Norma Farber First Book Award
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Norma Farber First Book Award
The Norma Farber First Book Award is given by the Poetry Society of America "for a first book of original poetry written by an American and published in either a hard or soft cover in a standard edition during the calendar year". Poetry Society of America Web site, Web page titled "PSA Annual Awards Guidelines", accessed October 28, 2006 The award was established by the family and friends of the poet and children's book author Norma Farber. The award comes with a $500 prize. Winners {, class="sortable" !Year !Winner !Title !Judge , - , 2020, , Zaina Alsous, , ''A Theory of Birds'' , , Matthew Shenoda , - , 2019, , Anna Maria Hong, , ''Age of Glass'' , , Geoffrey G. O’Brien , - , 2018, , Eve L. Ewing, , ''Electric Arches'' , , Elizabeth Macklin , - , 2017, , Vincent Toro, , ''Stereo. Island. Mosaic.'' , , Natalie Diaz , - , 2016, , Magdalena Zurawski, , '' ompanion Animal' , , Jennifer Moxley , - , 2015, , Cathy Linh Che, , ''Split'' , , Adrian Matejka , - , 2014, ...
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Poetry Society Of America
The Poetry Society of America is a literary organization founded in 1910 by poets, editors, and artists. It is the oldest poetry organization in the United States. Past members of the society have included such renowned poets as Witter Bynner, Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Marianne Moore, and Wallace Stevens. History In 1910, the Poetry Society of America held its first official meeting in the National Arts Club in Manhattan, which is still home to the organization today. Jessie Belle Rittenhouse, a founding member and Secretary of the PSA, documented the founding of the Poetry Society of America in her autobiography ''My House of Life'' writing "It was not, however, to be an organization in the formal sense of the word, but founded upon the salon idea, a place where poets would gather to read and discuss their work and that of their contemporaries, the group to be united largely through the hospitality of our hosts at whose apartments it was proposed we ...
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Emily Kendal Frey
Emily Kendal Frey (born January 20, 1976, in McLean, Virginia) is an American poet. Frey is the author of the full-length poetry collections ''The Grief Performance'' (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2011), ''Sorrow Arrow'' (Octopus Books, 2014), and ''LOVABILITY'' (Fonograf Editions, 2021); the chapbooks ''Frances'' (Poor Claudia, 2010), ''The New Planet'' (Mindmade Books, 2010), and ''Airport'' (Blue Hour, 2009); as well as three chapbook collaborations. Frey’s ''The Grief Performance'' was selected for the Cleveland State Poetry Center’s 2010 First Book Prize by Rae Armantrout. She also won the Poetry Society of America's 2012 Norma Farber First Book Award. Frey’s poetry also appears in journals such as ''Octopus'' and ''The Oregonian''. Frey received a B.A. from The Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and an M.F.A. from Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts. She lives in Portland, Oregon Portland (, ) is a port city in the Pacific Northwes ...
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Medbh McGuckian
Medbh McGuckian (born as Maeve McCaughan on 12 August 1950) is a poet from Northern Ireland. Biography She was born the third of six children as Maeve McCaughan to Hugh and Margaret McCaughan in North Belfast. Her father was a school headmaster and her mother an influential art and music enthusiast.Irish women writers: an A-to-Z guide by Alexander G. Gonzalez
p. 200. Greenwood Publishing Group, Westport, CT, 2006.
She was educated at Holy Family Primary School and and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1972 and a

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Cammy Thomas
Cammy Thomas is an American poet. Her first book, ''Cathedral of Wish,'' received the Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poetry Society of America. A fellowship from the Ragdale Foundation helped her complete her second, ''Inscriptions.'' Her third collection, ''Tremors'', appeared in 2021. All are published by Four Way Books. Two of her poems, under the title '' Far Past War'', were set to music by her sister, composer Augusta Read Thomas. The premiere of this choral work was performed by the Cathedral Choral Society at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. in March, 2022. Thomas currently lives in Bolton, Massachusetts. Published works Full-length poetry collections * ''Tremors'' (Four Way Books, 2021) * ''Inscriptions'' (Four Way Books, 2014) *''Cathedral of Wish'' (Four Way Books, 2005) Poems and links * ''Pandemic Poems'' (Indolent Books' ''What Rough Beast'' poem-a-day series, Oct., 2020) * ''The Crypt of the Capuchins'' (Image Journal, Issue 107) * ''The Bl ...
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Rosmarie Waldrop
Rosmarie Waldrop (born Rosmarie Sebald; August 24, 1935) is an American poet, novelist, translator, essayist and publisher. Born in Germany, she has lived in the United States since 1958 and has settled in Providence, Rhode Island since the late 1960s. Waldrop is a co-editor and publisher of Burning Deck Press. Early life in Germany Waldrop was born in Kitzingen am Main on August 24, 1935. Her father, Joseph Sebald, taught physical education at the town's high school. Towards the end of the Second World War, she joined a travelling theatre, but returned to school in early 1946. At school, she studied piano and flute and played in a youth orchestra. During Christmas in 1954, the orchestra gave a concert for American soldiers stationed at Kitzingen. After the performance, Keith Waldrop, a member of the audience, invited members of the orchestra to listen to his records. He and Rosmarie became friendly and worked together over the next few months, translating German poetry into Eng ...
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Kate Colby
Kate Colby (born 1974, Boston) is an American poet and essayist. She grew up in Massachusetts and received her undergraduate degree from Wesleyan UniversityWesleyan University Writing
and an MFA from California College of the Arts. In 1997, she moved to San Francisco, where she worked for several years as a curator at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, on the board of The LAB art space, and later as a grant writer and copyeditor. In 2008, she moved to Providence, Rhode Island, where she currently works as an editor and serves on the board of the Gloucester Writers Center in Massachusetts. Her poems and essays have appeared in ''A Public Space, Aufgabe'', ''The Awl'', ''Bennington Review, Boston Review'', ''Chicago Review, Denver Quarterly'', ''New American Writing'', ''The ...
