Today, we’re teaming up with Europeana.eu to challenge you to let your curiosity run wild! This challenge is for writers aged up to 25 based anywhere in the world. The deadline is 23:59 BST, Sunday 14 June 2026. Enter via Submittable. To help inspire your entries to this challenge, we’re running a free online writing workshop […]
Colour us surprised! We’re teaming up with Borough Road Gallery at London South Bank University and poet and visual artist Sophie Herxheimer to ask you to channel the colourful in your poetry. This challenge is now closed. Check back in the coming weeks to read the winning poems in the sidebar.
We’re teaming up with Rotherham-based green engineering firm AESSEAL once again! This time, poet Alycia Pirmohamed is asking you to think about transitional moments and spaces in nature… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed our judges: […]
It’s finally here! Time to cross one of the oldest poetic forms out there off your list and get to grips with the sonnet. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed our judges: Vaanya Poddar, Sophie Hardaker, […]
On Young Poets Network, we’ve challenged you to write poems that reach into the past or imagine the future before – but what about the pasts and futures we share with nature? We’re teaming up with the National Trust to ask you to write poems about entanglement of people and landscape, throughout history and beyond…
2025 marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth, and to celebrate, we’re teaming up with Jane Austen’s House and poet Janine Bradbury to ask you to write a poem inspired by Jane Austen’s humour. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar.
Foyle Young Poets Freya Gillard and Jennie Howitt invite you to explore the wonderful world of bogs, including their rich history and ecology, and to get inspired to write your own poems about our awesome and precious peatland ecosystems. This challenge is now closed.
What happens when a poem moves across languages, cultures, and histories? We’re teaming up with world-leading journal Modern Poetry in Translation for the fifth time as they celebrate their sixtieth anniversary. Chloe Elliott invites you to dive into the MPT archive, and let your discoveries spark new poetic creations. This challenge is now closed.
Here at Young Poets Network, we love to see poems that innovate and push the boundaries of poetry! So we’re teaming up with the Estorick Collection to challenge you to write poems that break a rule in some way. This challenge is now closed.
Roses are red, violets are blue, in today’s Young Poets Network challenge, we’re asking you… to once again think about using poetic form in your writing! Enter the humble couplet. This challenge is now closed.
We’re teaming up with Rotherham-based green engineering firm AESSEAL to challenge young poets to write poems that explore the habitats we share with non-human earthlings. Poet Caleb Parkin offers some prompts for imagining building a world where we can coexist with birds, bugs, and bears… This challenge is now closed.
Lights, camera, poem! We’re teaming up with the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum, based at the University of Exeter, to challenge you to get inspired by your favourite films. This challenge is now closed.
In our second August Challenge of 2024, Foyle Young Poet Noah Gower-Jones is asking you to dive deep into your relationship with the world underwater… This challenge is now closed.
Every year, we ask Foyle Young Poets to challenge you to write poems in new ways: in the first challenge of 2024, Cameron Calonzo is asking you to look into the future and write about what you can (fore)see. This challenge is now closed.
The challenge: write a poem of up to 24 lines that makes use of rhyme, metre, and/or stanza breaks. This challenge is now closed.
Let’s cook up some poems together! We’re teaming up with the Garden Museum to get you inspired to write poems about growing and cooking food. This challenge is now closed.
Shhh… can you hear that? We’re teaming up with People Need Nature and poet Polly Atkin to challenge you to think about the role sound plays in our relationship with nature. Send us poems about cooing pigeons, chattering chaffinches, bickering blackbirds… This challenge is now closed.
Out with the old, in with the… old? Poets have been using ancient mythology as the basis for their writing for hundreds of years: today, we’re challenging you to re-invent myths, and even make up some of your own! This challenge is now closed.
Roses are red, violets are blue, today on Young Poets Network we’ve got a new challenge for you… This challenge is now closed.
What would you want future generations to remember about your experience of being young, today? We’re thrilled to be teaming up with the Museum of Youth Culture to challenge you to get inspired and write poems about what youth culture looks and feels like to you. This challenge is now closed.
Have you ever had to do a self-portrait in an art lesson at school? Today, we’re challenging you to write self-portrait poems: you can be as realistic, or as abstract, as you like… This challenge is now closed.
