Firecracker Awards


Celebrating the Best of Independently Published Literature

The CLMP Firecracker Awards for Independently Published Literature are given annually to celebrate the books and magazines that make a significant contribution to our literary culture and the publishers that strive to introduce important voices to readers far and wide. Prizes are awarded in the categories of Fiction, Creative Nonfiction, Poetry, Magazines/General Excellence, and Magazines/Best Debut. Each year, CLMP also awards the Lord Nose Award, given to a publisher or editor in recognition of a lifetime of work in literary publishing.

Each winner in the book categories will receive $2,000 ($1,000 for the press and $1,000 for the author or translator). Each winner in the magazine categories will receive $1,000. In addition, a national publicity campaign spotlights and promotes our winning titles each year. In partnership with the American Booksellers Association, promotional materials—including a press release and shelf talkers featuring the winning titles—are distributed to over 500 independent booksellers across the country. Winners are also promoted in CLMP’s newsletters, on our website, and through a dedicated social media campaign. The publishers of winning titles receive a free one-year membership to CLMP, and magazine winners receive a one-year CLMP Member subscription to Submittable.

Submissions for the 2026 Firecracker Awards will be accepted in fall 2025. See below for more information and guidelines.

2025 Firecracker Awards Winners

FICTION: Obligations to the Wounded by Mubanga Kalimamukwento, published by University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN-13: 978-0-8229-4836-0 | Distributor: Longleaf Services

From the Judges:

“Seldom does fiction so expertly capture the complications of queerness, family, dislocation, and culture. Obligations to the Wounded is a triumphant collection of unforgettable tales whose characters are as varied in identity as they are in experienced circumstances. With wit and cunning, the protagonists navigate the ever-present systems of oppression that encircle them and their relationships. Mubanga Kalimamukwento has written a stunning work of compassionate art worthy of our attention and emotions.”

Mubanga Kalimamukwento is the author of Obligations to the Wounded: Stories (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024). Kalimamukwento’s other books include The Shipikisha Club: A Novel (forthcoming from Dzanc Books, 2026), Another Mother Does Not Come When Yours Dies: Poems (Wayfarer Books, 2025), unmarked graves (Tusculum University Press, 2022), and The Mourning Bird (Jacana, 2019). Her creative work has also appeared in adda, Aster(ix), Isele Magazine, Contemporary Verse 2, Kweli, Overland, on Netflix, and elsewhere. Kalimamukwento founded Ubwali Literary Magazine, co-founded the Idembeka Creative Writing Workshop, and serves as a mentor at the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop.

The University of Pittsburgh Press, founded in 1936, publishes books in a wide range of scholarly and literary fields, including the Pitt Poetry Series, the Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize, the Donald Hall Prize for Poetry, and, in rotation with other university presses, the Cave Canem Poetry Prize. The press sponsors the Drue Heinz Literature Prize, which recognizes one collection of short fiction each year.

CREATIVE NONFICTION: Low: Notes on Art & Trash by Jaydra Johnson, published by Fonograf Editions
ISBN-13: 979-8-9875890-7-6 | Distributor: NYU Press

From the Judges:

“Jaydra Johnson’s Low is formally inventive, bringing together art criticism and memoir, words and art into a meticulously crafted essay collection. In stunningly lyrical prose, Johnson pays a finely hewn attention to that which our wasteful, capitalistic society discards and collapses the dichotomies of high and low art. Johnson writes with a tenderness towards her subjects, but not without sacrificing a direct, unflinching approach to her insights on class and waste. This book, as the interstitial pieces remind us, give us new rituals for looking, exposing the casually oppressive structures of our society and imbuing trash with a newfound sense of purpose. Fonograf Editions has produced a gorgeous book to match with gorgeously formatted pages, and collaged interstitials that underscore the meaning and message of Johnson’s playful, powerful work.”

