Mark Irwin (born 1952) [1] is an American poet and the author of eleven collections of poetry, most recently Joyful Orphan (University of Nevada Press). He lives in Los Angeles and the mountains of rural Colorado. His honors and awards include the Philip Levine Prize for Poetry, The Nation/Discovery Award, four Pushcart Prizes, a National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship, Colorado and Ohio Art Council Fellowships, two Colorado Book Awards, [2] the James Wright Poetry Award, and fellowships from the Fulbright, Lilly, and Wurlitzer Foundations.
Irwin attended the Iowa Writers' Workshop (MFA, 1980) and Case Western Reserve University (PhD, 1982). Currently, he is a professor in the PhD in Creative Writing & Literature Program at the University of Southern California, [3] and he has also taught as a Visiting Writer at the University of Colorado/Boulder, Ohio University, University of Denver, University of Nevada/Las Vegas, Ashland University MFA Program, The Colorado College, and the Paris American Academy/USC. Additionally, he has served as Guest Editor for the literary journals Pequod and The Denver Quarterly.
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His poetry and essays have appeared in many literary magazines including The American Poetry Review, Agni Review, The Atlantic Monthly, Conjunctions, Georgia Review, Harper’s, The Kenyon Review, Paris Review, Pleiades, Poetry, The Nation, New England Review, New American Writing, The New Republic, The New York Times, The Southern Review, and Tin House. He has also translated Philippe Denis’ Notebook of Shadows, Nichita Stănescu’s Ask the Circle to Forgive You: Selected Poems, and Zanzibar: Selected Poems and Letters of Arthur Rimbaud (forthcoming with Alain Borer). His collection of essays, Monster: Distortion, Abstraction, and Originality in Contemporary American Poetry, was published in 2017. His poetry has also been set to music and translated into several languages.
Dorianne Laux is an American poet.
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Rusty Morrison is an American poet and publisher. She received a BA in English from Mills College in Oakland, California, an MFA in Creative Writing (Poetry) from Saint Mary's College of California in Moraga, California, and an MA in Education from California State University, San Francisco. She has taught in the MFA program at the University of San Francisco and was Poet in Residence at Saint Mary’s College in 2009. She has also served as a visiting poet at a number of colleges and universities, including the University of Redlands, the University of Arizona, Boise State University, Marylhurst University, and Millikin University. In 2001, Morrison and her husband, Ken Keegan, founded Omnidawn Publishing in Richmond, California, and continue to work as co-publishers. She contracted Hepatitis C in her twenties but, like most people diagnosed with this disease, did not experience symptoms for several years. Since then, a focus on issues relating to disability has developed as an area of interest in her writing.
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