Announcements & Events

2024 Allegra Johnson Literary Prize Winners

The Writers’ Program is thrilled to announce Mary Knauf the winner of the 2024 Allegra Johnson Prize

The 2024 The Allegra Johnson Prize final judge panel included Writers’ Program instructors Erik Fuhrer, Antionette Van Sluytman, and Cole Kazdin.

From our semifinalists, the panel selected an excerpt from Mary Knauf’s novel “A Good Boy,” and an excerpt from Sheila Garcia Mazari’s novel “Of the Making and Markings of Heavy Blood” as the competition finalists. You can read their work and see the full list of nominees below.

Award benefactors Roberta J. M. Olson and Alexander B.V. Johnson selected Mary Knauf’s novel excerpt “A Good Boy” in conjunction with the judges as the recipient of this year’s prize.

The writing here is absolutely spectacular. I always hesitate with comparisons, because the author has a distinct voice, but the skillful pacing and sharp ear for dialogue reminded me of my favorite Dennis Lehane books. Strong craft and really compelling characters. I was pleasantly surprised by how dreamy, vivid, and moving the language and narrative remained. I could tell the author has a mature grasp of character voice and storytelling and the pacing effectively kept the narrative flowing, securing the reader's attention in the best way.

Testament to Mary Knauf’s novel-in-progress, according to the final judges

A luncheon was held on June 5, 2024 to honor the prize awardees and let them connect with the nominating instructors, prize benefactors, and each other.

Group photo from the 2024 Allegra Johnson Literary Prize luncheon

Along with this year’s winner Mary Knauf, the luncheon was attended by Mary’s nominating instructor Tempany Deckert, past years’ winners Hillary Yablon and Michael Hewitt, Assistant Dean of Academic Affairs Stephen Mucher, Writers’ Program Director Charlie Jensen, and award benefactors Roberta J.M. Olson and Alexander B.V. Johnson.

“A Good Boy”

          Baby dreams, according to Loren, were flashbacks to your time in the womb. They were fevered visions of red uterine walls and rays of amber light cutting through amniotic fluid. They felt warm. You could hear the soft echo of your mother’s heart beating and her stomach gurgling, the whoosh of her blood as it carried oxygen to you. But, he stressed, baby dreams didn’t happen when you were asleep. They happened when you were awake. You could summon one whenever you felt like. I asked him how.

          “By positioning your body in a very specific way,” he responded. I stopped at a red light and looked at him.

          “Okay, like how?” I asked, slightly impatient.

          “You do this,” he said as he closed his eyes. He then tucked the pinky finger of his left hand against his right rib, securing the pinky with his right elbow. There was silence in the car. Loren, always fidgeting, was still, his smooth brow meditative beneath wild, unkempt teenage boy hair. When the light turned green I hit the gas as gently as I could so as not to disturb him.

          His eyes fluttered open, dazed. “See? I was just there. Nice and cozy. I even felt like sucking my thumb.” I laughed and said he was full of it, but he stayed serious. “I swear,” he said. “I must have been positioned like this in the womb. The physical sensation of my pinky under the elbow triggers my baby brain which then triggers a baby dream.”

 “Of the Making and Markings of Heavy Blood”

Magali had the funny thought then that when it came to grief, Dalé’s was like instant coffee, dissolving into his day-to-day routine, the sting felt for just a moment before he and the grief became one. Magali was like tea. Steeped into oblivion because that was the way Doña Maria Candelaria had taught her to brew tea and now, she could not fathom taking the teabag out before she finished her mug. Back then, Magali had grieved with her father, exchanging stories, crying freely, and making each other laugh. When her father had died, well, there was no one to grieve with other than herself.

About the Allegra Johnson Prize

Allegra Johnson and her dog outside in the sunshine

The Allegra Johnson Prize in Memoir and Novel Writing was created in 2014 by Roberta J.M. Olson and Alexander B.V. Johnson to honor their daughter, a prolific and talented young writer who was working on a memoir and a novel through the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program when her life was tragically cut short.

This merit-based and instructor-nominated award was created by her parents in the spirit of making a difference in the lives of promising Writers’ Program students in memoir and novel writing.

Image: Allegra Johnson

2024 Allegra Johnson Prize Semifinalists & Nominees

Sonja Berry, nominated by Brian Sonia-Wallace

Carolyn A. Fox, Master Class in Creative Nonfiction

Peter Giannini, nominated by Eileen Cronin

Gabriela Kruschewsky, nominated by Rosebud Ben-Oni

Julia Morris, nominated by Francesca Lia Block

Iraj Isaac Rahmim, Master Class in Novel Writing

Abigail Salcido, nominated by Melissa Larsen

Stacy Suaya, nominated by Henry Lien

Anthony Beightol, nominated by Stephen van Dyck

Linda Bird, nominated by Eileen Cronin

Linda Bird, nominated by Shawna Kenney

Gabino Cabanilla, nominated by Brian Sonia-Wallace

Cari Cannon, nominated by Shawna Kenney

Sue Cardenas-Soto, nominated by Gordon Grice

Juan-Carlos Cruz, nominated by Mark Sarvas

Georgianna de la Torre, nominated by Gordon Grice

Catherine Dorrough, nominated by Malia Márquez

Job Eagleson, nominated by Chris L. Terry

Amanda Espy, nominated by Aatif Rashid

Matt Garabedian, nominated by Kris Neri

Nikki Gordon, nominated by Shawna Kenney

Mitko Grigorov, nominated by Robert Eversz

Megan Guthrie-Wedemeyer, nominated by Aatif Rashid

Thomas Halloran, nominated by Jessica Barksdale

Sarah Ho, nominated by Eduardo Santiago

Heather Hund, nominated by Malia Márquez

Mark Hünken, nominated by Robert Eversz

Jacob Lopez, nominated by Wally Rudolph

Ken Luer, Master Class in Novel Writing

Diane McDaniel, nominated by Amy Friedman

Ardia Morning, nominated by Melissa Larsen

Elizabeth Morwick, nominated by Kris Neri

Moss Napoli, nominated by Henry Lien

Autumn Oyemade, nominated by Rosebud Ben-Oni

Lori Passarelli, Master Class in Creative Nonfiction

Sheryl Recinos, nominated by Robert Eversz

Phylise Smith, nominated by Mark Sarvas

Richard Solla, nominated by Malia Márquez

Jessica Stillwell, nominated by Tempany Deckert

Jason Tanamor, nominated by Jessica Barksdale

Ann Wagner, nominated by Robert Eversz

David Whiteside, Master Class in Creative Nonfiction

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