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Finalist: Bluff: Poems, by Danez Smith (Graywolf Press)

A cycle of work that grapples with artistic resilience and the responsibilities of a poet when engaging with powers that have been used to oppress others.

Nominated Work

Bluff: Poems

Bluff: Poems|Paperback

Written after two years of artistic silence, during which the world came to a halt due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Minneapolis became the epicenter of protest following the murder of George Floyd, Bluff is Danez Smith’s powerful reckoning with their role and responsibility as a poet and with their hometown of the Twin Cities. This is a book of awakening out of violence, guilt, shame, and critical pessimism to wonder and imagine how we can strive toward a new existence in a world that seems to be dissolving into desolate futures.  
        
Smith brings a startling urgency to these poems, their questions demanding a new language, a deep self-scrutiny, and virtuosic textual shapes. A series of ars poetica gives way to “anti poetica” and “ars america” to implicate poetry’s collusions with unchecked capitalism. A photographic collage accrues across a sequence to make clear the consequences of America's acceptance of mass shootings. A brilliant long poem—part map, part annotation, part visual argument—offers the history of Saint Paul’s vibrant Rondo neighborhood before and after officials decided to run an interstate directly through it.

Bluff is a kind of manifesto about artistic resilience, even when time and will can seem fleeting, when the places we most love—those given and made—are burning. In this soaring collection, Smith turns to honesty, hope, rage, and imagination to envision futures that seem possible.

Biography

Danez Smith is the author of three collections including Homie and Don’t Call Us Dead. For their work, Danez was won the Forward Prize for Best Collection, the Minnesota Book Award in Poetry, the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry, the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, and have been a finalist for the NAACP Image Award in Poetry, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the National Book Award. Danez's poetry and prose has been featured in Vanity Fair, The New York Times, The New Yorker, GQ, Best American Poetry and on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Danez is a member of the Dark Noise Collective. Former co-host of the Webby nominated podcast VS (Versus), they live in Minneapolis near their people. Their fourth collection of poems, Bluff, is forthcoming in August 2024.
 

Winners

Prize Winner in Poetry in 2025:

Marie Howe

A collection drawn from decades of work that mines the day-to-day modern experience for evidence of our shared loneliness, mortality and holiness. Poetry

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 2025:

Jennifer Chang

Reflective poems that fuse ancient philosophy with contemporary language and an immigrant perspective in a quest to find truth in the Western world.

The Jury

Carl Phillips​(Chair)

Professor Emeritus of English, Washington University in St. Louis

Joy Harjo

Poet, Musician and Playwright, Muscogee Nation Reservation, Oklahoma

Deborah Paredez

Associate Professor of Writing in the Faculty of the Arts; Chair, Writing Division, Columbia University

Brenda Shaughnessy

Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University–Newark

Brian Turner

Poet/Writer, Florida

Winners in Poetry

Brandon Som

A collection that deeply engages with the complexities of the poet’s dual Mexican and Chinese heritage, highlighting the dignity of his family’s working lives, creating community rather than conflict.

Carl Phillips

A masterful collection that chronicles American culture as the country struggles to make sense of its politics, of life in the wake of a pandemic, and of our place in a changing global community.  

Diane Seuss

A virtuosic collection that inventively expands the sonnet form to confront the messy contradictions of contemporary America, including the beauty and the difficulty of working-class life in the Rust Belt.

Natalie Diaz

A collection of tender, heart-wrenching and defiant poems that explore what it means to love and be loved in an America beset by conflict.

2025 Prize Winners

Staff of The Wall Street Journal

For chronicling political and personal shifts of the richest person in the world, Elon Musk, including his turn to conservative politics, his use of legal and illegal drugs and his private conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.