Mehta (Selected Poems 2000-2020), Brian Daldorph (Kansas Poems), Carol Kapaun Ratchenski (A Certain Kind of Forgiveness), and Ruth Maus (Valentine), and be there for the announcement of the 2021 Birdy winner and finalists! Grab a glass of champagne, some popcorn, get comfy on the couch, and indulge in all the excitement of tomorrow's event. Remember, if you haven't yet registered, please do so at tinyurl.com/birdypoetryprize.
To cap off our Birdy video series, today, you have Carol Kapaun Ratchenski, author of A Certain Kind of Forgiveness reading from Valentine by Ruth Maus!
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
This Saturday! Birdy Poetry Prize Event -- Check out excerpts from Birdy poets
In recognition of the virtual Birdy Poetry Prize event, 6 p.m. on March 13, each of the previous winners and finalists will be reading and discussing one of their fellow Birdy poet's poems in these special videos. Today, you have Ruth Maus, author of Valentine, reading from A Certain Kind of Forgiveness by Carol Kapaun Ratchenski.
Saturday, March 6, 2021
ONE WEEK until the Birdy Poetry Prize Event!
In recognition of the virtual Birdy Poetry Prize event, 6 p.m. on March 13, each of the previous winners and finalists will be reading and discussing one of their fellow Birdy poet's poems in these special videos. Today, you have JC Mehta (Selected Poems) reading from Kansas Poems by Brian Daldorph.
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Excerpt: Selected Poems by JC Mehta
Friday, February 26, 2021
PRESENTING: THE BIRDY POETRY PRIZE EVENT
6 p.m. (CST) | March 13 | via Zoom
Please join us in celebrating the 2019, 2020, and 2021 winners and finalists of the Birdy Poetry Prize! Our illustrious Birdy authors you are familiar with--Carol Kapaun Ratchenski (A Certain Kind of Forgiveness), Ruth Maus (Valentine), JC Mehta (Selected Poems 2000-2020), and Brian Daldorph (Kansas Poems)--will each be reading pieces from their books.
To top it off, the 2021 Birdy winner and finalist will be announced for the first time ever, live, by a secret, beloved guest judge!
Register for the event at tinyurl.com/birdypoetryprize.
More Birdy Event Details
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Excerpt: Selected Poems: 2000-2020, by JC Mehta
We now have copies of our 2020 Birdy Poetry Prize-winning books available in the Meadowlark Bookstore (and wherever you buy books)! Enjoy these poems from the book.
You are invited to our virtual reading event with JC and other Birdy authors on March 13, 2021, 6:00 pm. The winner of the 2021 Birdy Poetry Prize will be announced at this event.
“This Selected group of poems illuminates some harsh realities regarding identity. There are poems that smack a consciousness sideways. The poems have a real grit to them. For the reader, each poem will be an eye-opening experience.”
-Poet/Professor Stanley E. Banks, Blue Beat Syncopation (Bookmark Press)
“With sharp and incisive language, each piece provides an immersive moment, inviting the reader into the experience of growing up half Cherokee, of self-harm and losing friends, of teaching and aging and loving and living in the Pacific Northwest. Nothing is veiled, nothing is alluded to, and their humor is ever-present, wry and witty. Any writer who begins a poem with My psychologist says (don’t you love when poets start like this?) has levels of self-awareness and genre savvy that speak to years of dedication to identity and craft.”
-Brenna Crotty, Editor, Selected Poems
JC Mehta is an interdisciplinary artist, poet, author of several books, and citizen of the Cherokee Nation. Much of their work is informed by space, place, and ancestry. Mehta has served as the Editor in Chief of Crab Creek Review and has been awarded a number of art and research fellowships, including a First Peoples Fund fellowship and Eccles Centre Visiting fellowship at the British Library. Poetry-in-residency posts have taken Mehta to Crazy Horse Memorial, the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust in Britain, and Halcyon Arts Lab in Washington DC. Book awards include gold at the IPPY Awards, Book Excellence Awards, and Reader Views Literary Awards.
