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Luminaire Poetry Award

Luminaire Poetry Award

Submission Guidelines for the Luminaire Poetry Award

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About | What Is a Luminaire?| Reading Period | Current Status | Prize | Submission Guidelines | Winners | Judging Process | Medallion Designers

About the Luminaire Poetry Award

The Luminaire Award for Best Poetry is Alternating Current Press’ annual writing award to recognize the best poetry and hybrid work submitted to the press. We’re seeking individual poems in any poetry format, including experimental, prose poems, and hybrid. We especially want to hear from marginalized and underrepresented authors, and we are an LGBTQUIA2+ safe-space. [Back to Top]

What Is a Luminaire?

A luminaire is a complete electric light unit (used especially in technical contexts). The word comes from early 20th-century French, and some antique versions even had candles in them before electricity was widespread.

Lu•min•aire: \ˌlü-mə-ˈner\ n. Complete lighting unit, consisting of one or more lamps (bulbs or tubes that emit light), along with the socket and other parts that hold the lamp in place and protect it, wiring that connects the lamp to a power source, and a reflector that helps direct and distribute the light. [Concise Encyclopedia]

We chose the name specifically because it deals not only with electricity and lighting up a room, a home, a place, a world, a mind—but also because it refers to a complete lit unit, which is what we’re seeking: pieces that are complete in themselves from start to finish, pieces that have it all and light up our minds, the whole all-in-one package that outshines the rest. [Back to Top]

Reading Period

Submissions open: NOV 1, 2025
Submissions close: FEB 28, 2026
Winner announced: APR 2026
Publication: 2026/2027
[Back to Top]

Current Status

The 2025 award period is now closed, and winners and finalists were announced here. The submission period for the 2026 award will open on November 1, 2025. [Back to Top]

The Prizes

The first-place winner receives $100 (upon publication); publication of the winning piece on The Coil and in our triennial anthology that is printed in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats; a listing on the Alternating Current Press award page and on a press release on The Coil; complimentary digital copies of the triennial anthology in all available digital formats; our virtual gold award medallion for use on book covers, social media profiles, and websites; a certificate*; and a press-release mailing-list email blast. The triennial anthology is distributed through Ingram, Asterism, and all major online retailers, and publication includes a press kit, a book-club reading guide, a press release, multiple mailing-list email blasts, social media, and more.

Second place and third place receive $25 each (upon publication); publication of their pieces on The Coil and in our triennial anthology that is printed in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats; a listing on the Alternating Current Press award page and on a press release on The Coil; complimentary digital copies of the triennial anthology in all available digital formats; our silver or bronze virtual medallion for use on book covers, social media profiles, and websites; certificates*; and a press-release mailing-list email blast.

Fourth place and fifth place receive a listing on the Alternating Current Press award page; publication of their poems on The Coil and in our triennial anthology that is printed in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats; complimentary digital copies of the triennial anthology in all available digital formats; and a press-release mailing-list email blast.

Seven finalists are published online on The Coil, one per month, with finalist status indicated.

All semifinalists and accepted pieces are published online on The Coil, without award indication. The Coil pays $10 for online publication of all accepted poems that didn’t receive a separate monetary award.

If we enjoy your entire submission, we may additionally ask to see more work or a full collection from authors whose work we admire.

(*Print certificates can only be shipped to U.S. addresses; if a winner is selected with an out-of-U.S. shipping address, then certificates will be digital only.) [Back to Top]

Submission Guidelines

Past Luminaire Poetry Award Winners

2025 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Patients I Cannot Forget: RB” by Virginia LeBaron
2nd Place: “What Stays Behind” by Leonardo Chung
3rd Place: “I Love a Man with Ancestors in His Drawl” by Lyn Patterson
4th Place: “Georgette” by Benedicte Kusendila
5th Place: “Cathartes Aura” by Kate Leboff

2024 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “First Aid” by Philip Andrew Lisi
2nd Place: “Bin ich dein Neger?” by Tara Campbell
3rd Place: “That Woman” by Kate Segriff
4th Place: “[sic]stemic” by Dean Gessie
5th Place: “Cleaning the Orphanage” by Raymond Luczak

2023 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
Will be updated here soon.

