Katharine Coles

Katharine Coles is an American poet and educator. She served from 2006 to 2012 as Utah's third poet laureate and currently serves as the inaugural director of the Harriet Monroe Poetry Institute and the co-director of the Utah Symposium in Science and Literature.

Katharine Coles
OccupationPoet, professor
Alma materUniversity of Washington
University of Houston
University of Utah
Notable worksThe Golden Years of the Fourth Dimension
Notable awardsPEN New Writers Award
Guggenheim Fellowship
SpouseChristopher R. Johnson

Biography

Coles earned her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Washington. She later earned a master's degree from the University of Houston and her Ph.D. from the University of Utah. In 1997 she joined the faculty at the University of Utah.

Her published works include the novels Fire Season and The Measurable World, and five collections of poems: Fault, The Golden Years of the Fourth Dimension, A History of the Garden, The One Right Touch, and Flight. She has also contributed stories, poems, and essays to The Paris Review, The New Republic, The Kenyon Review, Image, Upstreet, and Poetry.[1]

Awards and honors

Coles received the PEN New Writer’s Award in 1992. Her 2001 poetry collection, The Golden Years of the Fourth Dimension, received the Utah Book Award. In 2012, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[2]

Selected works

Biography/Memoir

  • Look Both Ways, 2018

Novels

  • The Measurable World, 1995
  • Fire Season, 2005

Poetry

  • The One Right Touch, 1992
  • The Golden Years of the Fourth Dimension, 2001
  • Fault, 2008
  • The Earth Is Not Flat, 2013
  • Flight, 2016
  • Wayward, 2019
  • Sestina in Prose
gollark: Well, the internet is a vast world-spanning computer network.
gollark: I'll go release bees or something.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Too bad, you are to.
gollark: *Why* is it stuck on RTC connecting?

References

  1. Camp, Heidi (12 April 2012). "Two U of U English Faculty Receive Prestigious Guggenheim Fellowships | University of Utah News". UNews. University of Utah.
  2. "Katharine Coles". Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.