Mekeel McBride

Last updated

Mekeel McBride (born 1950) is a poet and professor of writing at the University of New Hampshire. She has held fellowships at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, Princeton University, and the MacDowell Colony, as well as being a recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts grants. She is the author of six books of poetry. [1]

Contents

Biography

McBride was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She holds a Bachelor's in Arts degree from Mills College in California. She later settled in Kittery, Maine.

McBride has taught at Wheaton College, [lower-alpha 1] Berwick Academy, Harvard University, and Princeton University. [2]

After this, McBride began teaching in the Master of Fine Arts writing program at the University of New Hampshire and was also teaching undergraduate classes. She encourages her students to embrace their own creativity, playfulness, and daydreaming, and her classes frequently encourage combining poetry with other kinds of art. [1] For example, to teach students to listen to sound in a different way, McBride has asked students to design a musical instrument and accompany a poem with it; instruments have included crystal glasses filled with water and automobile engines. [3]

Works

Much of her work draws on the semi-rural areas of New Hampshire and Maine where she lives, and includes elements from working class life: beat-up cars, harmonicas, trash, barbecues, and many, many dogs... This is a poetry that is broadly democratic in a way that Emerson would have liked. And unlike traditionally lyrical poetry, where we might expect mere pathos — or, worse, condescension — her poems allow a strangeness and value to working-class experience.

David Gruber [4]

McBride's poems have appeared in publications including The New Yorker , Poetry Field, Seneca Review, Antioch Review, The Nation, Kayak, Virginia Quarterly Review, Ploughshares, and the Georgia Review. [1] Her poem "All Hallows' Eve" was included in the Best American Poetry 1992, Edited by Charles Simic.

Linda Gregerson's review of McBride's 1983 collection The Going Under of the Evening Land,, wrote that "At their best, McBride's negotiations between expectation and creative license achieve an exquisite balance." [5]

David Gruber, reviewing her compendium Dog Star Delicatessen, described her "ongoing, underlying resistance to the constraints of normative lyrical language" and said "I believe there is a great beauty and humanity at work in McBride’s poetry. Her work offers us a world in which the ordinary can give way to the transcendent, if we will allow it to." He also likened her themes to Elizabeth Bishop's ("Like Bishop, McBride sees animals as fellow sufferers along with humanity here on earth.") [4]

Kettle

An old woman gets tired of her sad face
so she fills her soup bowl with fresh water
then stares into that small lake until she sees
her reflection floating there but softened.
She smiles and when she does that,
her sadness gets tricked into the bowl,
surprised to be lightened a little at last.
Then she takes that bowl into high grass
and leaves it there for the rough tongues
of homeless cats to scratch across;
for starlight to see itself in.
Now, who knows whether she is old
or young, this woman who tricks away despair.
She's laughing as she peels the wrinkled skins
from red potatoes, drooping them moon

by moon into evening's kettle: new root soup.

Mekeel McBride,"Kettle",The Deepest Part of the River [6] [7]
Collections

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rita Dove</span> American poet and author (born 1952)

Rita Frances Dove is an American poet and essayist. From 1993 to 1995, she served as Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She is the first African American to have been appointed since the position was created by an act of Congress in 1986 from the previous "consultant in poetry" position (1937–86). Dove also received an appointment as "special consultant in poetry" for the Library of Congress's bicentennial year from 1999 to 2000. Dove is the second African American to receive the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, in 1987, and she served as the Poet Laureate of Virginia from 2004 to 2006. Since 1989, she has been teaching at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, where she held the chair of Commonwealth Professor of English from 1993 to 2020; as of 2020, she holds the chair of Henry Hoyns Professor of Creative Writing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cornelius Eady</span> American poet (born 1954)

Cornelius Eady is an American writer focusing largely on matters of race and society. His poetry often centers on jazz and blues, family life, violence, and societal problems stemming from questions of race and class. His poetry is often praised for its simple and approachable language.

Mary Ruefle is an American poet, essayist, and professor. She has published many collections of poetry, the most recent of which, Dunce, was longlisted for the National Book Award in Poetry and a finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize. Ruefle's debut collection of prose, The Most Of It, appeared in 2008 and her collected lectures, Madness, Rack, and Honey, in 2012, both published by Wave Books. She has also published a book of erasures, A Little White Shadow (2006).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Millar</span> American writer

Joseph Millar is an American poet. He was raised in western Pennsylvania and after an adult life spent mostly in the SF Bay Area and the Northwest, he divides his time between Raleigh, NC and Richmond, CA.

Gillian Conoley is an American poet. Conoley serves as a professor and poet-in-residence at Sonoma State University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dana Levin</span> American poet

Dana Levin is a poet and teaches Creative Writing at Maryville University in St. Louis, where she serves as Distinguished Writer in Residence. She also teaches in the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. She lives in Saint Louis, Missouri.

Chase Twichell is an American poet, professor, publisher, and, in 1999, the founder of Ausable Press. Her most recent poetry collection is Things as It Is. Horses Where the Answers Should Have Been earned her Claremont Graduate University's prestigious $100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award. She is the winner of several awards in writing from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the American Academy of Arts and Letters and The Artists Foundation. Additionally, she has received fellowships from both the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Her poems have appeared in literary journals and magazines including The New Yorker, Field, Ploughshares, The Georgia Review, The Paris Review, Poetry, The Nation, and The Yale Review.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Skoyles (poet)</span> American poet and writer (born 1949)

John Skoyles is an American poet and writer.