2022 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
Will be updated here soon.

2021 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
Will be updated here soon.

2020 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
Will be updated here soon.

2019 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “MacMahan Island” by Sarah Anderson
2nd Place: “Molcajete” by Angelica Esquivel
3rd Place: “Living in English” by Threa Almontaser
4th Place: “‘A Paper Doll Speaks’ or ‘Sometimes I Don’t Feel Like a Woman’ in Three Parts” by Shay Alexi
5th Place: “(Han)kuk” by Esther Ra

2018 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Waking to Pablo Neruda Pumping My Chest” by Lindsey Thäden
2nd Place: “Confiteor 2” by Teresa Sutton
3rd Place: “Broken Waltz, City Street” by S. R. Aichinger
4th Place: “Post-Script: Denali” by Andrea L. Hackbarth
5th Place: “You Are Not Just Anything” by Mason O’Hern

2017 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “I Thought Pigeons Were Vegetarians” by Barrett Warner
2nd Place: “What form this time” by Torrie Valentine
3rd Place: “things / i know to be true, / but will never prove” by Omotara James
4th Place: “Insomnia” by Barrett Warner
5th Place: “My Father at the Funeral” by Helen Park
6th Place: “Bird Woman of Wonder Valley” by Cynthia Anderson
7th Place: “Sacks of Cells” by Brendan Walsh
8th Place: “Where There Is a Life, There Is a Hope” by Brendan Walsh
9th Place: “Logged” by Barrett Warner
10th Place: “Grocery Shopping” by Rebecca Gould
11th Place: “Misreading Belfast as Breakfast in a Poem” by C. C. Russell
12th Place: “Ten Cents” by Gary Beaumier

2016 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Baldwin Apples” by Sarah Ann Winn
2nd Place: “Coralee Robbins Mafficks the Fall of Art” by Amy Wright
3rd Place: “vii. (the leviathan)” by Mary Buchinger
4th Place: “we move as dust” by Michael Bernicchi
5th Place: “the thing is, you see” by Normal
6th Place: “PSU Harrisburg” by Chris Middleman
7th Place: “Herding Autumn” by Kaye Spivey
8th Place: “Foot Sonnet” by Brendan Walsh
9th Place: “Nobody plays in firehydrant fountains but Tegs Turpin” by Amy Wright
10th Place: “Mumbai, 11th March, 15.30” by Rinzu Rajan
11th Place: “Hometown Hero” by Aaron Graham
12th Place: “I Consider Whether Shipping Your Memory Home Would Be Too Costly” by Sarah Ann Winn

2015 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “mob of one” by Normal
2nd Place: “Reign” by Jared A. Carnie
3rd Place: “Sewing” by Noel King
4th Place: “Cause Célèbre” by Andrei Guruianu
5th Place: “After Abandon” by Michael Cooper
6th Place: “The Bends” by J. Bradley
7th Place: “Interview with a Rapid Snowfall” by Maison Demuth Olson
8th Place: “October” by Jared A. Carnie
9th Place: “My Afternoons with Dylan Thomas” by Lyn Lifshin
10th Place: “Madame Laveau, Fortune Teller and Police Psychic, Falls Off the Wagon with a Resounding Thud” by Jason Ryberg
11th Place: “color & contour” by Maison Demuth Olson
12th Place: “Interstices” by Kelly Jean Egan

2014 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Low Tide” by Pete M. Wyer
2nd Place: “Miss Valley City, North Dakota” by Charles P. Ries
3rd Place: “William Barret Question Mark” by CEE
4th Place: “Birch Street” by Charles P. Ries
5th Place: “With Apologies to Rose Bonne [The Hall of Ives]” by CEE

2013 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “No Sad Songs in the House of the Sun” by Shauna Osborn
2nd Place: “Influences of Light” by Charles P. Ries
3rd Place: “Another Birthday” by Sean Brendan-Brown
4th Place: “Waiting Tables in Reno” by Doug Draime
5th Place: “Still Victory” by Denis Sheehan
6th Place: “Estimated Losses” by Aleathia Drehmer
7th Place: “We Watch the Horse Fly Home” by Jane Stuart
8th Place: “Stp. Gran. Dad.” by Frankie Metro
9th Place: “Ten Thousand Shields & Spears” by Sean Brendan-Brown
10th Place: “Redhead” by Charles P. Ries
11th Place: “Sometimes” by Doug Draime
12th Place: “Land of Stinkin’ (New Salem, IL)” by CEE

