The Magma 2020/21 Poetry Competition is now open for entries in both
categories, the Judge’s Prize for poems of 11 to 50 lines and the Editors’
Prize for poems of up to 10 lines. Award-winning poet Theresa Lola is the
judge for the Judge’s Prize here are no sifters. The Editors’ Prize is judged
by a panel of Magma Editors. The prize money for both competitions is the same,
so double your chances and try your luck at both. First prize for the Judge’s
and Editors’ Prize is £1000,
second prize £300
and third prize £150.
The six prize-winning poems will be published in Magma and there will also be
five special mentions for the Judge’s Prize and for the Editors’ Prize. Winning
and commended poets will be invited to read their poems at a Magma Competition
Event in Spring 2021.
CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT MORE
Wednesday, 14 October 2020
Mslexia Poetry Competition
Monday, 12 October 2020
Death of Poet Derek Mahon
We are all deeply saddened to
learn of the death of poet Derek Mahon. His influence in the Irish poetry
community, literary world and society at large, and his legacy, is immense.
Derek, who died in Cork following a short illness, was one of Ireland’s
leading poets, a member of Aosdána and a highly accomplished
translator. Born in Belfast in 1941, he spent time living in
Dublin while studying at Trinity College and subsequently lived in France, the
US, Canada and London before settling in Ireland again.
Chair of Poetry Ireland, Ciarán Benson, said, “In the loss of Derek Mahon, Ireland, and the world of
poetry, has lost an outstanding voice, one that ranged over the wide
territories of contemporary life, both personal and natural. He effortlessly
framed and clarified centrally important ideas and longings and gifted them
back to us in a beautiful and rich body of work. His influence will continue to
grow.”
Director of Poetry Ireland, Niamh O’Donnell, said that Derek’s legacy in
the poetry world is very keenly felt.
“Derek was an extraordinarily brilliant poet. A gifted and noble observer of our world and one of that generation of outstanding poets from
Northern Ireland who rose to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s. His legacy to us is an
incredible body of work, full of hard-earned insight and wisdom, including so
many touchstone poems that will continue to resonate with people all over the
world for generations to come.”
One of Derek Mahon’s poems, ‘Everything Is Going To Be All Right’, has been a beacon of solace during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Derek will be remembered for so many of his insightful poems, including ‘A Disused Shed in County Wexford’ which he referred to as "that one"!
also ‘Beyond Howth Head’ and ‘A Refusal to Mourn’ and many more. His many honours
include the Lannan Literary Award for Poetry (1990), The Irish Times-Aer Lingus
Poetry Prize (1991), the Scott Moncrieff
Translation Prize and the David Cohen Prize
for Literature (2007). In 2019, his collection Against the Clock won him the
Irish Times Poetry Now award, his third time receiving the award.
At the time, Bernard O’Donoghue said on behalf of the judges that the
book was “driven by an unfailing poetry energy” and that “All we can say is
that the other five writers on the shortlist were unfortunate to be in
competition with Derek Mahon, one of the great poets of our time, at the top of
his form.”
Derek’s poems were featured many times in Poetry Ireland Review – his poem ‘Quarantine’ is a stand-out in the latest issue – and his work was often reviewed in the Poetry Ireland Journal.
Reviewing Derek’s most recent collection, Against the Clock, in the Review, Nicholas Grene wrote: “But wonderfully, for a poet who has
so often written out of a troubled life, there is a sense in many of these
poems of someone at peace with himself…Against the Clock is indeed the collection of a great poet, and we have
every reason to be grateful for it.”
Our thoughts and deepest sympathies are with Derek’s partner Sarah Iremonger and his children Rory, Katy and Maisie, along with all of his extended family, friends and comrades.