MILES COON, Founder & President (January 1938 – May 2022)

May 22, 2022 – Palm Beach, Florida — It is with deep sadness that we report that our Festival Founder & President, Miles Coon, passed away peacefully on Saturday, May 21, 2022 in Palm Beach. He leaves behind his loving family, including his wife Mimi, son Matthew, daughter Jennifer, and grandson Elias.

Miles was a brilliant student, lawyer, writer, and poet. His sense of humor and wit were always at the ready, especially in the puns he shared with delight. He graduated with highest honors from the University of Virginia in 1959 and Harvard law school in 1962. He practiced law for several years, and ran a manufacturing business for 30 years, which he sold, thereafter turning his attention to poetry.

Since that time, Miles became even more involved with poetry. He attended writing conferences and workshops as a self-described “poetry junkie” and entered the Sarah Lawrence MFA program where he worked with Thomas Lux who became a beloved teacher, mentor, and advisor. Miles’ poems appeared widely in many journals and magazines. He received his MFA in 2002.

In 2005 he founded the Palm Beach Poetry Festival and served as its President and Chairman of the Board. For 18 years, the festival has benefited greatly from his leadership, graciousness, and generosity. He has offered support to hundreds of aspiring poets who have attended the festival workshops, gifted partial and full scholarships and fellowships, and endeavored to honor the work and achievements of festival faculty and featured poets who presented workshops and readings each January.

Many articles and interviews have been published with Miles as primary spokesperson for the Festival. In 2014, when the festival hosted its first sitting U.S. Poet Laureate, Natasha Trethewey, South Florida PBS interviewed Miles for the Art Loft program. He spoke passionately and flawlessly about the ethos, mission, importance, and delights of poetry and the festival. You can listen to Miles speak from the heart in this PBS Interview.

Miles never abandoned writing his own poems. And we’re profoundly sad that he won’t be here to celebrate the publication of his first full-length collection, The Quotient of My Self Divided by My Self, forthcoming from Press 53 in June. However, a beautiful Interview with Miles by long-time festival poet Laure-Anne Bosselaar was recorded at the end of last year. In this recording, he speaks about the festival, the importance of poetry in his life, and of writing poems. He also reads some of the beautiful poems from his book.

Miles always liked to say that the festival would not be a festival without the participants, auditors, faculty, featured poets, interns, staff and friends who attend and give support. He believed passionately in the power of poetry and did great work to share that belief widely. That you are reading this message today is an affirmation of accomplishment of the mission he set for himself and for the festival.

Should you have memories you’d like to share of your past times with the festival, we ask you to post them on our website at this Festival Guestbook page, or on our Past Participants Facebook Group.

We will keep you informed about plans for a memorial to celebrate his life, and there will surely be a reading of the poems from his new book. We’ll send you the details as that comes clear.

Miles would want to thank you for your poems, your dreams, your interest, participation, and for the joy he found in gathering the poets together in South Florida. The boundless inspiration that we have found through this festival would not have been possible without Miles Coon. Rest in peace, dear friend.

 

Since that time, Miles became even more involved with poetry. He attended poetry conferences and workshops as a self-described “poetry junkie” and entered the Sarah Lawrence MFA program where he worked with Thomas Lux who became a beloved teacher, mentor, and advisor. Miles’ poems appeared widely in many poetry journals and magazines. He received his MFA in 2002.
In 2005 he founded the Palm Beach Poetry Festival and served as its President and Chairman of the Board. For 18 years, the festival has benefited greatly from his leadership, graciousness, and generosity. He has offered support to hundreds of aspiring poets who have attended the festival workshops, gifted partial and full scholarships and fellowships, and endeavored to honor the work and achievements of festival faculty and featured poets who presented workshops and readings each January.
Many articles and interviews have been published with Miles as primary spokesperson for the Festival. In 2014, when the festival hosted its first sitting U.S. Poet Laureate, Natasha Trethewey, South Florida PBS interviewed Miles for the Art Loft program. He spoke passionately and flawlessly about the ethos, mission, importance, and delights of poetry and the festival during the 10th Annual Festival. You can listen to Miles speak from the heart in this PBS Interview.
Over all these years, Miles never abandoned writing his own poems either. And though we’re deeply sad to say he won’t be here to celebrate the publication of his first full-length poetry collection, The Quotient of My Self Divided By My Self  which is forthcoming from Press 53 next month in June. A beautiful Interview with Miles conducted by long-time festival poet Laure-Anne Bosselaar was recorded at the end of last year. In this recording, he speaks about the festival, the importance of poetry in his life, and of writing poems. He also reads some of the beautiful poems from his book.
Miles always liked to say that the festival would not be a festival without YOU, the participants, auditors, faculty, featured poets, interns, staff and friends who attend and give support. He believed passionately in the power of poetry and did great work to share that belief widely. We affirm the accomplishment of the mission he set for himself and for the festival.
Should you have memories you’d like to share of your past times with the festival, we ask you to post them on our website at this Festival Guestbook page, or on our Past Participants Facebook Group.
Miles would want to thank every friend of the festival for the joy he found in gathering the poets together in South Florida. The boundless inspiration that we have found through this festival would not have been possible without Miles Coon. Rest in peace, dear friend.
Updates on plans for a memorial to celebrate his life, and a reading of the poems from his new book will follow.