2012 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Kind to a Spider” by Tim Staley
2nd Place: “Suggestion Box” by Ray Larsen
3rd Place: “how to kill a flower” by Sharon Zeisel

2011 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Amphitheater” by Gary Every
2nd Place: “Quality Time” by Tim Scannell
3rd Place: “Understanding Anita” by Bob Sharkey

2010 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Contagious” by Stephanie Hiteshew
2nd Place: “Yardwork” by Gary Every
3rd Place: “Just Another Word” by Pamela Annas

2009 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “The Fall of Miss Sopa, Eater of Clay” by Julie Buffaloe-Yoder
2nd Place: “The Rosebud” by Jason Fisk
3rd Place: “A Mother’s Mantra” by Rebecca Schumejda
4th Place: “on art and war” by justin.barrett
5th Place: “Hayden Carruth Suite” by Glenn W. Cooper

2008 Luminaire Award Winners for Best Poetry
1st Place: “Cleaning Up at the Hamtramck Burger Chef” by Don Winter
2nd Place: “Jumper” by Kevin M. Hibshman
3rd Place: “in the poetry section of brown university bookstore, providence, ri” by Zoe A. Jaimot [Back to Top]

Selection & Judging Process

We subscribe to the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP) Contest Code of Ethics: “CLMP’s community of independent literary publishers believes that ethical contests serve our shared goal: to connect writers and readers by publishing exceptional writing. We believe that intent to act ethically, clarity of guidelines, and transparency of process form the foundation of an ethical contest. To that end, we agree to 1.) conduct our contests as ethically as possible and to address any unethical behavior on the part of our readers, judges, or editors; 2.) to provide clear and specific contest guidelines—defining conflict of interest for all parties involved; and 3.) to make the mechanics of our selection process available to the public. This Code recognizes that different contest models produce different results, but that each model can be run ethically. We have adopted this Code to reinforce our integrity and dedication as a publishing community and to ensure that our contests contribute to a vibrant literary heritage.”

  1. We take submissions through Submittable and use its tools and our own to accept incognito submissions. The executive editor has access to the information, but she does not read or accept submissions. While the executive editor determines what is published on our press, she does not make judging decisions for awards.
  2. We ask submitters not to include their names, contact information, or any identifying marks within the documents, titles, and file names of submissions.
  3. Staff members of Alternating Current Press may have pieces published on The Coil or submit pieces for incognito submission consideration, but staff members are not eligible to win award prizes while serving on our staff. This includes volunteers while they are volunteering for our staff.
  4. For all awards, the executive editor compiles a spreadsheet of all the eligible pieces, makes sure everything is stripped of any contact information, and sends that spreadsheet to the award editors. The award editors rank the selections to choose the top finalists. The incognito judging decisions are final.
  5. While the manuscripts are read incognito, the editors are asked to recuse themselves from judging if there are any submissions that they may recognize as posing a personal conflict of interest. Once selected, we will reveal the winner’s name privately to the readers before announcement to clarify that there is no conflict of interest. Should there be a conflict, the next finalist in line without conflict shall become the winner, or judges shall recuse themselves from the ranking tallies. Conflicts of interest are defined as: close friends, relatives, students, and former students of the judges. We do not consider workshops to be disqualifying factors, unless the judge personally feels there is a conflict there. We leave the discretion of conflict identification up to the judges. Submissions that pose a conflict of interest may still be eligible for publication, even if they are ineligible for prizes.
  6. The winner is notified prior to announcement. The results are publicly posted online at The Coil and on the press website. [Back to Top]

Medallion Designers

Special thanks and acknowledgment to Devin Byrnes and SuA Kang of Hardly Square, for their creativity in designing our annual medallion imprint. Hardly Square is a strategy, branding, and design-based boutique located in Baltimore, Maryland, that specializes in graphic design, web design, and eLearning courses. Their invaluable design expertise has made our annual awards come to life. [Back to Top]


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