We’re thrilled to launch a writing challenge about all things adorable! Ecopoet Isabel Galleymore discusses the fascinating links between cuteness and our relationship with the natural world, and invites you to reconsider what makes you go ‘aww…’ This challenge is now closed.
This August, Young Poets Network is being taken over by Borneo Bengkel and Wordsmiths of Kuching, two emerging writers collectives in Malaysian Borneo. We’ve already published a feature all about them – today, we’re thrilled to launch a new writing challenge written by Adi HJ, exploring the Southeast Asian poetic form of the pantun. Let’s […]
Inspired by their exhibition Poets in Vogue which focuses on the links between poetry, clothing and fashion, curators Sophie Oliver and Sarah Parker have set us a new challenge about clothes. Winners will have the opportunity to perform at an event in September. To get you started, Sophie and Sarah explain the links between clothes […]
Young Poets Network is teaming up with the Portland Japanese Garden for the second time to ask young poets worldwide to write about cultivating peace. This time, Oluwaseun Olayiwola invites you to take some quiet time to reflect. This challenge is now closed.
We’re teaming up with charity People Need Nature again, this time to invite you to become healthcare professionals. Nurse and poet Romalyn Ante explains how the NHS is prescribing time in nature, and asks you to write poems recommending activities outside that make you feel better. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, […]
Sure, you’ve conquered sonnets, and you’re a dab hand at haikus. Erasure poems are yesterday’s news and your shovel is already golden, thank you very much. It’s time to tick something else off your poetry glossary and master a new form. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read […]
Can you write a poem that will be turned into song lyrics and performed by young people across the UK for years to come? Young Poets Network is teaming up with Britten Pears Arts to explore identity in your writing, with the winners turned into songs. Our friends at Britten Pears Arts say more… This […]
How can the roots of your name inspire new writing? We’re thrilled to team up with world-leading journal Modern Poetry in Translation (MPT) for the fourth time. New MPT editor Khairani Barokka offers a new spin on poetry in translation and invites you to investigate the language of your own name. This challenge is now […]
How attuned are you to your senses? Foyle Young Poet Eve Wright sets our third and final August challenge for 2022, inviting you to focus on one single sense to describe a moment, event or object. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, […]
Where do you find your inspiration? For the second August challenge of 2022, Hong Kong based Foyle Young Poet Ran Zhao invites you to write about the most ordinary, everyday moments of your life. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the […]
It’s that time of year again! Summer’s here and we’re launching weekly writing challenges written by Foyle Young Poets throughout August. We’re kicking off with Daniel Wale’s challenge all about the underappreciated subject of friendship. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to […]
In a busy world, take a peaceful moment for yourselves. Following poet Seán Hewitt’s writing prompts, submit your poems on peace by 12 September and take part in an international poetry programme that will bring people together from across the world. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read […]
Did you know that 2022 is the International Year of Glass? According to the UN General Council, ‘we live in an era of glass’ and it’s an essential material for creating a sustainable future. Inspired by this, we’re asking you to create new poems that open a new window onto the world of glass. This […]
Today we’re inviting you to protest through your poetry, inspired by one of the first great protests in UK history: the Great Rising of 1381. Vanessa Kisuule offers background and writing prompts, and Theresa Lola ran a free online workshop which you can see an excerpt of here to help inspire your entry. This challenge […]
Today we’re challenging you to write love poems. While we welcome poems about romantic love, we’re also interested in poems about friendship, family and other kinds of love. Here are some ideas on how to get started… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, […]
Ahead of Sylvia Plath’s 90th birthday, we’re looking for poems inspired by the themes of Nature and Magic. Winners will have the chance to be included in an anthology of work responding to one of the most beloved poets of all time, especially by young people. Poets Sarah Corbett and Ian Humphreys write more… This […]
What could be better material for your poetry than the everyday stuff you love (or hate)? We’re asking you to write poems about popular culture. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judges: Teo Eve, […]
In our fourth and final August challenge of 2021, Foyle Young Poet Anisha Minocha invites you to use the form of a letter (or postcard, or note, or email, or text, or DM) to write a poem. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, […]
