poems
“[Years of pelvic floor therapy],” “Sewer Slide,” “I May Be Stupid,” SICK magazine (forthcoming)
“Matador,” “I Was as Dead,” Foglifter
“Sea Level,” Brooklyn Poets
“I May Be Stupid,” underblong
“Proof of Life,” Epiphany Magazine
“Target Practice,” SPACE Gallery 2024 Poetry Hotline
“Rhythm 0,” The Lumiere Review
Luther Hughes: “The desperation of the speaker to understand exactly who they are in the context of what they are given—how one is supposed to live—is almost shocking. The poem strains; the poem enacts a beginning and an end.”
“Where Were You When Mac Miller Died,” Best New Poets 2022
honorsLonglist, ONLY POEMS’ Poet of the Year Prize (2024, 2025)
Semifinalist, Nine Syllables Press 2023 Chapbook Contest (2024)
Nominee, ONLY POEMS, Best Spiritual Literature (2024)
Nominated for “Light Being Light,” published by ONLY POEMS.
Semifinalist, The Adroit Journal’s Djanikian Scholars in Poetry (2024)
Finalist, poetry.onl 2024 Chapbook Series Fellowship (2023)
Recipient, Bates College, John Tagliabue Award for Creative Writing (2023)
Given to a student whose work in poetry or prose is judged the most outstanding by faculty in the English Department.
Nominee, Best of the Net (2022)
Nominated by The Lumiere Review, Ice Lolly Review, and COUNTERCLOCK Journal.
Winner, The Lumiere Review Poetry Contest (2022)
Honored for “Rhythm 0.”
Contributor, Best New Poets (2022)
Contributed the poem “Where Were You When Mac Miller Died.”
Semifinalist, The Adroit Journal’s Adroit Prizes for Poetry (2021)
Honored for “Where Were You When Mac Miller Died.”
Recipient, Bates College, Alice Jane Dinsmore Wandke Award (2019)
Given annually to a woman in the first-year or sophomore class who the English Department believes excels in creative work in either prose or poetry.