A preview of our forthcoming anthology collaboration with the Justice Arts Coalition, image by William B. Livingston III, created in response to P.M. Dunne’s first prize memoir essay, “The Anti-Social Social Club.”

Every year hundreds of imprisoned writers from around the country submit works to PEN America’s Prison Writing Contest. And while this is another successful year, boasting a competitive pool with over 1,000 entries to the contest, this is also, in most ways, not at all a typical year. This year, we announce our winners amidst a global pandemic that finds our incarcerated writers in a heightened position of vulnerability—unable to social distance, rendered more isolated without visits from loved ones, perhaps subject to extreme measure such as lockdowns, or without access to personal protective gear.

In the middle of a flurry of advocacy efforts, our contest offers an inroad to community, an invitation to enter the sacred contract between reader and writer. In this case, the bond created is ephemeral, but profound, moving through the literal walls that separate inside and outside. The work of this contest is needed: to help melt calcified perceptions of who is incarcerated, to uplift the incredible literary voices stifled by exile, to further underscore the knowledge that our humanity is deeply bound to one another’s survival.

With special thanks to our new Prison Writing Committee, who spent hours intimately involved with the thousands of submitted works to arrive at this roster of talent. Please note, the pieces will be publicly available on our website, and through our annual print anthology in September 2020.

PEN America
2020 prison writing award winners

POETRY

First Place

Jason Centrone, “No Future in a Circle

Second Place

Elizabeth Hawes, “What I Would Like To Hear

Third Place

Terry Hedin, “El Reno

Honorable Mentions

Demetrius A. Buckley, “In Response to Loneliness

Matthew Mendoza, “Meena in Captivity

Davi Gray, “Eugene Cernan, Last Man on the Moon

EDWARD BUNKER PRIZE FICTION

First Place

Mark Altenhofen, “Breathe Into the Ground

Second Place

Amy Bishop Anderson, “Man of Few Words

Third Place

Jeffrey Chapman, “Thinkin’ About You

Honorable Mentions

Nick Browning, “A Funny Story

Richard C. Staton, “Toto, I Don’t Think We’re in Kansas Anymore”

ESSAY

First Place

Nick Browning, “Little Gardens

Second Place

Michael Bankert, “Raw, Real, Uncensored

Third Place

Kevin Schaeffer, “Tarkovsky by Countlight

MEMOIR

First Place

Peter Dunne, “The Anti-Social Social Club

Second Place

Jeffrey Young, “Burn, Baby, Burn

Third Place

Amanda Patt, “Person on the Porch

Nonfiction Honorable Mentions

James Michael Anderson, “Another One Bites the Dust

Jeffrey Chapman, “Pet Cemetery

Ryan Moser, “Injuries Incompatible with Life

Davi Gray, “Why I Write”

DRAMA

First Place

Elizabeth Hawes, “Supernova

Second Place

Burl N. Corbett, “Insomnia

Third Place

Matthew Mendoza, “What’s Prison Like?

Honorable Mentions

Brian Beals, “Broken Pieces

Matthew Feeney, “CON*Star Ankle Bracelets

Sean J. White, “The Law of Averages

FIELDING A. DAWSON

Fielding A. Dawson Prize in Poetry

C. Fausto Cabrera, “Free Press

Fielding A. Dawson Prize in Fiction

Juan Moreno Haines, “Shadows and Shades

Fielding A. Dawson Prize in Nonfiction

Dawn Renee Peel, “Zhigwaajige’”

Fielding A. Dawson Prize in Drama

Daniel S. Throop, “The War Within

The Prison Writing Contest Prizes are sponsored by the generous support of the Greenburger Center for Social & Criminal Justice.

We are thrilled to share that the newly named PEN America/Edward Bunker Prize in Fiction has been made possible by the legacy of Edward Bunker and the gift of his family.