In our third August challenge this year, Foyle Young Poet Euan Sinclair asks you to imagine the inner lives of inanimate objects. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judge: Jamie Baty, Sabrina Guo, Hania […]
In our second August challenge this year, Foyle Young Poet Scott Walker invites you to get weird. Embrace the absurd as a response to the internet, the pandemic or just life on this crazy planet. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to […]
August means just one thing here on Young Poets Network: August challenges! Every week this month, we’ll be publishing a new writing challenge set by a Foyle Young Poet. We’re kick-starting 2021’s set with Cal O’Reilly’s challenge about conversations. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the […]
We’re delighted to team up with Modern Poetry in Translation for the third time, and once more offer you the chance to be published in this world-leading journal, and take part in a workshop with its editor. This time, we’re asking you to (co-)translate a poem by Irma Pineda, writing in the endangered language of […]
Young Poets Network is teaming up with People Need Nature for a fourth time, to challenge young poets to respond to the UK’s COP26 Presidency theme of Nature. Poet Louisa Adjoa Parker shows us how to imagine solutions to the climate crisis inspired by the natural world. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the […]
April 2021 marks ten years of Young Poets Network. As part of our celebrations, we’re launching a new writing challenge, asking you to use our ten years of history to inspire your poetry! This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted […]
A chunky Victorian novel, a popular science book, Romeo and Juliet and a doctor’s leaflet: what do they all have in common? They are the source materials for new poems, for erasure poems – the theme of our latest challenge. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in […]
In honour of Keats200, the bicentenary celebration of the poet John Keats’s life, works, and legacy, poet Amy Mackelden has set us a new challenge. She offers writing prompts and poems that explore illness, and use our bodies as inspiration. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in […]
What do cells and words have in common? This winter, we’re asking you to find the connections between biology and poetry. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judges: Madeleine Aase-Remedios, Sairah Ahsan, Aliyah Begum, […]
This winter, we’re asking you to gather some creative partners and work together on a poetry project. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose zines, music, songs and collages you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets and artists whose work impressed the judges: Hoverfly by Kaycee Hill […]
This year, we have seen how important nature is to our wellbeing, and how limited access to green spaces can be. We’ve teamed up with our friends People Need Nature and poet Gboyega Odubanjo to challenge you to write nature poems that focus on people’s place in nature. Send us poems appreciating the trees by […]
As poets, we know that words are powerful. When used for political reasons, language can be dangerous: it can turn anyone you don’t agree with into a sub-human monster. But because it is often absurd, political language is also ripe for satire. We’ve teamed up with Jeremy Wikeley from the Orwell Youth Prize to challenge […]
In the fourth and final August challenge of 2020, Rian Paton challenges you to submit your best spoken word poems. There’s no theme – just send us new work that’s no longer than three minutes long. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can watch in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, […]
In the third August challenge written by Foyle Young Poets, Ife Olatona asks you to repeat an image in your poem(s), and see where it leads… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judge: Irma […]
In our second August challenge written by Foyle Young Poets, Meredith LeMaître asks you to write new poems that take us into a fairy tale world… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judge: María […]
Every August, Foyle Young Poets take over Young Poets Network and set four weekly writing challenges. In the first August challenge of 2020, Lydia Wei is challenging you to write poems that imagine historical or fictional characters in surprising new situations. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read […]
Following the success of last year’s challenge with Modern Poetry in Translation, this year we’ve teamed up again, asking you to co-translate a poem by Suhrab Sirat, a poet in exile. MPT editor Clare Pollard introduces the challenge… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. […]
With more time to pay attention to the spaces and the people around us, we’re asking you to write odes to the little things. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judges: María Bascuñan, Anika […]
