Carolyn Creedon

Carolyn Creedon (born 1969) Newport News, Virginia is an American poet.

Carolyn Creedon
reading at Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice, 2014
Born1969
Newport News, Virginia
NationalityAmerican
Alma materSmith College,
University of Virginia

Life

She left college and worked as a waitress in San Francisco.[1] She graduated from Smith College, Washington University, and the University of Virginia with an M.F.A.[2]

Her work has appeared in The American Poetry Review, The Massachusetts Review,[3] Yale Review.

She wrote a letter in support of the Green Street Cafe.[4]

She is married to Paul Andrews. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Awards

Works

  • Wet: Poems, Kent State University Press, 2012, ISBN 9781606351505 [7]

Anthologies

Ploughshares

gollark: Or even just asked, probably.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> If you had been paying *any attention*, you could have found other information implying (what I want you to think is) my age VERY EASILY.
gollark: What if RocketRace is part of a Russian disinformation campaign discrediting real disinformation campaigns?
gollark: I am not an idiot. You, however, are an idiot.
gollark: I mean, cars are very scary, several-ton metal boxes hurtling down roads at several tens of metres per second.

References

  1. Schuyler Clemente (2005-05-13). "Smith Student Wins Prestigious Glascock Poetry Prize". The Smith College Sophian. Archived from the original on July 2, 2016.
  2. "Carolyn Creedon". poetryfoundation.org.
  3. "Massachusetts Review: An independent quarterly of literature, the arts, and public affairs - Back Issues". archive.org. 10 January 2010. Archived from the original on January 10, 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  4. Green Street Cafe. "Letter To the Editor that the Daily Hampshire Gazette refused to run". greenstreetcafe.blogspot.com.
  5. http://lowres.uno.edu/contestarch.cfm
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-08-17. Retrieved 2009-08-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. Puican, Mike. "Review of Wet by Carolyn Creedon". Triquarterly. Retrieved 19 March 2014. Creedon is at her strongest in poems in which she and the people she describe claim their experiences—the joys, the mistakes, the inequities—and, from them, create brash, original lives. There is a freshness not only in her overall perspective but in the energy and creativity in which the poems are conceived and expressed.
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