Famous Poets SocietyThe Famous Poets Society (also known as the Christian Poets Guild[1]) was a vanity press[2][3] that organized a poetry contest and offered self-publishing services. Despite the company's claims to have awarded over $425,000 in cash prizes to selected poets over 8 years,[4] nearly all writers who submitted works were accepted regardless of artistic merit, and they were required to buy the anthology (described in one NBC4 story as resembling a "yearbook" and being printed on "Xerox paper"[5]) in which they appeared in order to receive a copy of it; in addition, they had to pay significant fees to attend the contests' award ceremonies.[6][7] The Winning Writers website lists the Famous Poets Society as service that aspiring poets should avoid,[1] while an article in the Boston Phoenix described it as an outright scam, stating that its presumptive founder "[had] been preying on the naïveté and vanity of poets for 20 years."[7] See alsoReferences
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