Image with the words Writing Organization Award.

AWP Writing Organization Award

The AWP Writing Organization Award is a new award that will annually recognize writing conferences, festivals, centers, workshops, residencies, retreats, and other organizations for the important work they do to serve the writing community. The late poet and fierce writing organization advocate Kurt Brown worked hard to shine a light on these groups as an important part of the literary ecosystem. The Writing Organization Award is a continuation of that legacy. Letters of nomination are accepted September 1–October 31 annually via our online submission portal.

Based on letters of nomination, AWP awards a $2,000 honorarium and a complimentary bookfair booth, including two conference registrations, to each year’s winning organization.

Submit nominations September 1–October 31 via our online submission portal


2026 Winner

CantoMundo

CantoMundo logo

CantoMundo cultivates a community of Latinx poets through workshops, symposia, and public readings, and celebrates the breadth of Latinidad.

 


2026 Finalists

The Seventh Wave

The Seventh Wave logo

Seventh Wave is a BIPOC- and queer-led literary community championing the voices of writers, artists, and creatives with diverse backgrounds and perspectives. We work with both established and emerging writers to make social justice more accessible through our publications—an annual literary magazine—and our programming, which comprises digital residencies, in-person residencies, and Community Anthologies, a cohort-based storytelling platform. Relationships, inclusivity, and accessibility are at our core, and foregrounded in every editorial act. We live, we breathe, and we beckon this work.

VONA

VONA logo

VONA is a home for writers of the global majority. VONA fosters the development of personal and political writing, honoring writers’ unique histories, traditions, and aesthetics, providing a protected mentoring space for learning and community.

The AWP Writing Organization Award will be granted each year to a writing organization that excels in at least one of the following areas:

  • improves the craft, careers, and/or lives of the writers it serves
  • develops and employs innovative programming
  • serves a broad range of writers from diverse backgrounds
  • provides scholarships, financial assistance, and/or important resources to writers

Eligible organizations include writing conferences, centers, festivals, workshops, residencies, retreats, and/or any other established groups or organizations that meet the following criteria:

  • has been in operation for five years or more at the time of nomination
  • provides regular programming for writers, such as year-round services, annual events, monthly meetings, etc.
  • is independently run and not affiliated with a larger business or company; if housed by a university, must offer programming that is open to community members outside of the university itself
  • must be willing and able to send at least one representative to the AWP Conference & Bookfair to accept the award

Any organization that meets the above criteria may be nominated for the award, with two exceptions:

  1. organizations run by members of the current AWP Board of Directors or AWP staff, family members of the AWP Board of Directors or AWP staff, or former AWP board members or AWP staff who served AWP within the last five years
  2. organizations that have participated as a literary partner at the AWP Conference & Bookfair within the last five years

Nominations are open via our online submission portal September 1–October 31 annually. Letters of nomination can be submitted by attendees or participants of the organization, as well as anyone who has benefitted from or observed the positive impact of the organization; current staff and board members may not nominate the organization they serve. Former staff and board members may not nominate an organization if they have served it within the past five years.

Letters of nomination should include an explanation of how the writing organization fulfills the criteria above and a detailed explanation of the organization’s contribution to the writing community.

Letters should be no longer than two single-spaced pages. Letters should include the name, return address, and signature of the nominating person as well as contact information for an organization representative who can accept the award on behalf of the organization. All nominations should be in PDF format and submitted through AWP’s online submission portal. Nominations received by post, email, or any format outside of the submission portal will not be considered. Please note that while multiple people may submit letters of nomination, the judges will select winners based on the content of the letters and the programming of the organizations; a greater quantity of letters will not increase an organization’s chance of winning.

Previous recipients of the award may not be nominated and will not be considered. Nominations will be considered for three years, including the year the nomination is submitted.

All letters of nomination submitted before the deadline will be reviewed by a small committee who will select three finalists and determine a winner. The recipient will be announced during the Wednesday night Literary Awards Reception at the AWP Conference & Bookfair. The winner will receive a complimentary booth, including two conference registrations, at the bookfair following the year the award was presented. (For example, the winner of the 2026 award will be announced at the #AWP26 Conference & Bookfair and receive a booth at the #AWP27 Conference & Bookfair.) The winner will also receive a $2,000 honorarium. Booths are not transferrable; winners who choose not to exhibit at the following year’s bookfair will forfeit their complimentary exhibit space.

All finalists will be announced on AWP’s website and social media accounts and featured in The Writer’s Chronicle.



Torch Literary Arts

Torch logo

Founded in 2006 by Amanda Johnston, Torch Literary Arts is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that publishes and promotes creative writing by Black women. We publish contemporary writing by emerging and experienced writers alike. Torch has featured work by Toi Derricotte, Tayari Jones, Sharon Bridgforth, Crystal Wilkinson, Patricia Smith, Natasha Trethewey, Sapphire, and others. Programs include the Wildfire Reading Series, writing workshops, retreats, and special events.
Finalists: Brink Literacy Project, Macondo Writers Workshop