
From Across the Room
Write a poem about love at first sight.
Prizes
- First Place:
- $2,500
- Second Place:
- $1,000
- 50 Runners-up:
- $50
In addition, all finalists will receive a signed copy of Kirun Kapur’s “Women in the Waiting Room."
Status
CompletedTimeline
Submissions opened
Feb 14, 2022
Submissions closed
Mar 16, 2022 4:59 AM CUT
Results
Mar 29, 2022
Prizes
- First Place:
- $2,500
- Second Place:
- $1,000
- 50 Runners-up:
- $50
In addition, all finalists will receive a signed copy of Kirun Kapur’s “Women in the Waiting Room."
Status
CompletedTimeline
Submissions opened
Feb 14, 2022
Submissions closed
Mar 16, 2022 4:59 AM CUT
Results
Mar 29, 2022
About this challenge
Love is officially in the air, and we can’t help but get caught up in the heart-shaped chocolates and rom-com-worthy daydreams. That’s why we’re calling on our poets to describe a time when simply looking at another person took their breath away. Whether it was your first crush (we’ve been there) or a fictional character (we’ve definitely been there), we want to hear you describe your “…and that's when I saw you" moment.
To celebrate the season of falling head over heels in love, we’re challenging you to write a poem about the knee-buckling moment when you caught someone's eye from across the room. Tell us about the blood rushing to your cheeks and the butterflies fluttering in your stomach. We can’t wait to fall in love with your poems!
Judge
Kirun Kapur - Kirun grew up in Hawaii and has since lived and worked in North America and South Asia. Her first job as a writer was for India’s groundbreaking feminist magazine Manushi and from there, her travels took her through Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. Her work has appeared in Ploughshares, AGNI, Poetry International, Prairie Schooner, and many other journals and news outlets. She has taught creative writing at Boston University, Brandeis University, and has been granted fellowships from The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Vermont Studio Center and MacDowell Colony. Additional honors include the Arts & Letters Rumi Prize in Poetry, a Best of the Net award, the Nazim Hikmet Prize, and the Glenna Luschei award. In 2015, NBCNews named her to their list of Asian-American Poets to Watch. Kirun's latest book, "Women in the Waiting Room," was a finalist for the National Poetry Series.
Kirun serves as the editor of the Beloit Poetry Journal, one of the nation’s oldest poetry publications, and teaches at Amherst College where she is the director of the Creative Writing Program. She lives north of Boston with her family. To learn more, visit her at kirunkapur.com.
How to enter
For your story to be eligible, it should be between 100 and 2,000 words and adhere to our Community Guidelines. Stories published on Vocal and entered into the contest up until March 15, 2022, at 11:59 PM EST will be entered for consideration. Official Rules for the Challenge can be found here.
The From Across the Room Challenge is exclusive to Vocal+ members. To learn more and upgrade to Vocal+ visit https://todaysurvey.today/vocal-plus%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E.%3C/p%3E%3Cp class="css-1923z11-Text">To be eligible to win the grand prize, second place, or third place prizes, you must be over the age of 13 and residing in a country where Stripe is available at the time of entry. A complete list of countries where Stripe is available can be found here—winners will need to have a Stripe account created and connected in order to receive the prizes. For this reason, entrants located outside of any of these countries will not be eligible to win.
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Challenge resources
Instructions Included Challenge Winners
For the Instructions Included challenge, we asked writers to tell a story through instructions and to trust the form to carry what could not be said outright. Across the top entries, that trust paid off in many different ways.
By Vocal Curation Team5 days ago in Resources
The Ritual of Winter Challenge Winners
Welcome to the Winners Announcement for The Ritual of Winter challenge. This prompt focused on winter rituals and the meaning that settles into them over time. The top pieces stay grounded in ordinary acts and repeated routines, letting winter shape the work through pace, attention, and restraint.
By Vocal Curation Team24 days ago in Resources










