Joint winners of Michael Hartnett Poetry Award 2018 announced

  • Éigse Michael Hartnett

Recipients to receive awards on opening night of Éigse as Dublin Literary Award 2018 shortlisted author among the festival guests.

Two outstanding poets, Macdara Woods and Mary O’Malley, have been named as joint winners of the Michael Hartnett Poetry Award 2018, which is awarded annually in conjunction with Éigse Michael Hartnett in Newcastle West, Co Limerick.
 
The winners were selected from a large number of submissions: Macdara Woods for his collection, Music from the Big Tent (Dedalus, 2016) and Mary O’Malley for her collection, Playing the Octopus (Carcanet, 2016).
 
They will receive their award on Thursday 12 April 2018, the opening night of the literary and arts festival, Éigse Michael Hartnett and will share the €4,000 purse that goes with the award.
 
Éigse takes place each year in Newcastle West, Co Limerick, Hartnett’s home-town and is supported by the Arts Council and Limerick City and County Council.
 
In their citation the judges Jo Slade and James Harpur said: “Macdara Woods has honoured poetry throughout his life, consistently rendering the weals and woes of the human condition into poems that sometimes ring from the rooftops, and sometimes whisper with deft subtlety; poems that mix wise and rare insights with a generous heart and an open mind – qualities dear to Michael Hartnett.”
 
“Music from the Big Tent is a superb orchestra of verbal melodies, a Big Top in which free verse, ballads and haiku sing and cavort.  The collection includes poems that x-ray the body of homo sapiens, poems that laud the depth and variety of European culture and topography; poems that encapsulate the mysterious beauty of nature and poems that mourn the dead but celebrate the beauty of the human form and the endurance of love.”
 
The judges in their citation described Mary O’Malley’s Playing the Octopus as: “a beautiful collection of rare gems that sparkle and seduce. Through the finely wrought, delicately woven poems, Mary has created a world that sustains us, that we recognise and can inhabit.” And the poet acts as an assured guide.”
 
“This is a collection that balances beauty and harmony, the poems are restrained but deeply felt, the voice assured, meaning is revealed slowly like an uncovering of essence, something essential and elemental.”
 
“There is a playfulness and joy in language that at times produces a magical quality: light bounces and refracts; musical intonations interweave with the lyric voice. What is achieved is a virtuoso performance.”
 
Upon hearing that she was joint winner of the 2018 award, Mary O’Malley said: “I am delighted to receive the Michael Hartnett Award. Michael, whom I knew and who had kind things to say about my young poems, has remained a touchstone for me.”
 
“When I first met him, at the launch of a small anthology to raise funds for the Simon Community, he was kind, generous and had, in abundance, that 'uaslacht' of which I later heard him speak. Over the years, I got to know him better. He used to call me 'an Atlantean', which gave him a quiet amusement.”
 
“I used to wait for each book of Michael's as I have never waited for any poet's, before or since.  His work was, quite simply, essential and so he remains. His stature grows, and will, I think, continue to do so. He was a poet deeply schooled and this gave his poems a quiet authority.”
 
Sheila Deegan, Culture and Arts Officer with Limerick City and County Council said: “I would like to congratulate the joint winners of this year’s poetry award.  Poetry has the power to transport the reader into another world, and these winners have that ability.  They are deserved winners and join a long list of some of the powerhouses of Irish literature.”
 
Previous winners of the Michael Hartnett Poetry Award, which is awarded in alternate years for collections in Irish and English, include Sinead Morrissey, Vona Groarke, Julie Callaghan, Maurice Riordan, Peter Sirr, James Harpur, Jo Slade, Doireann Ní Ghríofa, Paddy Bushe, Aine Ni Fhoghlú and Mark Roper.
 
The Michael Hartnett Poetry Award is supported by the Limerick City and County Council’s Culture and Arts Office and by the Arts Council.
 
Éigse Michael Hartnett is the literary and arts festival established in the wake of poet Michael Hartnett’s death in 1999 and has continued every year since. This year’s Éigse begins on Thursday 12 April and runs until Saturday 14 April.
 
Among the highlights of this year’s programme include:
  • A keynote address by Michael’s son Niall Hartnett
  • An evening with John Boyne, and Limerick singer/songwriter Emma Langford
  • Readings with Mike McCormack (shortlisted for the 2018 Dublin Literary Award), Robyn Rowland and Edward O’Dwyer
 
There will also be poetry workshops, a Poetry Slam, a literary walking tour, a film screening, a food and poetry event with award-winning chef Tom Flavin, and street entertainment.
 
Academic and cultural commentator Declan Kiberd will deliver the Michael Hartnett Memorial Lecture, entitled: Honey, I shrunk the kids: Is there a children’s literature? and poet Gabriel Fitzmaurice will launch a book of translations of the poetry of Seán Ó Ríordáin called Ag Crú na Gréine/Milking the Sun.
 
For the full programme go to www.eigsemichaelhartnett.ie
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