CHESTERTOWN, MD (05/03/2013)(readMedia)-- Washington College is pleased to announce that Bond Richards of Norfolk, VA has been named a finalist for the 2013 Sophie Kerr Prize, awarded each year to the graduating senior determined to have the best ability and promise for future fulfillment in the field of literary endeavor. Valued at $61,192, it is the nation's largest literary prize awarded solely to undergraduate students.
The literary prize was established by a posthumous gift from Sophie Kerr, a prolific writer born in Denton, MD, about 30 miles from the Washington College campus. When it came time to pass her assets forward, Kerr bequeathed most of them to Washington College, where she had received an honorary degree (along with Eleanor Roosevelt) in 1942. From the original half-million dollars she left to the College at her death in 1965, the Sophie Kerr Endowment has over the years awarded some $1.5 million in prize money to promising young writers.
Richards is a member of two honor societies, Sigma Tau Delta, the International English Honor Society, and Phi Sigma Tau, the International Honor Society in Philosophy, and he works as the logic/philosophy tutor for the Office of Academic Skills at the College. His Sophie Kerr portfolio consists of three sections: poems, shorts stories and an excerpt from a screenplay about a man who accidentally discovers photographs of Sigmund Freud dressed in women's clothing. He hopes to one day make a living telling stories, in one form or another.
The College will announce the winner of the Sophie Kerr Prize at 7:30 p.m. on May 14 at the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore. The celebration will be free and open to the public and will include remarks by Daniel Dirda, the Pulitzer Prize-winning book critic at the Washington Post and readings by the five prize finalists.
Founded in 1782 under the patronage of George Washington, Washington College is a private, independent college of liberal arts and sciences located in colonial Chestertown on Maryland's Eastern Shore.