Jaydra Johnson is the author of Low: Notes on Art and Trash (Fonograf Editions, 2024), which was chosen by Maggie Nelson as the winner of the Fonograf Editions essay collection contest. Johnson is a writer, visual artist, and educator whose work has appeared in Oxford American, Epoch Review, Guernica, and Sedition magazines, among others. She currently writes the Cliff Notes column for Variable West.

Fonograf Editions, founded in 2016 and based in Portland, Oregon, is a nonprofit independent record label and publisher of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. The press values the interdisciplinary, experimental, and unclassifiable and strives to bring to life works that resist, bend, and break expectations.

POETRY: Mirror Nation by Don Mee Choi, published by Wave Books
ISBN-13: 978-1-950268-93-1 | Distributor: Consortium Book Sales and Distribution

From the Judges:

“Don Mee Choi’s Mirror Nation is a virtuosic work exploring memory, loss, and grief inside the system of capitalist nation-states. Choi rearranges and expands language(s), numbers, signs, still and archival images in a project so singular that it expands the definition of poetry itself as it charts a poignant journey of meaning-making in the aftermath of empires’ repeated cycles of violence. Mirror Nation offers the best of what poetry can provide—a new way of seeing. Once you have read it, it will live in you and with you for the foreseeable future. Arriving at a crossroads in the American colonial project, this collection is both testament and testimony to the corrosive forces of empire.”

Don Mee Choi is the author of Mirror Nation (Wave Books, 2024). Choi’s other books include the National Book Award-winning collection DMZ Colony (Wave Books, 2020), Hardly War (Wave Books, 2016), The Morning News Is Exciting (Action Books, 2010), and several pamphlets of poems and essays. She is a recipient of fellowships from the MacArthur, Guggenheim, Lannan, and Whiting Foundations, as well as the DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program. She has translated several collections of Kim Hyesoon’s poetry, including Autobiography of Death (New Directions, 2018), which received the International Griffin Poetry Prize.

Wave Books, founded in 2005 and based in Seattle, Washington, is an independent poetry press dedicated to publishing exceptional contemporary poetry, poetry in translation, and writing by poets. Wave Books challenges the values and practices of readers and adds to the collective sense of what is possible in contemporary poetry.

MAGAZINES/BEST DEBUT: Revel
Distributor: Itasca Books

From the Judges:

“Coming to us from Atlanta, Revel dashes out of the gates as an assured, groundbreaking, and dynamic literary magazine. Publishing outstanding work in a range of poetic and prose styles from some of today’s most noteworthy luminaries and promising emerging writers, Revel prioritizes work that is sharp, clear, and urgent. Its elegant design further elevates the pleasure of reading a journal that should have a long and impactful trajectory.”

Revel, founded in 2024, is a biannual magazine published by Unbound Edition Press, and features new poetry, fiction, literary essays, criticism, and art. The magazine shares with its publisher the mission to respect and elevate emerging, underappreciated, and marginalized authors, with a strong commitment to advancing LGBTQ+ and BIPOC voices.

 

MAGAZINES/GENERAL EXCELLENCE: Circumference
Distributor: circumferencemag.com

From the Judges:

Circumference is a thrilling reminder of how the reader is ultimately a citizen of the republic of arts and letters, an enduring place that encompasses the globe and welcomes every person. The representation of different languages in the table of contents alone hints at the beautiful conversation nurtured in its pages, as the journal introduces the hungry reader to compelling voices from an array of cultures and nations that they otherwise may have never known about. In its majestic offerings of poetry and prose, we find perspectives that inspire, challenge, and push the boundaries of what literature can be. At a time when finding commonalities among differences feels more important than ever, Circumference is indispensable.”

Circumference, founded in 2020, is a biannual journal of poetry, translation and international culture. Circumference publishes new translations of poetry, drama, and essays, particularly—but not exclusively—from contemporary authors in the belief that translation is a vital part of public and artistic discourse.