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Introducing Selected Poems, by JC Mehta -- Winner of the 2020 Birdy Poetry Prize
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Selected Poems: 2000-2020 JC Mehta, winner of the 2020 Birdy Poetry Prize ISBN: 978-1-7342477-5-6 Coming February 2021 |
The morning I turned thirty-five,
I asked the women orbiting my life
to meet me in the forest at dawn. It meant
getting up at four-thirty, being the first
car on the glittering asphalt, boyfriends
and lovers who wouldn’t understand. Slipping
out before toddlers unclenched
their dream fists. Which of you would come
after all these years? It was stupid,
it was childish, all Prove that you cares
and Show me you love mes. I know that,
but I wanted, I needed, I was desperate
to see who would be there
before the birds, in the hours when rabbits
felt safe over human footprints. And it was nobody
I would have imagined, the quietest of sisters
who came, walked beside me, shot
fast as homemade bottle rockets
through the darkest morning hours.
Selected Poems: 2000-2020
©2020 JC Mehta
Ingredients of Love
If food is love, what does it mean
for those who starve ourselves? Eat this,
says Maa, gajar halwa she shredded
all morning till her fingers burned orange.
I’m full, I say, pushing
her love off my plate, feeding
her sacrifice to the bin, to the birds,
to the raccoons that forage
at dusk. Taste this, you tell me,
fingers pinching palak paneer
gone limp. I’m fasting, I tell you,
scooting the bowl of our vows
back into your space. Over and over,
year following year, the love
is ladled and forked, plated
and whisked again and again
toward my clamped-shut mouth.
Maybe tomorrow, I keep saying,
the words by now stale
and crumbling out, an explosion
of yesterday’s confections.
Selected Poems: 2000-2020
©2020 JC Mehta
When to Stay
They say I don’t know when to leave. I say
they don’t know
when to stay. What good comes
after the bars shut down, past the window
of these shoes could go all night? Knowing
when to stay is what brought me to you.
Knowing how to stay shot us
through the affairs, the culture battles, the year
I ran away to another land with another man
and yet you played stowaway
in my organs. When you know
when to stay, how to close down
the party and watch the lights come on,
you see everything. The way the floors
are caked in syrup and the booths
are worn to threads. How the dancers
wear their stretch marks and the barbacks’
fingernails are chewed. We stayed through
the last song, the final bathroom checks,
when the last dish was scraped of tots
and plopped into the machine—through the ugly
and into the empty morning streets
where New and Hope trudge soft
and amble on bare feet into the next.
Selected Poems: 2000-2020
©2020 JC Mehta
Thursday, November 26, 2020
What's your stack look like? A Thanksgiving letter from our publicist
Dear readers:
I wish you all a truly lovely Thanksgiving. We all know it's a weird holiday season, so please keep doing your part to spread love and compassion.
Hopefully, you will have some downtime today. When I have downtime, on Thanksgiving especially, all I want to do is crawl into bed and read, how 'bout you?
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
From the Publisher’s Desk: Virtual Presentations and Books you can Hold in your Hands
How many months of social distancing does it take for this publisher to get onboard with online events? Six. Or six and half, depending on what you consider day one. Shortly after my last note, I got to do an interview with Ande Bozarth of Kansas AARP. It was a whole lot of fun. Left me wanting to do more, and boy oh boy did I get the chance.
As a member of the team that helped bring the annual Kansas Authors Club convention online, I got in some Zoom training and practice and became—more or less—a convert! We are so fortunate to live in times when we have the technology for great substitutes to in-person gatherings.
In fact, our publicist, Linzi Garcia, organized a fantastic virtual book launch, our first, for Arlice Davenport and his new book of poetry, Setting theWaves on Fire. And then three Meadowlark authors and I got right to work on a presentation for the Kansas Library Association, which was also moved online this year.
We
also launched/are in the process of launching our second YA book, A
Time for Tears, by Jerilynn Jones Henrikson. It’s a title that is proving
popular with all ages.
Kansas Library Association - Tracy Million Simmons, Julie Stielstra, Jerilynn Henrikson, and Michael D. Graves Presentation
Much
love and good reading.
Tracy
Million Simmons
Meadowlark
Press
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Birdy contest has us feeling good, how about you? -- JC Mehta Selected Poems Introduction
The 2021 Birdy Poetry Prize contest is underway! We are thrilled to see submissions rolling in and encourage you to keep them coming.