2022 HIGH SCHOOL POETRY CONTEST (Applications Open October 15th-December 1st)

The 18th Annual Virtual Palm Beach Poetry Festival invites all Palm Beach County High School Students to send in one original poem.

  • The winner will receive $200 and a pair of tickets to the virtual Friday night reading event featuring Poet At Large Aimee Nezhukumatathil.
  • The four runners up will each receive $100 and a pair of tickets to the virtual Friday night reading event
  • All winners receive a one-year subscription to Poets and Writers Literary Journal
  • All of the prize-winning poems will be posted on the festival website: palmbeachpoetryfestival.org and will be included in press releases

ELIGIBILITY: All Palm Beach County High School Students, Grades 9-12 – Public, Private Charter Schools, and Home-School

RULES:

  1. Poems may be submitted October 15th through December 1, 2021, as follows:
  2. Submit one poem, 30 lines maximum, single-spaced, 12-point type.
  3. Your name, address, phone number, email address, name of high school, teacher’s name, and grade level will be entered as you complete the Submittable entry. All entries will be read blind using Submittable.
  4. By submitting a poem to the contest, the student agrees to be named in press releases and media stories about the contest and the festival.
  5. Your submission is an agreement that if selected as a winner, you will submit a video reading of the winning poem, and a headshot for promotional purposes.
  6. Any Submission containing profanity will be declined.

Submissions that do not adhere to these rules will be refused. Keep a copy of your poem, as the original will not be returned. Winners and runners up will be notified by January 1st, 2022.

DISTINGUISHED JUDGE:
Dr. Jeff Morgan, English Professor, College of Arts and Sciences, Lynn University, Boca Raton, Florida

Please see last year’s poets and their winning poems at the following link: https://www.palmbeachpoetryfestival.org/news/2021-high-school-poetry-contest-winners/

2020 High School Poetry Contest

The 17th Annual Virtual Palm Beach Poetry Festival invites all Palm Beach County High School Students to send in one original poem.

  • The winner will receive $200 and a pair of tickets to the virtual Friday night reading event featuring Poet At Large Brian Turner
  • The four runners up will each receive $100 and a pair of tickets to the virtual Friday night reading event
  • All winners receive a one-year subscription to Poets and Writers Literary Journal
  • All of the prize-winning poems will be posted on the festival website: palmbeachpoetryfestival.org and will be included in press releases

ELIGIBILITY: All Palm Beach County High School Students, Grades 9-12 – Public, Private Charter Schools, and Home-School

RULES:

  1. Poems may be submitted October 15th through December 1, 2020, as follows:
  2. Submit one poem, 30 lines maximum, single-spaced, 12-point type.
  3. Your name, address, phone number, email address, name of high school, teacher’s name, and grade level will be entered as you complete the Submittable entry. All entries will be read blind using Submittable.
  4. By submitting a poem to the contest, the student agrees to be named in press releases and media stories about the contest and the festival.
  5. Your submission is an agreement that if selected as a winner, you will submit a video reading of the winning poem, and a headshot for promotional purposes.
  6. Any Submission containing profanity will be declined.

Submissions that do not adhere to these rules will be refused. Keep a copy of your poem, as the original will not be returned. Winners and runners up will be notified by January 1st, 2021. Enter the Palm Beach Poetry Festival High School Poetry Contest using this link.

DISTINGUISHED JUDGE:
Dr. Jeff Morgan, English Professor, College of Arts and Sciences, Lynn University, Boca Raton, Florida

State of Florida Registration


Palm Beach Poetry Festival Registration Number CH42258,
is registered with the State of Florida
Department of Consumer Affairs.

A copy of Official Registration and Financial Information may be obtained from the Division of Consumer Services by calling toll-free within the state. Registration does not imply endorsement, approval, or recommendation by the state.

• 1-800-HELP-FLA (435-7352)                         • www.FloridaConsumerHelp.com

 

2020 Poet At Large, Patricia Smith

Patricia Smith
Photo ©Beowulf Sheehan

The festival Poet At Large will appear for a special evening reading on Friday, January 24th, and also present to high school students throughout Palm Beach County during festival week. This year’s Poet At Large is Patricia Smith. We anticipate that this program will reach one of the largest festival audiences in our history. It is an honor to welcome Patricia Smith to the festival in this new role to reach an important festival audience including teachers and students beyond the walls of the Crest Theatre.

OUR WORKSHOPS

Join us for six days of workshops, readings, talks on the craft of writing poems, manuscript conferences, panel discussion, social events and so much more. Apply today!

OUR POETRY WORKSHOPS

Festival workshops offer participants the perfect opportunity to focus on their work with other serious writers of poetry in a small group setting. The festival schedule, which includes afternoon craft talks and nightly poetry readings, is planned to support your writing and expand your experience of poetry with poets who are not only highly acclaimed, but renowned teachers of craft.