Though we’re all trying to be physically distant from each other at the moment, it’s more important than ever to stay connected socially. That’s why we’re launching a collaborative renga poetry challenge… Renga is a 700-year-old Japanese poetic form. The word ‘renga’ literally means ‘linked poem’, and writing a renga requires a partner, or partners. […]
In our final challenge with the Bloodaxe Archive, we’re asking you to pay attention – almost as if you were making your own archive. Note down and photograph your week, and use the materials you gather to create a new poem(s). Find out more… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems […]
How does it feel to be surrounded by dire climate news and extreme weather? With our friends at the Freud Museum London, we’re asking young poets everywhere what impact the climate emergency has had on them. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, […]
In our third Bloodaxe Archive challenge, we’re inviting you to radically re-draft someone else’s poem from the Bloodaxe Archive… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judges: Lucy Ansell, Hero Bain, Jessica Brown, Jack Cooper, […]
Young Poets Network is delighted to team up with Artlyst, the UK’s leading art information website, to challenge you to write ekphrastic poems. What is an ekphrastic poem? Keep reading… This challenge is now closed. Thank you to everyone who submitted, and a huge congratulations to the winners and the poets on the longlist, whose […]
Poet Sinéad Morrissey asks maybe the most fundamental question about poetry: what’s the point of all that white space? Show us what you think with your creative responses! This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the […]
Young Poets Network has teamed up with Newcastle University to explore the archives of Bloodaxe Books, one of the UK’s leading poetry publishers. This winter, we’re challenging young poets everywhere to delve into the specially designed digital version of the Bloodaxe archive and respond creatively to four brand new writing challenges. This challenge is now […]
We’re teaming up with Little Angel Theatre to challenge you to get inspired by Edward Lear and Little Angel Theatre’s production of ‘The Dong with a Luminous Nose’ and write nonsense poetry. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets […]
In our last August challenge of 2019, former Foyle Young Poet and Chicago Youth Laureate Kara Jackson is challenging young poets everywhere to write questioning, interrogating, cross-examining poems. This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the […]
For your third August challenge of 2019, explore poems about poems with Foyle Young Poet Danique Bailey. Find out what meta-poetry is and pen some of your own clever verse for the chance to win publication! This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, […]
In our second August challenge of 2019 former Foyle Young Poet Fiyinfoluwa Oladipo challenges young poets to write a poem in the form of a how-to guide… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar. Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judge, […]
Welcome to the first of four August challenges in 2019! Every week in August a Foyle Young Poet will challenge you to write a different type of poem. To kick us off, Andrew Pettigrew is challenging you to write a poem that captures a moment. Find out how… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to […]
The fifth annual Timothy Corsellis Prize for poetry in response to poets of the Second World War is now closed for entries. Thanks so much to all the entrants this year and congratulations to the winners, whose poems you can read in the sidebar! Congratulations, too, to the longlisted poets whose work impressed the judges: […]
Ever wanted to translate a poem? We’ve teamed up with Clare Pollard, editor of Modern Poetry in Translation, to challenge young writers to do just that. You don’t need to know any other languages to take part – find out more below… This challenge is now closed. Congratulations to the winners whose translations you can […]
On Sunday 20 July 1969 the very first humans stepped out onto the moon. To mark 50 years since the moon landings, we’re challenging young writers and spoken word artists to create poems about the moon and its place in world culture and history. Winning poets will be part of the Moon Festival: the largest […]
Mary on the Green is a campaign to erect a statue of Mary Wollstonecraft in Newington Green, London. But who is Mary Wollstonecraft? Writer Bee Rowlatt from Mary on the Green is here to help us find out more – and to challenge you to write poems about this Enlightenment philosopher who helped create the […]
Since 1 May 2009, Carol Ann Duffy has been the United Kingdom’s Poet Laureate. Her time as Poet Laureate is coming to an end this April, and to celebrate her work and her time as Laureate we’re challenging young writers everywhere to craft poems in response to Duffy’s writing. This challenge is now closed and […]
Acclaimed US poet, teacher and editor Peter Kahn explains the new poetic form that Ravi Shankar calls the ‘21st century sonnet’ – and challenges you to write your own. Congratulations to the winners of this challenge, selected by poet Peter Kahn: you can read their poems in the sidebar. We also congratulate poets whose work […]
