2022 Winner
”In Eat or We Both Starve Kennefick gives us a set of metaphysical explorations of what it means to hunger, both spiritually and physically. These questing poems are grounded by language that is both earthy and tactile. Unafraid to lean into the grotesqueness of the body, here we find a world where cannibals confess that 'Hunger...proved stronger than grief.' Keenly attuned to pleasure, too, here female experience is expressed with joyful abandon: 'Afterwards, our seams popping, we shriek with laughter.'" Jessica Traynor
Seamus Heaney Poetry Prize Guest Judge 2022
“When I was little my mother met Seamus Heaney in a restaurant and told him about my ambition to be a poet. 'But she already is,' he assured her and signed a napkin which I still have. Many years later, with much trepidation, I submitted my application for the Seamus Heaney Summer School, my first experience attending a residential poetry course. It had a transformational impact on my writing life, learning as I did from the late, great and much-missed Ciaran Carson, Sinéad Morrissey and Leontia Flynn. During the Summer School, I attended the ceremony for the Seamus Heaney First Collection Poetry Prize, won that year by Rachael Boast, so it feels like a full and magical circle that my book has now been given the same honour. I am so grateful to the judges and to all at the Seamus Heaney Centre, and excited too for future poets who will continue to be nourished by Heaney's legacy as I have been.”