Archibald Lampman Award

Named after the 19th-century Confederation poet, Archibald Lampman, the award recognizes an outstanding book of English-language poetry by an author living in the National Capital Region.

For the years 2007 through 2009, the Archibald Lampman Award merged with the Duncan Campbell Scott Foundation to become the Lampman-Scott Award in honour of two great Confederation Poets. This partnership came to an end in 2010, and competition returned to its former identity as the Archibald Lampman Award for Poetry.

Submission details.


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Press Release: September 14, 2009

Lampman-Scott Award 2008 Winner

Winner: The Bindery by Shane Rhodes

The Lampman-Scott Award is administered by the Arc Poetry Society, and is awarded each year to a book of Poetry written by a poet living in the National Capital Region. Arc was happy to announce at the Ottawa Book Awards that the winner of the 2008 Lampman-Scott Award for Poetry has gone to Shane Rhodes for his book The Bindery.

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Press Release: October 09, 2008

Four Arc events you should know about

[Correction: the 30th Anniversary Celebration on October 23, 2008 starts at 8:30pm]

October is an exciting month at Arc, with four very different literary events planned that promise to be stimulating, thought-provoking and entertaining: the Lampman-Scott Award Reading, the Ottawa Book Awards where the winner of the Lampman-Scott Award for 2008 will be announced, Arc’s 30th Anniversary Celebration, and the Montreal Launch of Arc 60—the 30th anniversary issue! (phew)

The Lampman-Scott Award, administered by the Arc Poetry Society, honours the poetry and friendship of Archibald Lampman and Duncan Campbell Scott. Their literary friendship helped foster Ottawa’s now thriving and diverse literary community. Like its predecessor, the Archibald Lampman Award, the Lampman-Scott award recognizes an outstanding book of English-language poetry by an author living in the National Capital Region with a $1,500 prize for first place.

The Lampman-Scott Award Reading will feature readings from a wide selection of the contenders for the 2008 award at on Wednesday October 15, 2008 at 7pm at Collected Works Book Store (1242 Wellington Street West, Ottawa). Everyone is welcome to join us for good cheer and some fantastic poetry!

The full list of contenders for the 2008 Lampman-Scott Award are:

Michael Blouin for I’m not going to lie to you
Stephen Brockwell for The Real Made Up
Anne Le Dressay for Old Winter
Nicholas Lea for Everything is Movies
Luis Lama for Alien Land
Nadine McInnis for Two Hemispheres
rob mclennan for The Ottawa City Project
Colin Morton for The Cabbage of Paradise
Shane Rhodes for The Bindery
Ian Roy for Red Bird
Asoka Weerasinghe for Mayan Love Songs

The winner of the Lampman-Scott Award will be announced three short days later at the Ottawa Book Awards. The Ottawa Book Awards celebrate literary achievement in Ottawa. Founded in 1986, this annual award shines the spotlight on outstanding books written by Ottawa’s finest authors in categories of English fiction, English non-fiction, French fiction, and French non-fiction. Arc is very pleased to join in this celebration by adding the Lampman-Scott Award to the evening’s program. Everyone is welcome to join us in celebrating the finalists and winners on Saturday, October 18, 2008, 8pm at Library and Archives Canada (395 Wellington Street, Exhibition Hall A). The MC will be Alan Neal, Host of CBC Radio’s Bandwidth and Canada Live, and Anne Michaud, cultural reporter for La Première Cha&icrc;ne, of Radio-Canada Ottawa-Gatineau 90,7 FM.

Arc 60 luanch invitation, October 23, 2008

Arc would like to invite you to its grand 30th Anniversary Celebration. Thirty years of Arc Poetry Magazine will be celebrated at the launch of the Thirtieth Anniversary Issue at the Ottawa International Writers Festival on Thursday, October 23, 2008 at 8:30pm at Library and Archives Canada (395 Wellington Street, Ottawa). Canada’s top poets will commemorate three decades of Arc’s existence at a celebration that will include readings by some of Arc’s most notable contributors over the past thirty years: Roo Borson, Mary Dalton, Sonnet L’Abbe and Steven Heighton. For tickets and more information, please visit www.arcpoetry.ca.

The Montreal launch of Arc 60—which is Arc’s 30th anniversary issue —will take place Sunday October 26, at 7:30pm at Ye Olde Orchard Pub (20 Prince Arthur West, Montreal). This is a co-launch with Montreal publisher Biblioasis for Arc 60 and the already acclaimed anthology Jailbreaks: 99 Canadian Sonnets, edited by Zach Wells. The event will feature a musical set by the Montreal duo Orillia Opry, and readings by Montreal poets and Arc 60 contributors Stephanie Bolster, Asa Boxer, Susan Gillis, Robyn Sarah and Carmine Starnino—in addition to readings by select Jailbreaks contributors.

For more information on any of these events, coming attractions, or our next issue Arc 61 please see: www.arcpoetry.ca or email: arc@arcpoetry.ca.



Press Release: October 31, 2007

Arc Poetry Magazine Honours Poets of the National Capital Region

Arc Poetry Magazine is pleased to announce the winners of two important competitions that recognize the accomplishments of poets living in the National Capital Region: the Lampman-Scott Award, which recognizes an outstanding book of English-language poetry, and the Diana Brebner prize, which recognizes the work of an emerging poet.

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Press Release: September 13, 2007

Ottawa Literary Awards Ceremony

The City of Ottawa, The Ottawa International Writers’ Festival and Arc Poetry Society are pleased to invite you to attend a celebration of Ottawa’s outstanding authors.

Saturday, October 13 at 8:00 p.m.

