Mark Smith-Soto Receives 2012 James Applewhite Poetry Prize

UNC-Greensboro faculty member Mark Smith-Soto, left, received the 2012 James Applewhite Poetry competition award from poet James Applewhite, right, during the annual Eastern North Carolina Literary Homecoming at ECU. (Contributed photo)

During the recent Eastern North Carolina Literary Homecoming, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Professor Mark Smith-Soto was announced as the winner of the 2012 James Applewhite Poetry competition for his poem, “Last Retreat to Topsail Island.”

James Applewhite presented the award during the annual literary homecoming held at Joyner Library, where Applewhite was also honored with the Roberts Award for Literary Inspiration. Smith-Soto read his poem at the event, and it will be published in the North Carolina Literary Review’s 2013 issue.

Raised in Costa Rica, Smith-Soto is professor of Spanish and long-time editor of International Poetry Review at UNC-Greensboro. He received an NEA fellowship in creative writing in 2005, and his poetry has been collected in a chapbook and two full-length volumes as well as published in numerous literary magazines.

Applewhite, a fellow poet, selected Smith-Soto’s poem from six finalists whose work had been selected for publication in NCLR by Poetry Editor Jeffrey Franklin. Almost 50 poets submitted up to five poems each to the competition.

“The poem as a whole is excellent, beautifully crafted, unselfconsciously eloquent,” Applewhite said of Smith-Soto’s winning submission.

Applewhite awarded second place to Laurence G. Avery’s poem, “Only Yonaguska,” and honorable mention to Grace Cloris Ocasio’s “Little Girlfriend.” The other finalists selected for publication are Richard Betz’s “Picking Blackberries on Yellow Mountain Road,” Samantha Lee Deal’s “North Carolina, This Will Be The Last Poem,” and Susan Laughter Meyers’ “Banding Hummingbirds” and “Beggar’s-Lice.”

Published since 1992 by ECU and the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association, the North Carolina Literary Review has won numerous awards and citations. The James Applewhite Poetry Prize competition was funded by the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation.

A two-year subscription to NCLR will include the 2013 issue, featuring the winner and some of the finalists. The other finalists and additional poems from Smith-Soto’s submission will appear in NCLR Online, an open access publication that appears in early 2013. The print issue follows in the summer. Visit www.nclr.ecu.edu for subscription information.