 

OM_0081_FotorOn a typical morning, after you pick up a coffee in the festival bookstore, participant time is devoted to a workshop where you may learn as much from the your fellow participants as you will from your workshop leader. On afternoon breaks in the balmy winter of Delray Beach, you may stroll along Atlantic Avenue, have lunch, before you attend a Craft Talk in the Crest Theatre, and ask your burning questions.

 

OM_0346_FotorThroughout the day, the Festival Bookstore is a gathering point for participants OM_0502_Fotorwhere Murder On The Beach, our official bookseller, manages the sale of books by faculty and featured poets, and consigns participants’ books for sale. We also provide a limited selection of snacks, water, coffee and tea for purchase and gather at the bookstore at various times during the week for participant open mics.

After the afternoon events, you may break for dinner and free time with friends and prepare for our nightly poetry readings headlined by our award-winning faculty poets.

All events take place at Crest Theater at Old School Square in Delray Beach, a place most past participants have described as their “poetry home” in Palm Beach. OM_0005_Fotor

 

2019 PALM BEACH POETRY FESTIVAL FELLOWSHIPS

2018 Beloved Poems Panel Audience

The Palm Beach Poetry Festival is pleased to announce it will offer three fellowships that provide full workshop tuition and lodging in Delray Beach for the upcoming 15th Annual Palm Beach Poetry Festival, January 21-26, 2019. The fellowships are offered to open the festival workshop doors widely to qualified poets and to ensure the festival’s workshops provide enriching experiences through working with poets from a wide variety of cultures.

The three fellowships are the Palm Beach Poetry Festival Langston Hughes Fellowship, the CantoMundo Palm Beach Poetry Festival Fellowship, and the Kundiman Palm Beach Poetry Festival Fellowship.

Each fellowship recipient will be an outstanding poet who will benefit from, and contribute to, participation in the workshop. A writing sample, letter of introduction, and description of need are an integral part of the application and selection process. Fellowships applications are now open. For details, please visit the links below to each for specifics, details and to apply. The deadline to apply for these fellowships is November 12, 2018.

The Palm Beach Poetry Festival – Langston Hughes Fellowship, includes the application fee, tuition, and lodging near the venue. The fellow will be an outstanding African American poet who will benefit from and contribute to participation in the workshop. A writing sample, letter of introduction, and description of need are an integral part of the application and selection process. Fellowships are open by application to poets who identify as Black or African American. Use this link to apply for the Palm Beach Poetry Festival Langston Hughes 2019 Fellowship.

CantoMundoCantoMundo nurtures and support the numerous aesthetic and philosophical approaches of Latinx poetry in the USA, and builds on the aesthetically, culturally, and linguistically diverse work of Latinx poets, who have historically—and with limited economic resources—formed supportive literary spaces. CantoMundo’s first gathering convened in 2010. Use this link to find out more about the CantoMundo /Palm Beach Poetry Festival 2019 Fellowship and to apply.

kundiman-stacked1

Kundiman is dedicated to the creation and cultivation of Asian American literature, offering a comprehensive spectrum of arts programming that gives writers opportunities to inscribe their own stories, transforming and enriching the American literary landscape. Use this link to find out more about the Kundiman / Palm Beach Poetry Festival 2019 Fellowship and to apply.

 

These fellowships are supported by the generous donations of individuals who wish to remain anonymous. In addition, the festival also offers a limited number of partial scholarships to applicants for whom the partial assistance makes it possible for them to attend. Email query must be made after applications are submitted.

We welcome inquiries from donors who may be interested in our efforts to expand the availability of these fellowships and seek to support the festival’s dedication to inclusiveness and enrichment of its workshops and public events. Donors may contribute to the PBPF Diversity Fellowship Fund,  established to support these efforts. Interested donors may contact Festival Director, Susan R. Williamson or Founder, Miles Coon.

Poets Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Elizabeth Acevedo, and Gabrielle Calvocoressi at 2018 Festival Gala

Craft Talk: Poets Ross Gay and Aimee Nezhukumatathil

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Left to Right: 2018 African American Fellow, Gabriel Ramirez; Festival Intern, Jose Vilar; Faculty Poet, Gabrielle Calvocoressi

2018 Kundiman Fellow Viplav Saini at Festival Bookstore

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FESTIVAL EVENT TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW

Visit the Schedule of Events page to order tickets online. Or, visit the Delray Beach Center for the Arts, Crest Theatre Box Office, 51 North Swinton Avenue, Delray Beach, FL 33444, or call 561-243-7922, Extension 1. Service charges apply for tickets purchased online.

Individual Event Ticket Prices are: $15 General Admission, $12 for seniors, and $10 for students. Student Group discounts available for groups of ten or more. Inquire with the Box Office about groups, or email us at news@palmbeachpoetryfestival.org.

Workshop Auditor and Participant Tuition includes admission to ticketed events.