Marie
Howe is the author of three volumes of poetry, The
Good Thief (1998), What
the Living Do (1997), and The
Kingdom of Ordinary Time (2008) and the co-editor
of a book of essays, In the Company of My Solitude:
American Writing from the AIDS Pandemic (1994). Stanley
Kunitz selected Howe for a Lavan Younger Poets Prize
from the American Academy of Poets. She has, in addition,
been a fellow at the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe
College and a recipient of NEA and Guggenheim fellowships.
Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic,
Poetry, Agni, Ploughsahres, Harvard Review, and The
Partisan Review, among others. Currently, Howe teaches
creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College, Columbia,
and New York University.
Marie
Howe wowed readers and critics alike with her first
book of poems, The Good Thief. Selected by Margaret
Atwood as the 1989 winner of the National Poetry Series,
the book explored the themes of relationship, attachment,
and loss in a uniquely personal search for transcendence.
Said Atwood, "Marie Howe's poetry doesn't
fool around . . . these poems are intensely felt,
sparely expressed, and difficult to forget; poems
of obsession that transcend their own dark roots."
Howe sees her work as an act of confession, or of
conversation. She says simply,"Poetry is telling
something to someone." The Boston Globe calls
her work, "a poetry of intimacy, witness,
honesty, and relation."
Howe's
equally acclaimed second book, What the Living Do,
addressed the grief of losing a loved one. "The
tentative transformation of agonizing, slow-motion
loss into redemption is Howe's signal achievement
in this wrenching second collection," said
Publisher's Weekly, in choosing it as one of the five
best volumes of poetry published that year. Part of
the urgency and importance of Howe's poetry stems
from its rootedness in real life-just ten minutes
into her 1987 residence at the MacDowell Colony, Howe
received a call from her brother John telling her
that her mother had had a heart attack. Two years
later, John died of AIDS, and her book What the Living
Do is in large part an elegy to him. Howe's poetry
is intensely intimate, and her bravery in laying bare
the music of her own pain- but never the pain alone-is
part of its resonance. Inside each poem there is also
a joy, a new breath of life, some kind of redemption.
"Each of them seems a love poem to me,"
says Howe.
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