Ellen Bryant Voigt is an American poet. She served as the Poet Laureate of Vermont.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laura Kasischke</span> American fiction writer and poet (born 1961)

Laura Kasischke is an American fiction writer and poet. She is best known for writing the novels Suspicious River, The Life Before Her Eyes and White Bird in a Blizzard, all of which have been adapted to film.

Wesley McNair is an American poet, writer, editor, and professor. He has authored 10 volumes of poetry, most recently, Lovers of the Lost: New & Selected Poems, The Lost Child: Ozark Poems, The Unfastening, and Dwellers in the House of the Lord. He has also written three books of prose, including a memoir, The Words I Chose: A Memoir of Family and Poetry. In addition, he has edited several anthologies of Maine writing, and served as a guest editor in poetry for the 2010 Pushcart Prize Annual.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Karen An-hwei Lee</span> American poet (born 1973)

Karen An-hwei Lee is an American poet.

Judy Jordan is an American poet. Her honors include the Walt Whitman Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Susan Hutton is an American poet.

Kimberly Burwick is an American poet. Her honors include the 2007 Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize (finalist) and the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Memorial Fund Poetry Prize and fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center and Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center.

Eve Shelnutt was an American poet and writer of short stories. She lived in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Athens, Ohio, and Worcester, Massachusetts. Over the course of her career, she taught at Western Michigan University University of Pittsburgh, Ohio University, and The College of the Holy Cross.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dzvinia Orlowsky</span> American poet

Dzvinia Orlowsky is a Ukrainian American poet, translator, editor, and teacher. She received her BA from Oberlin College and her MFA from the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. She is author of six poetry collections including Convertible Night, Flurry of Stones for which she received a Sheila Motton Book Award, and Silvertone (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2013) for which she was named Ohio Poetry Day Association's 2014 Co-Poet of the Year. Her first collection, A Handful of Bees, was reprinted in 2009 as a Carnegie Mellon University Classic Contemporary. Her sixth, Bad Harvest, was published in fall of 2018 and was named a 2019 Massachusetts Book Awards “Must Read” in Poetry. Her co-translations with Ali Kinsella from the Ukrainian of selected poems by Natalka Bilotserkivets, "Eccentric Days of Hope and Sorrow" was published by Lost Horse Press in fall, 2021 and short-listed for the 2022 Griffin International Poetry Prize, the Derek Walcott Poetry Prize the ALTA National Translation Award, and awarded the 2022 AAUS Translation Prize.

Jeff Friedman is an American poet and educator. He is known for his lyrical narrative verse rooted in autobiographical experience and for his later fabulist prose poetry and flash fiction which interweave the fantastical and the ordinary. In a review of Friedman's collection Floating Tales (2017), poet and critic Walter Bargen wrote that the author "assembles fantastic tales only to disassemble them, then reassemble them into even more impossible worlds, and yet the reader will find her-or himself believing in their possibilities and often laughing along the way." Friedman is the author of nine collections of poetry and prose, which include Black Threads (2007), Working in Flour (2011), Pretenders (2014), The Marksman (2020), and the microfiction collection, The House of Grana Padano (2022), co-written with Meg Pokrass. He lives in West Lebanon, New Hampshire with his wife, painter Colleen Randall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judith Harris (poet)</span> American poet

Judith Harris is an American poet and the author of Night Garden, Atonement, The Bad Secret, and the critical book Signifying Pain: Constructing and Healing the Self Through Writing. Her poetry has appeared in many publications, including The Nation, The Atlantic, The New Republic, Ploughshares, Slate, Southern Review, Image, Boulevard, Narrative, Verse Daily, and American Life in Poetry. She has taught at the Frost Place and at universities in the Washington, D.C. area.

Maureen Therese Seaton was an American lesbian poet, memoirist, and professor of creative writing. She authored fifteen solo books of poetry, co-authored an additional thirteen, and wrote one memoir, Sex Talks to Girls, which won the 2009 Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Memoir/Biography. Seaton's writing has been described as "unusual, compressed, and surrealistic," and was frequently created in collaboration with fellow poets such as Denise Duhamel, Samuel Ace, Neil de la Flor, David Trinidad, Kristine Snodgrass, cin salach, Niki Nolin, and Mia Leonin.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Mekeel McBride". College of Liberal Arts. 2018-05-31. Retrieved 2020-11-06.
  2. McBride, Mekeel (2002). Wind of the White Dresses. Carnegie Mellon University Press. ISBN   978-0-88748-370-7.
  3. Donnely, Dianne, ed. (2010). Does the Writing Workshop Still Work?. Multilingual Matters. p. 59. ISBN   9781847692689 . Retrieved January 28, 2021.
  4. 1 2 David Gruber. "On Mekeel McBride's Dog Star Delicatessen" (PDF). Denver Quarterly. University of Denver. Retrieved January 28, 2021.
  5. Gregerson, Linda (October 1984). "Review [Untitled]". Poetry. 145 (1): 44–46. JSTOR   20600065 . Retrieved January 28, 2021.
  6. McBride, Mekeel (2001). The Deepest Part of the River. Carnegie Mellon Poetry Series. Carnegie Mellon University Press. p. 53. ISBN   978-0887483189.
  7. Mekeel McBride (2 June 2016). "Kettle". Emma Gunst. Retrieved January 28, 2021.

Notes

  1. Multiple sources reference Wheaton College, but it is unclear which Wheaton College is intended.