Photo courtesy of Miley Lu
“In poetry, it’s important to keep secrets,” Miley Lu says. They will represent Vassar College at the Glascock Poetry Contest.
The 102th Kathryn Irene Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest will take place at Mount Holyoke College on April 3 and 4, 2025. It is the oldest continuously-running intercollegiate poetry contest in the country. This year, all of the contestants hail from either historically women’s colleges or gender-diverse women’s colleges. In the days leading up to the contest, Mount Holyoke News will be releasing digital-exclusive profiles of each poet-contestant.
By Melanie Duronio ’26
Staff Writer
Since they were in elementary school, Miley Lu has “always written stuff” as a tool of creative expression while growing up. Now, as a senior with an English major and creative writing concentration at Vassar College, they have honed their work to be showcased in this year’s Kathryn Irene Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest.
“I was so excited when I read that [nomination] email,” Lu said. “I’ll be honest, I really had a severe bout of imposter syndrome … But I’m still very, very excited for it, and at the end of the day, it’s an incredible opportunity. And I would never want to give that up.”
Lu was nominated for the Glascock Poetry Contest by her Vassar professors. She describes the college as “a beautiful place with wonderful people,” who provided a nurturing environment for her creative works. Lu credits her English professor Timothy Liu as a mentor, who “really changed my path in life.”
“He’s a wonderful poet and he is Chinese American, he’s gay, he’s queer … to meet him and to read his poetry was the first time in my life that I was like, ‘Wow, someone like me can do this for a job and a living,’” Lu said.
While writing, Lu often explores the inherent “mystery” and “confessional booth” aspect of poetry. Unlike when writing an essay or longer form story, Lu wants to leave their readers with an “aftertaste” of an emotion that is familiar yet indescribable.
With this, they hope the audience can work on “untangling” themselves.
“The tangliness means that there’s something to work apart,” they said. “And I think that’s what makes it important. Not even always to do the untangling, but to recognize that there is something to pry and to poke at.”
This does not stop Lu from keeping secrets of their own in their writing. When writing about a vulnerable topic, they find it is “almost too much to just come out and say it,” and prefer to take advantage of unreliable narration in their prose.
“In poetry, it’s important to keep secrets,” Lu said. “You have to keep a couple cards very close to your chest … you're telling a very intimate story and a very intimate truth, but you are still allowed to keep some things close to you and to ask the reader to figure it out.””
Lu will read four poems at the Glascock Contest: “mother : morpho : man”; “smoke point ekphrastic”; “on earth we weigh the same as ever. and”; and “落井 / 下石 (well-fall / cast stone).” She finds that her pieces often turn into portraits of her loved ones, such as her mother and her partner, although does not consider them as love poems in a traditional sense.
“The most important things to you in your life are often what comes out of your writing, whether you mean to or not,” Lu said. “A lot of my poems end up being, or trying to be, portraiture of my loved ones.
“I was told once by Timothy Liu that you have to make the beloved visible,” Lu said.You have to give details or memories or little things that are important and unmistakable, that make this person so that they are no one else.”
Moving forward, Lu finds the path of academia to be most appealing. She sees herself continuing to work in poetry as a professor and publishing a collection of her works one day.
“I would say I want to be a poet, but something I’ve been taught not to say is that,” Lu said. “Everyone who is a poet will say, ‘You’re a poet as long as you write poems.’”
Sofia Ramon ’27 contributed fact-checking.