2025 Live Canon Poetry competition: Nigerian writer Ogunrinde gains global recognition

• Laughter — Oyelola Ogunrinde

Nigerian journalist and writer Oyelola Ogunrinde has been longlisted for the 2025 Live Canon International Poetry Competition, a prestigious UK-based literary award that has celebrated poetic excellence for over a decade.

The competition, known for its rigorous judging process and emphasis on technical mastery, emotional resonance, and originality, received thousands of entries from poets across the world this year.

Being longlisted, organisers noted, is a mark of exceptional literary quality and creative distinction.

The overall winner, Lauren Thomas, clinched the top spot with her poem “The Beekeeper of Heligan.”

The announcement was made during an online ceremony on Thursday, 23rd October 2025, by guest judge Nina Murray, an acclaimed poet and translator known for her evocative and thought-provoking works.

Murray commended the high calibre of submissions and the thematic diversity reflected in the finalists’ poems, noting that the entries captured a wide spectrum of human emotion, nature, and modern experience.

Ogunrinde’s longlisted poem, titled “Laughter,” stands among an impressive selection of works featured in the 2025 Live Canon Anthology, available via Live Canon’s official website.

Past winners of the competition include Inua Ellams, the Nigerian-British poet who took home the prize in 2014.

This year’s shortlist featured works such as “The Beekeeper of Heligan” by Lauren Thomas, “Rewilding at the End of the World” by Jen Feroze, “Pheasant Eggs” by Miles Gibson, and “The Gleaners” by Vasiliki Albedo, among others.

Ogunrinde’s recognition adds to the growing list of Nigerian writers making waves on the global literary stage, reinforcing the country’s vibrant contribution to contemporary poetry.

Shortlist

Blow — Nicky Kippax

Bycatch — Caroline Smith

E = mc² — Kate Fenwick

How Fungi Unmake and Remake the World and It’s Holy — Anne Cooper

Pheasant Eggs — Miles Gibson

Rewilding at the End of the World — Jen Feroze

The Beekeeper of Heligan — Lauren Thomas

The Cows on Testing Day — Ilse Pedler

The Final Foley Session: Climate Emergency — Jane Thomas

The Gleaners — Vasiliki Albedo

The Old People’s Home at the End of the World — Anna Bowles

To Mr Edwards (Physics) — Oenone Thomas

We Never Found the River — Laura Theis

Longlist

A Boy Scout Memory — Matthew McDermott

Angels Have Blue Feet — Lesley Saunders

Ascension Day — Martin Yates

Asclepius — Bex Hainsworth

Colourless Green Ideas Sleep Furiously — Brett van Toen

Dinger, Short for Schrödinger — Sharon Black

Dogwhelk — Claire Barnes

Don’t Love Me — Mehmet Izbudak

Even in Pristina We Get Ready for Winter — Lesley Sharpe

Family Matters — Julia Webb

Gaia Returns to Work After Maternity Leave — Karan Chambers

How to Ferment Your Past — Denise O’Hagan

I Am a Nothing-Doer — Katie Griffiths

If I’m Only a Handbag, You Might Be One Too — Aileen La Tourette

Laughter — Oyelola Ogunrinde

Leicester Car Parks — Julie Runacres

Love Map – A Zuihitsu — Vanessa Lampert

Mount Famine — Mark Totterdell

My Dad Wins the Charles Lindbergh Award for Driving to East Midlands Airport So Early the Terminal Has Yet to Be Built — Jeanette Burton

Oscar’s Boat — Mary Mulholland

Pitching God — Deborah Finding

Playing Among Ruins — David Clark

Self Portrait as All the Saints — Sue Burge

Slow — Ruth Sharman

Special Clinic — Lydia Kennaway

The Bowling Action of Muttiah Muralitharan — Sarah Gibbons

The Disaster Planner Enjoys Dessert — Suzanna Fitzpatrick

The Resurrection of the Tasmanian Tiger — David Underdown

The Shark God — Paul Terence Carney

The Story Is Rain — Jeff Bien

The Underside of Pigeons — Amelia Dowler

This Cuckoo from Harappa — Rishika Williams

Threads — Karis Williamson

To a Magnolia — Oliver Dixon

Towards the End — Penny Sharman

When a Sindhi Woman Dies, So Does a Book — Sapna Bhavnani

Wild Carrot Wild Mustard — Ger Duffy

Wrecked — Lesley Curwen

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Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

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