Library and Archives Canada, 394 Wellington Street
Exhibition Hall A

Hosted by:

Rita Celli of CBC Radio’s All in a Day and
Jean Mohsen Fahmy, author and president of L’Association des auteures et auteurs de l’Ontario francais

Awards to be presented:

Ottawa Book Awards
Lampman-Scott Award

Reception to follow with music by Peter Hum and Mark Fraser.



Press Release: September 13, 2007

Lampman-Scott Award Reading, September 20, 2007

Arc Poetry Magazine and the Beechwood Cemetery Foundation are proud to host the 2007 Lampman-Scott Award Reading on Thursday, September 20, 7:00 p.m., at the Beechwood Cemetery Memorial Centre, 280 Beechwood Avenue. The event is free.

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Press Release: March 20, 2007

Archibald Lampman Award merges with Duncan Campbell Scott Foundation

Arc Poetry Magazine is pleased to announce the merger of the Archibald Lampman Award for Poetry with the Duncan Campbell Scott Foundation and the creation of the new $1500 annual Lampman-Scott Award. The Lampman-Scott Award recognizes an outstanding book of English-language poetry by an author living in the National Capital Region and will be announced at the Ottawa Book Awards ceremony in October. A reading featuring all eligible poets in conjunction with he Poets’ Hill Committee will be held at Beechwood Cemetery on Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007.

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Press Release: May 28, 2006

And the 2006 Lampman winner is...

Laura Farina wins the 2006 Archibald Lampman Award for her book This Woman Alphabetical, from Pedlar Press.

Named after the 19th-century Confederation poet, Archibald Lampman, the Lampman award recognizes an outstanding book of English-language poetry written by an author living in the National Capital Region.

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Press Release: March 23, 2006

Lampman Poetry Award Reading at Beechwood Cemetery

The resting place of Canada’s finest nineteenth-century poet will be the site of a poetry reading in his honour on Wednesday, May 10.

Born in 1861, Archibald Lampman graduated from Trinity College (Toronto) in 1882, then moved to Ottawa, where he worked for the Post Office until his death in 1899. He is known for his ability to immerse metaphysics in the details of nature, which he observed while hiking around what was then the wilderness capital of a new country.

Each year, the Arc Poetry Society’s Archibald Lampman Award recognizes an outstanding book of poems published by a contemporary Ottawa-area poet. In past years, the award has gone to such notable local poets as George Elliot Clarke, Gary Geddes, Stephanie Bolster, David O’Meara and last year’s winner, Stephen Brockwell.

On May 10, eleven entrants to this year’s prestigious Lampman competition will read from their work at the Reception Centre at historic Beechwood Cemetery, where Lampman himself is laid to rest. Poets Daniel Boland, Ronnie R. Brown, Tony Cosier, Laura Farina, William Hawkins, Bing He, Tom MacGregor, Nadine McInnis, Seymour Mayne, E. Russell Smith and Andrew Steinmetz will take the podium at this free event starting at 7:30 p.m.

Founded in 1873, Beechwood Cemetery is the resting place of Archibald Lampman, John Newlove, and many other leading Canadian poets of the nineteenth and twentieth century. A portion of Beechwood Cemetery has been designated “Poet’s Hill,” and is being developed as a site for literary commemoration, reflection and education.

Beechwood Cemetery Reception Centre is located at 280 Beechwood Avenue.

View poster



Fruitflies ricochet off imaginary light

Feature Review

Fruitflies ricochet off imaginary light: Nominees for the 2004
Archibald Lampman Award

Stephen Brockwell. Fruitfly Geographic.
Toronto: ECW Press, 2004.

Cyril Dabydeen. Imaginary Origins: Selected Poems 1970-2002.
Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 2004.

Seymour Mayne. Ricochet.
Oakville: Mosaic Press, 2004.

Susan McMaster. Until the Light Bends.
Windsor (ON): Black Moss Press, 2004.

To begin this review of the four books that were nominated for the 2004 Archibald Lampman Award for Poetry, given each year to a poet living in the National Capital Region, I will strip my sleeve, show my scars, and declare that poetry prizes ought to be encouraged. Every year, shortly after nominees are announced for literary awards all across the country, I hear talk about how such prizes mean nothing. Hmmm, yes; nothing but publicity, prize money, reviews, and a significant line on a c.v. Such talk usually issues from a young fox for whom the poetry grapes are never quite ripe, though occasionally a well-established poet will suggest that the proliferation of prizes diminishes the receipt of one. (Incidentally, I have never heard this complaint from the lips of any recent awardee, s/he who sports a cheque and perhaps an engraved plaque.) Complaint number two contends that poetry prizes depend on the tastes and education of that year’s jury. This is true, but in matters of arts and culture, I can think of few undertakings that do not rely upon the taste and education of a few people for its start-up energy. This is why juries are chosen afresh each year. This process is not perfect, nor is it unbiased; however, neither is publishing, reproductive technology or the electoral system. We persevere, and live on to read the nominated books.

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Press Release: May 28, 2005

2005 Summer Awards

Fruitfly takes Lampman
‘Brave’ winner of Confederation Prize
Rhenisch and Wells earn critic kudos

The 20th Archibald Lampman Award for Poetry goes to Stephen Brockwell for his book, Fruitfly Geographic (published by ECW Press). The award is given annually by Arc, Canada’s National Poetry Magazine, for the best book of poetry written in English during the preceding calendar year by a writer living in Ottawa.

Stephen Brockwell is also the author of The Wire in Fences and Cometology, and is the co-editor of the online journal www.poetics.ca.

Jury members Jeanette Lynes of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, matt robinson of Fredericton and Russell Thornton of North Vancouver chose Brockwell’s book from 11 entries, out of which the following shortlist was named:

Fruitfly Geographic by Stephen Brockwell
Imaginary Origins by Cyril Dadydeen
Until the Light Bends by Susan McMaster
Ricochet by Seymour Mayne

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