Congratulations to Maria McLeod, scholar, writer, and poet, on her poem, “A Destiny We Welcomed,” winning second place in the prestigious Fish Poetry Prize! The competition draws entries from around the world, and this year Maria’s poem was judged and selected by former U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins out of 1, 706 submissions—once more, congratulations, Maria!
Maria’s excellent interview with former contributor Evan Morgan Williams about his most recent collection, The Divide: Stories (Cornerstone Press), can be found in our 2026 issue—check it out!
Step 1: A poet submits his work. In September of 2022, Steve Deutsch submitted his poem, “Looking for America,” for consideration of publication in volume XXVII of the Clackamas Literary Review (CLR). Steve is the poetry editor of Centered Magazine and was the first poet-in-residence at Bellefonte Art Museum in Pennsylvania. He’s been nominated for the Pushcart Prize multiple times and won the Sinclair Poetry Prize for his full-length book, Brooklyn.
Step 2: Student editors select Steve’s poem for publication. Students enrolled in one of the English Department’s book publishing course offerings at Clackamas Community College in Oregon City, OR, who were learning all about publishing by working as assistant editors to publish the next volume of the award-winning and internationally-read Clackamas Literary Review, read, discussed at length, and were thrilled to acquire “Looking for America” for publication.
Step 3: A composer from the San Francisco Bay Area discovers Steve’s poem in the CLR. Martin Rokeach, a professional composer who had been commissioned by conductor Bruce Koliha to write a piece for chorus, had been searching for just the right poem—scouring the internet, visiting used book stores—to set to music. He had read over 200 poems and was coming up short. And then Dennis Lum, whose poems “Milky Way” and “The Answer Is No” were published in the same issue as “Looking for America,” and who happened to be Martin’s cousin-in-law, sent a copy of the CLR to his family to read. In Martin’s words, “I at last found what I needed in Steve’s ‘Looking for America.’” Martin reached out to the CLR’s managing editor about connecting with Steve regarding the exciting opportunity. The editor connected composer with poet, and the rest is, as they say, history.
Step 4: Composer sets poem to music. Martin wrote the music, to be performed by the San Ramon Valley Chorale, renaming it “Remembering We’re Alive.” It premiered in April 2025, nearly two years after the poem was first published in the CLR.
Step 5: Choral work wins a national music prize. Sacramento State’s Festival of New American Music, which received more than 230 submissions in four categories, selected only one choral work in the choir category. You guessed it: “Remembering We’re Alive.”
See how that works?
“Remembering We’re Alive,” adapted from Steve Deutsch’s poem “Looking for America,” originally published in volume XXVII of the Clackamas Literary Review and set to music by Martin Rokeach, will be performed November 2nd, 2025 at Sacramento State’s annual music festival.
“Looking for America,” by Steve Deutsch
Let us be best friends one last time—
roll out the old Ford and take
that trip we so often dreamed of
when young. Head to the west coast
on those two lane roads that once were America.
Remember when we were America too?
Fill that old Ford with chips and beer—
the radio set to the “Nothing but Oldies” Station,
loud enough to remind us we are still alive.
Swap lies with the locals in pubs on Main Street
and sample the biscuits and bacon in dozens of mom
and pop diners in what was once the heartland—
a thousand dots on a tattered gas station map
long ago bypassed and nearly forgotten.
And when the Ford throws a rod
in Kansas or Colorado, as of course
it must, we can unfold the aluminum
lawn chairs and sit on the berm to wait for the sunset.
Congratulations to Harry Newman, author of the excellent poem “Back” (CLR, 20th Anniversary Issue), on his first full-length poetry collection, Cliff Dwellers, winning the Gerald Cable Book Award! The book is scheduled for release August 15th, 2026, by Silverfish Review Press. Check it out!
Congratulations to Adam Tavel, whose poem “Training Fire” was featured in Volume XX of the CLR, and in his new book: CATAFALQUE. This collection also won the 2017 Richard Wilbur Award! Way to go University of Evansville Press for publishing this collection.
Two-time contributor Danielle Hanson’s new book, Fraying Edge of Sky, just won the Codhill Poetry Award! Included in the book is her poem “Saints,” which first appeared in our 2012 volume. Congratulations Danielle!!
Between the destruction of angels, creation of philosophers, and use of mythological creatures, Fraying Edge of Sky captures a side of the other-world humans don’t see into very often: “A walking stampede, slow and terrible. / The hospital for nonexistent children. / A mountain devouring clouds.” Hanson’s beautiful lyricism and shocking imagery coalesce in wonderment, in poems that play with the power of light and dark, ultimately haunting the pages that make up her magical book, reminding us over and over of how “We are giants over the fallen.”
We are thrilled to announce the Clackamas Literary Review is a recipient of the 2018 Oregon Literary Fellowship for Publishers! This is an incredible honor. Thank you Literary Arts!
And thanks to our poets and writers who trust us with their words. And to our unstoppable student editors who make sure those words get published. They are who make our work possible, and worth it.