The Fenland Poet Laureate Award
The Fenland Poet Laureate Award is an annual competition that seeks to discover and crown the next Poet Laureate for Fenland.
The award began in 2011 and is recognised as one of the most prestigious literary accolades in Cambridgeshire. Poets and writers at every stage of their writing career are welcome to submit. The competition has recognised previously unpublished newcomers, established names, and emerging talent.
The winning poet is awarded the honorary title of Fenland Poet Laureate, gaining a platform to showcase and share their work, and the opportunity to represent and promote Fenland poetry throughout their year in the role
A young people’s poetry award, for ages 11 – 17, runs alongside the main competition; the winner of whom will be crowned the Young Fenland Poet Laureate.
New for the 2026 awards, a Junior Poet Laureate competition has been introduced for primary-aged children.
Spoken word will also now be accepted for entry and the awards are free to enter.
Entry Criteria
How to enter
Spoken word entries can be submitted as video files up to a maximum of 5 minutes. They should be sent by email to Liv
The email should include your name and which category you are applying for, but please ensure your entry does not include your name.
For school entries, please shortlist and collate entries into one submission. All written entries must be typed. For the Junior Poet Laureate Award, there are to be no more than 3 entries per class.
The judges
Hetty Cliss
Hetty Cliss is a poet from the Cambridgeshire Fens and a graduate of UEA’s Creative Writing MA.
Her debut pamphlet (In)Habit is out with fourteen poems and her work can also be found in Banshee, And Other Poems, fourteen poems , Propel, and Bi+ Lines.
In 2024, she was the winner of the Ware Sonnet Prize.
Andrew McDonnell
Andrew McDonnell is course leader for degrees in English Literature and Creative Writing at University Centre Peterborough.
He holds a PhD in Creative & Critical writing and his research is on how the second-person pronoun in short fiction can be used for oppositional and disruptive narratives.
Andrew is a published writer of both short stories and poetry, with his collection The Somnambulist Cookbook published by Salt in 2019.
Elisabeth Sennitt Clough
Elisabeth Sennett Clough is an award-winning poet. She has written five full poetry collections and her most recently published collection My Name is Abilene was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection 2023.
A new collection, Sidewinder, is forthcoming in 2026 and was awarded a Society of Authors grant.
Elisabeth is an alumna of the Arvon/Jerwood mentorship scheme and was a Ledbury Emerging Poet.
Her debut novel, Shadow Sister, was longlisted for the Jenny Brown Associates Prize 2025 and will be published by Holand Press.