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Thylias Moss
Thylias Moss (born February 27, 1954, in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American poet, writer, experimental filmmaker, sound artist and playwright of African Americans, African-American, Native Americans in the United States, Native American, and Europeans, European heritage. Her poetry has been published in a number of collections and anthologies, and she has also published essays, children's books, and plays. She is the pioneer of Limited Fork Theory, a literary theory concerned with the limitations and capacity of human understanding of art. Youth Moss was born Thylias Rebecca Brasier, in a working-class family in Ohio. Her father chose the name Thylias because he decided she needed a name that had not existed before. According to Moss, her first few years of life were happy, living with her family in the upstairs rooms of an older Jewish couple named Feldman (who Moss believes were Holocaust survivors). The Feldmans treated Moss like a grandchild. When Moss was five, the Feldmans so ...
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Catherine Imbriglio
Catherine Imbriglio is an American poet. Life Catherine was born and lives in Rhode Island. She graduated from Regis College, Boston College, Brown University, M.A. (creative writing), and Ph.D. 1995. She teaches at Brown University. Her work has appeared in ''American Letters & Commentary'', ''Caliban'', ''Center: A Journal of the Literary Arts'', ''Conjunctions'', ''Contemporary Literature'', ''Denver Quarterly'', ''Epoch'', ''First Intensity'', ''Indiana Review'', ''New American Writing'', ''No: A Journal of the Arts'', ''Pleiades'', ''WebConjunctions''. Awards * 2008 Norma Farber First Book Award The Norma Farber First Book Award is given by the Poetry Society of America "for a first book of original poetry written by an American and published in either a hard or soft cover in a standard edition during the calendar year". Poetry Society of A ... ''Parts of the Mass'' * Untermeyer fellowship in poetry * merit award in poetry from the RI State Council on the Arts * Brown Univ ...
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Martha Ronk
Martha Clare Ronk (born 1940 Cleveland, Ohio) is an American poet. Life She graduated from Wellesley College, and Yale University with a Ph.D. She taught at Colorado University and Otis College of Art and Design, and Naropa University Summer Writing Program. and Occidental College. She joined the Occidental faculty in 1981 and retired as a professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies in 2014. She has lived in Los Angeles since 1971. Awards * 2006 National Poetry Series * 2005 PEN USA award in poetry * Lynda Hull Poetry Award * 2002 The Denver Quarterly * Artist Residencies at the MacDowell Colony MacDowell is an artist's residency program in Peterborough, New Hampshire, United States, founded in 1907 by composer Edward MacDowell and his wife, pianist and philanthropist Marian MacDowell. Prior to July 2020, it was known as the MacDowell ... and Djerassi * MacArthur summer Research Grant * Mary Elvira Stevens Traveling Fellowship from Wellesley College * Gertrude Stei ...
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Richard Deming
Richard Deming is the Director of Creative Writing and a Senior Lecturer in English at Yale University, where he has taught since 2002. An American poet, theorist, and art critic, he is the author of five books: three books of criticism – ''Listening on All Sides: Toward an Emersonian Ethics of Reading'' (Stanford University Press, 2008), ''Art of the Ordinary: The Everyday Domain of Art, Film, Philosophy, and Poetry'' (Cornell University Press, 2018), and ''Orson Welles's Touch of Evil'' (British Film Institute/Bloomsbury, forthcoming) – as well as two collections of poems, ''Let's Not Call it Consequence'' (Shearsman Books, 2008) and ''Day for Night'' (Shearsman, 2016). He has also published essays in the collections ''Looking at Robert Gardner: Essays on His Films and Career'' (eds. William Rothman and Charles Warren, SUNY Press, 2016), ''A Power to Translate the World: New Essays on Emerson and International Culture'' (ed. Ricardo Miguel Alfonso, University Press of New En ...
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Edward Hirsch
Edward M. Hirsch (born January 20, 1950) is an American poet and critic who wrote a national bestseller about reading poetry. He has published nine books of poems, including ''The Living Fire: New and Selected Poems'' (2010), which brings together thirty-five years of work, and ''Gabriel: A Poem'' (2014), a book-length elegy for his son that ''The New Yorker'' called "a masterpiece of sorrow." He has also published five prose books about poetry. He is president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in New York City. Life Hirsch was born in Chicago. He had a childhood involvement with poetry, which he later explored at Grinnell College and the University of Pennsylvania, where he received a PhD in folklore. Hirsch was a professor of English at Wayne State University. In 1985, he joined the faculty at the University of Houston, where he spent 17 years as a professor in the Creative Writing Program and Department of English. He was appointed the fourth president of ...
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Scott Coffel
Scott Coffel (born 1956) is an American poet. He was born in New York City and educated at York College, City University of New York, and at State University of New York at Oneonta. He graduated from Iowa Writers Workshop with an MFA in 1995. He directs the Hanson Center for Technical Communication at The University of Iowa The University of Iowa (UI, U of I, UIowa, or simply Iowa) is a public university, public research university in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. Founded in 1847, it is the oldest and largest university in the state. The University of Iowa is org .... His work has appeared in ''Missouri Review'', ''Salmagundi'', ''Paris Review'', ''Ploughshares'', ''the American Scholar'', ''Prairie Schooner'', ''the Southern Review'' and '' the Wallace Stevens Journal''. Works"Double Indemnity"; "Andrei and Natasha"''Waywiser'' ''Adirondack Review''"Tonight Wallace Stevens" ''Poetry Society of America'' *''Toucans in the Arctic'', Etruscan Press, 2009, *''Shivering belie ...
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