Our 2020 Birdy winner is JC Mehta, who kindly shared Selected Poems: 2000-2020 with Meadowlark --the manuscript chosen by judge Stanley E. Banks. To get you as excited as we are about Birdy, we would like to share with you the introduction to Mehta's book, written by curator and editor of the collection, Brenna Crotty.
***
"JC Mehta will tell you exactly who she is.
"In 2018, while working on a collaboration between CALYX Journal and Cordella Magazine, I was lucky enough to get to reprint one of Mehta’s poems, “Recipe for an Indian.” The very first line demanded How much Indian are you? and in the same line retorted All of it. The poem itself—short and vivid—braided together an identity built on hunger, desirability, trauma, family, and yearning. I knew absolutely nothing about JC Mehta as a person, but I suddenly felt like I had a very clear window into who she was in only nine lines.
"So when Mehta reached out and asked me to curate this collection from twenty years of her work, I had to say yes. Her poetry invited me into experiences both similar and wildly different from my own with humor and a complete lack of self-consciousness. With sharp and incisive language, each piece provides an immersive moment, inviting the reader into the experience of growing up half Cherokee, of self-harm and losing friends, of teaching and aging and loving and living in the Pacific Northwest. Nothing is veiled, nothing is alluded to, and her humor is ever-present, wry and witty. Any writer who begins a poem with My psychologist says (don’t you love when poets start like this?) has levels of self-awareness and genre savvy that speak to years of dedication to identity and craft.
"I have a great admiration for Mehta’s style of poetry because I have always had a soft spot for writing that is unafraid. Occasionally brash and belligerent, occasionally tired and defeated, every poem is refreshingly honest in its self-reflection, each one adjusting a new shard of identity, large or small, to provide a glimpse at a deep and complex life. Mehta’s focus is most often on the self: one’s body, bloodline, trauma, relationships, and place in the community. In “Place Settings,” the very second poem in this collection, she tells the reader: All my family’s dead so nobody’s / left that knows there’s an Indian / girl with a sick head / who grew up poor and sometimes / likes to fuck women gone / and snuck into this little fĂȘte. There really isn’t time for florid metaphor when laying bare the self—these poems are written with a knife, not a quill.
"When I received three hundred of Mehta’s poems and was tasked with selecting a third of them for this book, they were sent to me in alphabetical order. Considering many of them are deeply personal and confessional poems, I found it to be a strange and immersive way to construct an image of a life and its histories, one where childhood experiences were fresh and pertinent at any moment in time, where there was no real beginning or end to an eating disorder. In choosing the order of this collection, I tried to preserve that non-linear feeling. I didn’t want to construct tidy trajectories that followed poems from childhood to adulthood, from suicide attempts to recovery, mostly because Mehta’s own poetry largely dismisses such neat lines and parameters. In her poem “Recovery,” she asks, Recover is a funny word, like / what’s buried that needs covering / again? The self is a fractured and complex subject throughout the book, and my hope is that a nonlinear collection such as this preserves the fraught and capricious relationships that we all have to our own changing and evolving identities.
"Instead of a timeline, I focused on the twin centers of Mehta’s work, the I and the you. Her depiction of herself is clear and consistent, told in bold and sometimes lonely strokes, and the introduction of the you changes that dynamic. The you is always the same unnamed figure, a lover or life partner. I want you to be the only one to say my name like it mattered. The body of my pieces I wrote for you (“Let Me Go Quietly”). As the fragments of the I create a clear and vivid picture, there is a beautiful grace in the way Mehta moves her same unsentimental but deeply loving focus to another, the way it begins to encompass a we beyond the I or you. There is a wild serenity that develops within that concept of we, creating a softness even to some of the familiar edges of grief, and that is the movement that I believe is at the center of this collection.
"Perhaps a little confusingly, the poem I selected as the first of the collection is titled “Editor’s Notes,” and I did it because it slyly addressed the questions that I had when I first read through Mehta’s body of work. Did all this really happen, did / those people really die? Did you seriously / try to kill yourself? She already knows the questions you’ll have, and she has ready responses that are all the more satisfying and invigorating for their freshness and honesty. She might tell you something about you, too.
Brenna Crotty
Editor"
***
We look forward to reading all the manuscripts to come! Visit BirdyPoetryPrize.com for contest details. To learn more about Mehta, visit thischerokeerose.com/.