Bird Skin Coat

Bird Skin Coat is a book of poetry by Angela Sorby published in 2009.[1][2] It won the 2009 Brittingham Prize in Poetry, judged by Marilyn Nelson.[1]

Angela Sorby

Angela Sorby Writer of 2 books(Childhood, Performance, and the Place of American Poetry and Distance Learning: Poems and Schoolroom Poets) ,Angela Sorby is associate university teacher of English at Marquette University and her area of specialty is American poetry:, interpreting it, reading it and writing it. She is particularly involved in how poetry engages with children and childhood. Upcoming work comprises: Early African-American Children’s Literature (U of Minnesota P); “Baby to Baby: Lydia Sigourney and the Origins of Cuteness,” a chapter in Mary Lou Kete and Elizabeth Petrino, eds and Conjuring Readers: Antebellum African-American Children’s Poetry, a chapter in Anna Mae Duane and Kate Capshaw Smith, eds.


gollark: https://xkcd.com/1209
gollark: Do tattoo artists support Unicode?
gollark: Why?
gollark: Also, you could do that without editing tron with much fiddling with the window API.
gollark: I could make potatOS make you draw a potato to uninstall it.

References

Angela Sorby


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