How are poems like memes? Poet Rishi Dastidar thinks about how these strange, self-replicating internet things can be likened to writing, and challenges you to create poems inspired by memes. Let’s start with a picture that you probably know: Although it really doesn’t feel like itself until we do something with it. Like perhaps: […]
This winter we’re challenging young poets everywhere to write about our fir-y friends: trees! We’re delighted to share seven exciting prompts to help inspire your tree-writing. Read on and get scribbling… In the northern hemisphere, winter is in full swing and we’re thinking about trees. Many of them have already shivered off their leafy coats […]
Could you be one of the Bletchley set? Poet So Mayer takes us into the Bletchley Park archives and invites young poets everywhere to try a number of cleverly coded writing exercises. Write in response to one or more of these, or simply write a poem inspired by the work at Bletchley Park. This challenge […]
Welcome to our fourth and final August challenge for 2018! This week, Foyle Young Poet Aidan Forster invites you to create poems using contemporary and local language. Could you write a poem out of online jargon? A poem incorporating your favourite song lyrics? And how will your choice of words reflect your identity? Read on […]
In our third August challenge of 2018, Damayanti Chatterjee, one of this year’s two Foyle Young Poets interns, asks young writers to think about their relationship with their country. She explores how poets of the Second World War interrogate national identity and challenges you to respond. “What can the England of 1840 have in common […]
Welcome to our second August challenge of 2018! Rummage through your bookshelves and ransack the library – this week Foyle Young Poet Bailey Blackburn is challenging writers to make poems out of already-published texts. Find August challenge #1 here. When I first began writing poetry, I was often terrified by the concept of the blank […]
Welcome to the first of four August challenges in 2018! Every week in August a Foyle Young Poet will challenge you to write a new kind of poem. This week Enshia Li is exploring the unusual mutant world of the prose poem! And remember, if you’re confused by any definitions you can check out our […]
The fifth annual Timothy Corsellis Prize for poetry and essays is now closed for entries. Thanks to all our entrants and read the winning poems on the side of this page. Timothy Corsellis was a young poet and pilot killed in 1941. The Prize was set up in his name, with the support of his […]
Young Poets Network is once again teaming up with the Freud Museum to bring you a new challenge inspired by their upcoming Weekend of Discontent. Imagine that the year is 1938, eighty years ago. Europe is brimming with tension. The anti-Jewish Nazi party in Germany, having gained power in 1933, have just annexed Austria. Thousands […]
Who was W.S. Graham? What will be your new language? Are you going to try your best on silence? To celebrate W.S. Graham’s centenary, we’re searching for poems inspired by his enigmatic and inviting work. Poet Rachael Boast introduces WSG and offers prompts to kick-start your writing in this new challenge. This morning I am […]
Feel inspired, angry, and polemical about a topic which has the potential to ignite us all. Young Poets Network have teamed up with End Hunger UK to call for poetic responses to the scandal of UK hunger. This challenge is now closed: read the winners in the anthology below. Did you know that 14 […]
To mark International Women’s Day and 100 years since some women got the vote in the UK, former Foyle Young Poet Ankita Saxena is challenging you to make yourself heard! We want you to write protest poems using a classic device of both poetry and protest: repetition. Votes for Women In 1908, two early suffragettes interrupted a […]
We are delighted to present the Thinking Outside the Penalty Box anthology, including the winning poems in this challenge. Though the challenge is now closed, read the poems and the challenge to get inspired to write your own poems inspired by extraordinary African lives in football. Lizzy Attree and poet Nick Makoha have been working with […]
Chris Meade asks young poets to write about all the things they’ve nearly done… or will nearly do. Nearlyologists call on all people to share freely and openly one with another who they really and nearly are… Once others decided which were real writers deserving reproduction. Today we are nearlywriters, able to amplify and illuminate […]
We launch a new challenge based around the classic poem ‘Timothy Winters’ in celebration of poet Charles Causley’s centenary. Charles Causley 2017 is the centenary of Charles Causley’s birth. Born and raised in Cornwall, he was a poet whose work for adults and children ranged across war poetry, religious poetry, eco poetry and protest poetry. […]
