Seymour Adelman Book Collector's Prize
Are you a collector - or maybe a collector in the making? Do you see value and coherence in a group of books that other people may not notice? We want to hear from you!
2024 Contest Rules:
- Deadline: Monday, April 8, 2024
- Submit:
- a concise statement (500-1000 words) explaining your book collection and how it began. See further explanation below (The Collection).
- an annotated bibliography including short descriptions for all items in the collection.
- your name, e-mail address, and class year.
- Send your essay and bibliography to Marianne Hansen at mhansen@brynmawr.edu.
More information for entering:
- The Collection may include books, manuscripts, and/or ephemera. It may focus on any theme or genre, a single author or illustrator, a publisher, a printing technique, or any other characteristic you can specify. Evaluation will be based on motivation, coherence of the collection, originality, accomplishment, and condition of the works entered. Monetary value is not a determining factor.
- The Interview. During your scheduled session with the judges, you will be able to show five sample books from your collection. Interviews will take place in early-mid April.
- Prizes. First prize is $500. Second prize is $250. Both prizes include a copy of John Carter's ABC for Book Collectors. The judges may decide to award more than one prize at any level, or not to award a prize at any level, depending on the number and quality of the entries. The top prize winner of the Adelman contest will be eligible for the t.
If you have any questions, want to know more about previous entries, or just want to talk about your collection, please write mhansen@brynmawr.edu.
About the Contest
The annual contest takes place during the spring semester and is open to all registered Bryn Mawr College undergraduates. Each contestant submits a concise statement (500-1000 words) explaining their collection and how it began, and an annotated bibliographic list of the collection. The annotated bibliography includes a citation and a descriptive entry or commentary for each item in the collection. Most collections include 20-50 books. The collection must be owned by the student. It may any theme or genre, a single author or illustrator, a publisher, a printing technique, or any other characteristic you can specify - and may include books, graphics, manuscripts, and/or ephemera.
Each finalist gives a short presentation and shows five examples from the collection to the judges. Evaluation is based on motivation, coherence of the collection, originality, accomplishment, and condition of the works entered. Monetary value is not a determining factor.
Most years there is a first and a second prize, but the judges may decide to award two firsts, two seconds, or any other combination of prizes. Winners are eligible to enter the National Collegiate Book Collecting Contest. Prizes are awarded at student award ceremonies and/or convocation.
A previous winner may enter again only if a different collection is submitted. A previous non-winning entry may be submitted again, although the collection must show growth since the first entry.
Previous winners and their collections are listed at the end of this page.
Seymour Adelman, who was Honorary Curator of Rare Books at Bryn Mawr College, gave his own collection of books and manuscripts to the Bryn Mawr College Library in 1976. Adelman believed that students are often collectors without realizing it, and he established the Seymour Adelman Book Collector's Prize in 1979 in order to encourage students to think about their books in a new way. This prize, which is sponsored by the Friends of the Bryn Mawr College Library, was first awarded in 1980.
For more information, please contact the Curator of Rare Books, Marianne Hansen.
Past Winners
Year | Prize | Name and Class Year | Subject of Collection |
---|---|---|---|
1980 | 1st Prize | Catherine E. Du Beau (1980) | Eclectic |
1980 | 1st Prize |
Leslie Victoria Kurke (1981) |
Classical Studies |
1981 |
1st Prize |
Pamela Carter (1982) |
Penguins |
1981 |
1st Prize |
Artemis Hionides (1982) |
Modern Greece |
1982 |
1st Prize |
Ruth Herold (1982) |
Herman Melville |
1982 |
2nd Prize |
Saba Bahar (1984) |
Alexandria |
1982 |
2nd Prize |
Sara Baughman (1982) |
Illustrated Works |
1983 |
1st Prize |
Eva Posfay (1984) |
Hungarian Poetry |
1983 |
1st Prize |
Hanna Rubin (1983) |
Classic Children's Books |
1984 |
1st Prize |
Marion M. Gartner (1985) |
King Arthur |
1985 |
1st Prize |
Anne J. Brownstein (1985) |
Poetry |
1986 |
1st Prize |
Alice Elizabeth Krinsky (1988) |
Lewis Carroll |
1987 | 1st Prize | Genevieve Bell (1990) | Australian Literature |
1987 |
1st Prize |
Robin Bernstein (1991) |
Bibles and Religious Literature |
1987 |
1st Prize |
Heather Harwood (1988) |
Classical Studies |
1989 |
1st Prize |