 


2025 FIRECRACKER AWARDS FINALISTS

Fiction

Obligations to the Wounded by Mubanga Kalimamukwento, published by University of Pittsburgh Press
The World With Its Mouth Open by Zahid Rafiq, published by Tin House
Vague Predictions & Prophecies by Daisuke Shen, published by CLASH Books
Medusa of the Roses by Navid Sinaki, published by Grove Atlantic
Amphibian by Tyler Wetherall, published by Ig Publishing

Creative Nonfiction

We’re Alone by Edwidge Danticat, published by Graywolf Press
Fire Eater: A Translator’s Theology by Chloe Garcia Roberts, published by co•im•press
Low: Notes on Art & Trash by Jaydra Johnson, published by Fonograf Editions
Becoming Little Shell: A Landless Indian’s Journey Home by Chris La Tray, published by Milkweed Editions
Frighten the Horses by Oliver Radclyffe, published by Grove Atlantic

Poetry

Cloud Missives by Kenzie Allen, published by Tin House
Consider the Rooster by Oliver Baez Bendorf, published by Nightboat Books
Mirror Nation by Don Mee Choi, published by Wave Books
Besaydoo by Yalie Saweda Kamara, published by Milkweed Editions
A Domestic Lookbook by JoAnne McFarland, published by Grid Books

Magazines/Best Debut

Fruitslice
new words
Revel
Short Reads
The Weganda Review

Magazines/General Excellence

Aster(ix) Journal
Circumference
The Common
The Evergreen Review
The Hopkins Review
Joyland Magazine


2025 Firecracker Awards Judges

Fiction

Luis Alberto Correa, general manager at White Whale Bookstore
Juliana Lamy, author of You Were Watching from the Sand, published by Red Hen Press
Alejandro Varela, author of The Town of Babylon, published by Astra House

Creative Nonfiction

Sean Enfield, author of Holy American Burnout!, published by Split/Lip Press
Rosa Hernandez, marketing manager at Third Place Books
Alejandra Oliva, author of Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith, and Migration, published by Astra House

Poetry

Rob Arnold, executive director of Poets House
Truong Tran, author of book of the other: small in comparison, published by Kaya Press
Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, author of Kaan & Her Sisters, published by Trio House Press

Magazines

Amy Brady, former executive director and publisher of Orion Magazine
Alexandra Watson, executive editor of Apogee Journal
Oscar Villalon, editor of ZYZZYVA

 

 


Submissions for the 2026 Firecracker Awards will be accepted in fall 2025. See below for the 2025 submission guidelines (subject to change for 2026).

Submission Guidelines

  • There is no limit to the number of unique entries publishers may submit.
  • The entry fee is $65 ($55 for CLMP Members) for the first submission and $45 ($35 for CLMP Members) for each additional entry. Interested in becoming a CLMP Member? Join now.

Book Categories

  • Books must be published by an independent publisher during the 2024 calendar year.
  • Books of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction for adults are eligible. This includes English-language books from international publishers, books in translation, and graphic novels.
  • Self-published books, including books published with “hybrid” publishers in which authors pay for part or all of publication costs, are not eligible.
  • Children’s and young adult books are not eligible.
  • Anthologies are not eligible.
  • Posthumous submissions are not eligible. The author or translator must be living at the time of submission.
  • Entries should be submitted by the publisher. However, authors may submit their own books if the publisher consents to the entry of the book. If an author submits their book themselves, they must provide contact information for the publisher in the application. CLMP will only communicate with publishers about submitted books.

Magazine Categories

  • Magazines must be independent and literary in nature (primarily publishing fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, and/or literary reviews).
  • Magazines submitting in the General Excellence category must have published regularly for at least the past two years.
  • Magazines submitting in the Best Debut category must have launched in the 2023 or 2024 calendar years.
  • Both print and digital magazines are eligible.
  • Magazines may only be submitted in one category.

CLMP reserves the right to determine all submissions’ eligibility, and its decision will be final.

 

The Firecracker Awards are sponsored by

Bookshop.org logoHawthornden FoundationSubmittable