Katie Condon
is the author of Praying Naked, winner of the Charles B. Wheeler poetry prize (OSU / MAD CREEK BOOKS 2020). Her poetry has appeared in or is forthcoming from the New Yorker, American Poetry Review, and Ploughshares, as well as the Academy of American Poets’ anthology 100 Poems That Matter. Condon is the recipient of a 2025 National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, the 2023 Nadya Aisenberg fellowship from MacDowell, and served as the Creative Writing Fellow at Emory University from 2019 - 2020.
Condon holds an MFA in poetry from the University of Houston, and a PhD in English from the University of Tennessee. She is an assistant professor in the English department at Southern Methodist University, where she teaches creative writing and edits a line of poetry for Project Poëtica / Bridwell Press.
Praying Naked
Winner of the 2018 The Journal Charles B. Wheeler Poetry Prize
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Through language both reverent and reckless, Katie Condon’s debut collection renders the body a hymn. Praying Naked is Eden in the midst of the fall, the meat of the apple sweet as sex. In this collection, God is a hopeless and dangerous flirt, mothers die and are resurrected, and disappointing lovers run like hell for the margins. With effortless swagger and confessional candor, Condon lays bare the thrill of lust and its subsequent shame. In poems brimming with “the desire / to be desired” by men, by God, by lovers’ other women, by oneself, she renders a world in which wildflowers are coated in ash and dark bedrooms flicker with the blue-light of longing. Our speaker implores like an undressed wound: “is it wrong to feel a hurt kind of beautiful?” Ecstatic and incisive, Praying Naked is a daring sexual and spiritual reckoning by a breathtaking new poet.