Gather round the fire as Young Poets Network launches a festive new short poem challenge themed around wish lists… The gift-giving season is nigh! As the nights creep in earlier and earlier, here at Poetry Towers we’re all looking forward to sharing food, presents and frivolity with our nearest and dearest. We’re asking young writers […]
Following the brilliant poems we received for our Ways to be wilder challenge in 2016, we’ve partnered up once again with the charity People Need Nature and T. S. Eliot Prize-winning poet Jen Hadfield. This time we’re asking you to consider the names we use every day and the histories lurking behind them. The poet Don Paterson says, ‘Every […]
Thursday 21 September 2017 marks the 80th anniversary of the publication of J. R. R. Tolkien’s classic The Hobbit. To celebrate, we’re challenging you to write and send in your own fiendish riddles. Riddles are poems which describe something (or someone) without naming it. The intrigue of a riddle is trying to guess the object, […]
The August challenges are designed by Foyle Young Poets to send you into a fever of creativity over the summer. In this year’s last August challenge, Foyle intern Zainab Ismail asks our younger poets to play with shape and pour us a concrete poem… I remember the tall minarets of Morocco many summers ago. Prayers […]
The August challenges are designed by Foyle Young Poets to send you into a fever of creativity over the summer. Foyler Marina McCready encourages you to write a poem for the Timothy Corsellis Prize by asking how much (or how little) free will exists in conflict and war… In war poetry, one recurring theme is free will, or […]
The August challenges are designed by Foyle Young Poets to send you into a fever of creativity over the summer. In our second challenge, Daniel Blokh inspires you to immerse your reader in a particular place – from weeping willows to snowswept mountains… As a first-generation American, I have always loved hearing my parents’ stories […]
The August challenges are designed by Foyle Young Poets to send you into a fever of creativity over the summer. First off, four-time-Foyler Magnus Dixon takes us to the rich, mysterious edges of our familiar places… In this August challenge, I would like you to take me on a journey to your edgelands, the forgotten […]
We are delighted to announce the launch of the fourth annual Timothy Corsellis Prize! Timothy Corsellis was a young poet and pilot killed in 1941. The Prize was set up in his name, with the support of his family, to encourage more people to read the powerful but lesser-known poets of the Second World War. […]
Young Poets Network has teamed up with the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, to present you with a challenge to write about the changing face of the Polar Regions. This challenge is now closed. You can read the winning poems in the sidebar, and in our beautiful anthology below: We asked our friends at the National […]
Young Poets Network has once again teamed up with Oxfam to bring you a challenge from poet Harry Man all about global inequality and climate change. This challenge is about thinking about what’s happening across the world to create new, daring and powerfully moving poetry to help support action on climate change. Whether it’s writing […]
The winning poems of this challenge, plus a commissioned poem by the challenge-writer, judge, and poet Helen Mort, can be read in our beautiful new anthology, below. Though I am the Universe is now closed for entries, you can still read the challenge below and write your own climate-inspired poems. To kick off Young Poets Network’s […]
For language-lovers, it might seem odd to focus on getting rid of words – but in this challenge celebrating the short poem, that’s exactly what we want you to do… Of course, we love poems that flower and flow across many stanzas, pages, even filling whole books. But there’s something about the brilliantly executed short […]
This winter, we’re asking for you for something a bit different – an alternative to the seasonal poem that’s full of puddings, parties and snow.
For poems capturing the sights and sounds of the Great Fire of London.
We’ve teamed up with English National Ballet to bring you a tantalizing challenge based around Akram Khan’s new production of Giselle, a tale of love, betrayal and redemption.
In our fourth and final August challenge, Mikaela Carmichael asks you to explore the stories and characters of different languages.
In our third August Challenge, Lauren Maltas encourages you to explore ideas of contradiction and nonconformity in poetry, focusing on the work of Russian author Anna Akhmatova.
In our second August Challenge, Chloe Smith, a 2015 Foyle Young Poet, asks you to focus on specific moments to create vivid, unforgettable poems.
Ben Read, a 2015 Foyle Young Poet, challenges you to experiment with truth and lies to create poetry that twists, turns and deceives…
Our prestigious annual prize celebrating work which explores and responds to poetry of the Second World War
Send us your creative responses to the world beyond the stage lights!
Tap into your wild side with this challenge from People Need Nature and poet Jen Hadfield
Young Poets Network is joining forces with Oxfam to tackle global inequality and gender inequality through poetry!
