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Tony
Hoagland is the author of three volumes of poetry:
Sweet Ruin, winner of the Brittingham Prize in Poetry,
Donkey Gospel, winner of the James Laughlin Award
of The Academy of American Poets, and What Narcissism
Means to Me, as well as a collection of essay's about
poetry, Real Sofistakashun all by Graywolf Press.
His poems and critical essays have appeared widely
in journals and anthologies such as American Poetry
Review, Harvard Review, and Ploughshares. Hoagland
currently teaches in the poetry program at the University
of Houston. He is the winner of the 2005 O.B. Hardison
Jr. Prize. Awarded by the Folger Shakespeare Library,
this is the only national prize to recognize a poet's
teaching as well as his art. Hoagland also received
the 2005 Mark Twain Award, given by the Poetry Foundation
in recognition of a poets contribution to humor in
American poetry.
Tony
Hoagland's poems have been described as moving unerringly
with wit and irony, like an arrow through its targetwe,
the readerswith exhilarating results. His poems
sprint across the page and unexpectedly blow apart
a single moment, exposing its contradictory natureand
often our folly. Hoagland explores the spiritual bereftness
of American satisfaction, creating poetry that is
scathing, funny, rich, and refreshingly intelligent.
Steven Cramer writes of Hoagland's poems, "[they]
grapple with selfhood and manhood, but they also consider
the mysteries of the national identityhow the
social and the personal mutually impinge."
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