National Poetry Month Contest

Pecantown Poetry Writing Contest – April 2026

April is National Poetry Month

Pecantown Books & Brews presents

Voices
In Bloom

The Pecantown Poetry Writing Contest — 2026

April 1 – 30Submissions Open
May 13Winners Announced
JuneChapbook & Coffee Cups
Submit Your Poem

Your words
belong here.

We believe the heart of a poet lives in us all. This April, we’re inviting writers of all ages to capture big feelings and keen observations in verse.

For Adults

Open to all adult writers — no prior publication required. One, pocket-sized original poem per person, submitted anytime during April.

Open to All Adults

For Kids & Teens

Two age-range prompts designed especially for younger poets: one for ages 7–12 and one for teens 13 and up. We can’t wait to see the worlds you create on the page.

Ages 7–12 Ages 13+

The Judges

Winners will be selected by a panel of local poets and teachers who care deeply about prose and poetry, and appreciate the courage it takes to express yourself in writing. Judging will be blind, and based on adherence to the rules of the prompts, originality, and the ability of the poet to push the boundaries of language and form.

What Happens Next

All submitted poems become part of the Pecantown Chapbook — a printed collection available in store starting June. Winners are highlighted in store. Excerpts from winning poems will be featured on Pecantown’s coffee cups all summer long!

Three ways
your poem lives on.

Winners will be celebrated online, in-store – and in-hand, through chapbooks and coffee cups featuring your words, carried out into the world by Pecantown’s guests and customers.

In-Store Spotlight

Winners’ poems and names will be displayed at Pecantown Books & Brews throughout June. Your words on our walls, for every customer to read.

June in-store

On Coffee Cup

Lines from winning poems appear on Pecantown’s coffee cups beginning in June. Your verse, carried in the hands of readers and coffee drinkers all over town!

Cups available June

The Pecantown Chapbook

Every submitted poem will be included in the Pecantown Poetry Chapbook, a printed collection available in store starting June. A keepsake, a community document, a real book.

All entrants included

Here’s your
invitation.

Each category has its own prompt. Choose the one that belongs to you.

Adult Prompt · One Prompt, Any Form

What Are You Carrying?

Begin by making a list of everything you’re currently carrying in your purse or pocket, backpack or bag — down to the nitty-gritty: bits of lint, a melted tube of chapstick, receipts, loose change.


Next, imagine you are also carrying something that could not possibly be contained in your bag or pocket — like the house you grew up in, your first love, a deep feeling, a significant loss. Now write a poem using items and ideas from both : the real and the impossible.

A note on form: Make it short and pocket-sized – no more than 14 lines. Play with the shape of the poem on the page — the way you arrange words in space is part of the poem. Any form is welcome. Be sure to title your poem!
Ages 7–12

Kids Prompt 1 · Any Form, Up to 14 Lines

“If I Were ___”

Write a poem using any form, but no more than 14 lines total, beginning with the title “If I Were [blank].”


For example: “If I Were Made of Glass” or “If I Were a Monster.” Be as wild and creative as you can in filling in the blank. Explore the concept using highly visual and engaging language — help us see exactly what it would look like, feel like, and sound like.

Tip: The more unexpected your blank, the more exciting your poem. Think big and strange, or small and personal. Just express yourself!
Ages 13+

Teen Prompt 2 · Inspired by Gwendolyn Brooks

Write the Opposite

Read the poem below by celebrated poet Gwendolyn Brooks. Then re-write it using words that mean the opposite of those in the poem. Use your own first name — or the name of a friend or family member — in place of “Cynthia.”

Cynthia in the Snow

It SUSHES.
It hushes
The loudness in the road.
It flitter-twitters
And laughs away from me.
It laughs a lovely whiteness
And whitely whirs away,
To be
Some otherwhere,
Still white as milk or shirts.
So beautiful it hurts.

— Gwendolyn Brooks

One more rule: coin one new word of your own invention and use it anywhere in your poem — just as Brooks invented the word SUSHES. Make it a word the world has never seen before.

A note on “opposite”: Don’t worry about finding a perfect antonym for every single word. Let your imagination guide you — what feels like the opposite? The opposite of beautiful might be alarming or ordinary. There’s no wrong answer.

Need a little
inspiration?

Pick up one of these books at Pecantown, and stop in to discuss your prompt.

For Adults

A Poet’s Handbook

Mary Oliver

A warm, practical guide to the craft of poetry from one of America’s most beloved poets. Oliver writes about voice, imagery, and the habit of attention with characteristic grace and clarity.

Adventures in Form

Tom Chivers, ed.

A lively anthology exploring the possibilities of poetic form, from the traditional to the experimental. Perfect for writers curious about shape, structure, and the architecture of a poem on the page.

How to Write It

Anthony Anaxagorou

A bold, contemporary guide to writing poetry with confidence and intention. Anaxagorou addresses voice, identity, and the political power of the written word — essential reading for any serious poet.

For Kids & Teens

How to Write a Poem

Kwame Alexander & Deanna Nikaido

A joyful, interactive introduction to poetry from award-winning author Kwame Alexander. Full of prompts, examples, and encouragement for young writers finding their voice for the first time.

A Book of Nonsense

Edward Lear

The classic collection of limericks and nonsense verse that has delighted children for over 170 years. A wonderful reminder that poetry can be wildly, gloriously silly — and that made-up words are always welcome.

Pizza, Pigs, and Poetry

Jack Prelutsky

The beloved children’s poet shares his secrets in this playful how-to guide. Prelutsky shows young poets how to find ideas anywhere — from lunch to daydreams — and turn them into something wonderful.

Mark your
calendar.

April 1, 2026

Contest Opens

Submissions begin. All categories — adult and youth — open simultaneously.

April 30, 2026

Submissions Close

Last day to submit your poem. Midnight deadline. All entries must be received by end of day.

May 13, 2026

Winners Announced

Winners notified directly and announced in-store and online. Come celebrate with us!

June 2026

Chapbook & Cups

The Pecantown Poetry Chapbook is available in-store. Winning lines appear on our coffee cups all summer.

Ready? We are.

Write something
meaningful.

Submit one original poem — your own words, never before published — anytime between April 1 and April 30. Email your poem to poetry@pecantownbooks.com and include the prompt number/age group in the subject line. Be sure to include your name, age category, a contact number in the body of the email, too.

Submit Your Poem

Deadline: April 30, 2026  ·  All ages welcome  ·  No entry fee

About the Judges

“Winners will be selected by a panel of poets and teachers who love language and amplifying the voices of those brave enough to express their truest feelings and observations.”

Pecantown Books & Brews  ·  Your independent bookshop & local gathering place, fostering productive collisions since 2022.  ·  Seguin, Texas

Questions? Email poetry@pecantownbooks.com  ·  Contest runs April 1 – April 30, 2026

Contact Us

212 S Camp Street
Seguin, Texas 78155

830-491-9155

inquiries@pecantownbooks.com