We’ve teamed up with our friends at the National Trust to bring you a brand new poetry challenge all about memory and history – and what these mean to you.
This year is the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt that was fought between the English and the French. It was part of the Hundred Years’ War – which actually lasted for over 100 years! The battle took place on 25th October 1415 in Northern France. Won by the English who were led by […]
Poet Richard O’Brien explores the classic representation of the Battle of Agincourt in Shakespeare’s Henry V, and challenges you to write a poem rediscovering some of the more marginalised voices from this epic battle. Illustration by Alex Foster Power and Perspective Perhaps the most famous version of the story of Agincourt is Shakespeare’s play Henry […]
The Battle of Agincourt On St. Crispin’s Day (October 25th), 1415, an English army led by king Henry V defeated a much larger French force in battle near the French village of Agincourt. You can read all about the battle here. Between seven and ten thousand French soldiers were killed, with England’s losses estimated by […]
December is finally with us! Here at Poetry Towers, we’re really starting to feel the bite of winter. Hurrying to work, our coat collars turned up against the cold, we’ve been gulping down warming mugs of hot chocolate, shaking the moths out of our woolliest mittens, and even sporting the odd tartan blanket over […]
This year is the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt that was fought between the English and the French. It was part of the Hundred Years’ War – which actually lasted for over 100 years! The battle took place on 25th October 1415 in Northern France. Won by the English who were led by […]
Laura Furner, a former Foyle winner, sets the second of our four August challenges – a month of vivid and varied reading and writing tasks from Foyle Young Poets to get you inspired! This challenge encourages you to write a poem for the Timothy Corsellis Prize, by looking at the work of WWII poet John Jarmain. […]
Jessica Walker, a former Foyle Winner, introduces the first of our four August challenges – a month of inspiring writing tasks from Foyle Young Poets to get you reading and creating! This challenge asks you to write a poem featuring a vivid, jump-off-the-page character. It begins with a character, usually, and once he stands up on […]
The Museum of London tells us about pioneering female photographer Christina Broom, who captured many aspects of life in the first decades of the twentieth century, including the campaign for women’s right to vote. Then they challenge you to write your own poem capturing a moment of struggle, drama and change, as Broom did. Christina […]
After an extremely successful first year, the Timothy Corsellis Prize for poems responding to Second World War poetry returns, with a new Young Critics Prize running alongside the Poetry Prize. This competition is now closed. Catch up on the winning poems here! Last year, we were delighted to receive hundreds of entries for the inaugural […]
We have teamed up again with the Freud Museum in London to get you writing about that most resonant and influential of subjects – the unconscious.
The new mini-competition from Young Poets Network and the Museum of London is to write a poem capturing the sights and sounds of Sherlock Holmes’s Victorian London!
Young Poets Network teams up with The Reading Agency to get you writing about the huge importance of reading.
Discover the great master of haiku and haibun, Matsuo Basho, and experiment with the Japanese tradition of mixing haiku and prose.
It’s a real thrill to announce the latest writing challenge on Young Poets Network, in collaboration with the British Library – we want your poems on a Gothic theme! From Frankenstein’s monster to Dracula to Dr Jekyll’s transformation into the brutal Mr Hyde, take inspiration from this mysterious and macabre tradition.
Young Poets Network is delighted to be collaborating with The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, to get you writing about the astonishing avian world. Wing your poems our way and winners will be published online and sent prizes – if only we could do it by pigeon post…
Back when Young Poets Network first started, poet Matthew Sweeney wrote a brilliant feature about titles, and how they make all the difference to a poem. For the next challenge, we are asking you to read his advice below, and then have a go at renaming a famous poem.
Dominic Hale, a former Foyle winner, sets the second of our four August challenges – a month of vivid and varied reading and writing tasks from Foyle Young Poets to get you inspired! This challenge encourages you to write a poem for the Timothy Corsellis Prize, the new annual poetry award on Young Poets Network, by looking at the work of WWII poet Keith Douglas.
Phoebe Thomson introduces the first of our August challenges – a month of vivid and varied reading and writing tasks from Foyle Young Poets to get you inspired! This challenge asks you to write a poem on location.