Elizabeth Knapp (1990) |
Folklore |
1990 |
1st Prize |
Catherine Barriger (1990) |
Spanish Novels by Women |
1990 |
1st Prize |
Lorrie Kim (1990) |
Female Authors |
1991 |
1st Prize |
Charlotte Troyanowski (1994) |
Historical Etiquette |
1991 |
2nd Prize |
Ina Warriner (1991) |
Souvenir Books about Finland |
1992 |
1st Prize |
Leili Towfigh (1992) |
Baha'i Faith |
1992 |
2nd Prize |
Sara Rubin (1992) |
African and African-American Writers |
1993 |
1st Prize |
Catherine C. Hoffman (1995) |
Lucy Maud Montgomery |
1993 |
2nd Prize |
Carrie LaSeur (1993) |
American West |
1993 |
2nd Prize |
Gretchen Maxeiner (1994) |
Latin Literature |
1994 |
1st Prize |
Jennifer K. Jackson (1994) |
Preserving the Past |
1994 |
2nd Prize |
Melanie Evans (1997) |
Children's Books |
1994 |
2nd Prize |
Joanna Reiner (1995) |
Tea |
1995 |
1st Prize |
Melissa Cohn (1997) |
Autograph Books |
1995 |
2nd Prize |
Gabrielle Costanzo (1997) |
Eclectic |
1996 |
1st Prize |
Brenda Fishman (1998) |
Learning Languages |
1996 |
2nd Prize |
Jane J. Park (1996) |
Asian-American Literature |
1996 |
2nd Prize |
Sara Wakefield (1997) |
Fairy Tales |
1997 |
1st Prize |
Robin Brenner (1999) |
Picture Books |
1997 |
2nd Prize |
Heather McLees (1998) |
Scottish History and Culture |
1997 |
3rd Prize |
Astrid Cook (1997) |
20th Century Books by Women |
1998 |
1st Prize |
Virginia Hutton (2000) |
|
1998 |
2nd Prize |
Rebecca Silverman (2001) |
|
1998 |
3rd Prize |
Jill Baron (2000) |
|
1999 |
1st Prize |
Elizabeth Scanlon (1999) |
Poetry |
2000 |
1st Prize |
Ada Palmer (2001) |
Distopia |
2000 |
2nd Prize |
Virginia Hutton (2000) |
Ghost Stories |
2001 |
1st Prize |
Elaine Massung (2004) |
Modern Fiction (firsts) |
2001 |
2nd Prize |
Jenny Lentz (2002) |
19th Century Writers |
2001 |
2nd Prize |
Amanda Pegg (2001) |
Science Fiction |
2002 |
1st Prize |
Jenny Lentz (2002) |
Nancy Drew |
2002 |
2nd Prize |
Susannah Smith (2003) |
Edward Gorey |
2002 |
2nd Prize | Sally Lemmon (2003) | Hawai'i |
2003 | 1st Prize | Susan Howson (2003) | Young Adult Classics |
2003 | 2nd Prize | Laura Nuffer (2005) | Anthropology |
2004 | 1st Prize | Lawral Wornek (2004) | Ballet |
2004 | 2nd Prize | Molly Tamulevich (2007) | Unexplained Phenomena |
2005 | 1st Prize | Elizabeth Kestler (2008) | Science Fiction / Fantasy |
2005 | 2nd Prize | Joanna Karpinski (2005) | The Titanic |
2006 | 1st Prize | Melody Brandston (2008) | Juvenile Series Fiction |
2006 | 2nd Prize | Meridel Newton (2006) | Anne McCaffrey |
2007 | 1st Prize | Vanessa Poggioli (2007) | New York, NY |
2007 | 2nd Prize | Christen Gore (2007) | Scottish Country Dance |
2008 | 1st Prize | Helen Cosgrove-Davies (2010) | Fashion |
2009 |
1st Prize |
Anna Van Brookhoven (2009) |
Children's Books |
2009 |
2nd Prize |
Megan Clark (2011) |
19th-Century Costume |
2009 | 2nd Prize | Jessica Schwartz (2009) | Seeing America |
2010 | 1st Prize | Madeline Birkner (2010) | Photography |
2010 | 2nd Prize | Helen Cosgrove-Davies (2010) | Knitting |
2011 |
1st Prize |
Maggie Stack (2011) |
Men and Women at Sea |
2011 |
2nd Prize |
Nicole Yulo (2011) |
Contemporary Picture Books |
2011 | 2nd Prize | Anne Harding (2012) | Books on Books |
2012 | Prize | Stephanie Trott |
Food Studies |
2013 | 1st Prize | Katherine Littrell (2014) | Early Modern Theater |
2013 | 2nd Prize | Lauren Malamed (2015) |
Zines |
2014 | Prize | Karuna Doraiswamy (2014) | South Asians in America |
2014 | Prize | Sophie Mankins (2014) | Young Adult Fantasy |
2015 | 1st Prize | Amy Miles (2015) | Natural History |
2015 | 2nd Prize | Anna Kalinsky (2015) | Etiquette Books |
2016 | Prize | Jo Dutilloy (2016) | Genre Classics and Spin-offs |
2016 |
Prize | Amy Wiedenfeld (2016) |
Nancy Drew |
2017 | 1st Prize | Alina van Ryzin (2017) | Photography Books |
2017 | 2nd Prize | Lily Jewell (2020) | Barnes and Noble Special Editions |
2018 | 1st Prize | Lou Longo (2021) | Shakespeare |
2018 | 2nd Prize | Musckaan Chauhan (2020) | Discontents of History: India and Its People |
2019 | 1st Prize | Iman Qazi (2019) | Pakistani authors |
2019 | 2nd Prize | Peyton Moriarty (2021) | World of Warcraft |
2020 | 1st Prize | Chloë Epstein (2021) | Comic Books and Graphic Novel |
2021 | 1st Prize | Viviana Freyer (2024) |
Banned and Challenged Books |
2022 | 1st Prize | Miles DeClue (2022) | Black Woman Protagonists |
2022 | 1st Prize | Ella Kotsen (2023) | Female Writers from Maine |
2022 | 2nd Prize | Madi Wyttenbach (2023) | Occult Books |
2022 | 2nd Prize | Hallie Ferguson (2024) |
Bodice Ripper Romance Novels |
2023 | 1st Prize | Audrey Cho |
The Romanovs |
2023 | 2nd Prize | Abby Agronov |
More Than a Joke: Harley Quinn and Community |
2024 | 1st Prize | Beatrice Stewart |
Literature of the AIDS Epidemic |
2024 | 2nd Prize | Alexis Longo |
(Select Favorites from a Collection of) Secondhand Poetry Books |
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