Young Poets Network is very excited to announce the first annual Timothy Corsellis Prize, for poems responding to the Second World War. Discover some fascinating young soldier-poets and write a poem in response to their life or work. The lucky winners, chosen by judges from the Poetry Society, the Imperial War Museum and the War Poets Association, will receive cash prizes, poetry books, poetry posters and publication!
The team at the Freud Museum introduce the celebrated psychologist Sigmund Freud, and his writing about war and humankind – and challenge you to write a poem in response.
The team behind the new Shakespeare display at the Victoria and Albert Museum inspire you to inhabit one of Shakespeare’s characters in our new writing challenge.
As part of the celebrations for the Edith Sitwell Festival 2014, Charles Mundye discusses the poet’s life and work, and sets two intriguing and inspiring writing challenges!
Former Foyle Young Poet Helen Mort sets out her fourth and final poetry writing challenge, asking you to respond to images from Cape Farewell’s archive of photos, videos and blog posts.
Former Foyle Young Poet Helen Mort sets out her third poetry writing challenge, asking you to respond to images from Cape Farewell’s archive of photos, videos and blog posts.
Former Foyle Young Poet Helen Mort sets out her second poetry writing challenge, asking you to respond to images from Cape Farewell’s archive of photos, videos and blog posts.
Five-times-Foyle Young Poet and TS Eliot Prize-nominated Helen Mort introduces the first of her four poetry writing challenges, asking you to respond to images from Cape Farewell’s archive of photos, videos and blog posts.
Young Poets Network has teamed up with Free Word, who work at the meeting point of literature, literacy and free expression, to offer you the chance to write a new poem inspired by the theme of ‘trust’. Winners will receive prizes, publication and a reading opportunity – read on for further details, as Free Word tells us more about the idea of trust and the poetry challenge:
Lend your voice to the dawn chorus!
What would happen if La Belle Dame Sans Merci met the Jabberwock? Or if the Owl and the Pussycat met Macavity the Mystery Cat? For this workshop, which gets you thinking hard about point of view, we want you to imagine a meeting between two colourful characters from poetry!
Bed of fish, smooth path of ships, island-ring, realm of lobsters, slopes of the sea-king, whale-house, land of the ocean-noise, blood of the earth, frothing beer of the coastline… Debbie Potts explores the world of kennings – tiny, metaphorical riddles used by Viking and Anglo-Saxon poets – and challenges all you twenty-first century poets to create your own!
One hundred years ago, in September 1912 in the British Museum tea shop, London, Ezra Pound described his poet-friends H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) and Richard Aldington as imagistes…
We asked you to send us Olympic couplets which we could join together into a giant Olympic Relay Poem. We had an amazing response, read the poem and find your couplet!
We’re creating a giant relay poem to help prepare for the Olympics, and we’re asking you to contribute two lines! Plus our favourite three submissions will win Young Poet Network notebooks.
Daljit Nagra shows you how to write a poem using the Great Poetry Animator.
Young Poets Network is collaborating with the National Portrait Gallery for a new challenge, inviting you to write a history for one of the unknown faces in the Gallery’s Collection in their current display Imagined Lives: Portraits of unknown people.
Glyn Maxwell talks about the cross over between writing poetry and plays. The key is to inhabit the whole world in order to make your character real.
Think of your poems as a person going up to strangers and talking to them, what must the poem do to make people listen? Award winning poet Jack Underwood’s workshop will help write a new poem to engage your reader. Click “read on” to take part.
Meet Poetry Digest, the magazine that ices poems on cakes!
Write your own holiday-inspired ‘poem on a postcard’, and view Clare Pollard’s feedback on her favourite poems from last years Poetry Exchange.
Like Starlings is a project where poets collaborate to write poems in response to one another. This week Caleb Klaces, founder of Like Starlings, is offering you the chance to write your own Like Starlings style poem. Selected poems will be featured on the Young Poets Network website and five poets will receive Te Neves Notebooks.
Joelle Taylor reads her poem ‘No Man’s Land’ and invites you to write a poem inhabiting another character.
Can you write a poem that sticks to just one vowel? Take up Ross Sutherland’s challenge, inspired by the Oulipo movement of the 1960s.