Lewis Buzbee

Lewis Buzbee is a San Francisco based author and poet. He is "a fourth generation California native on his mother’s side, and a Dust Bowl Okie on his father’s."[1]

Work

He is the author of the novels Fliegelman's Desire (1990),[2] Steinbeck's Ghost (2008) and The Haunting of Charles Dickens (2010), the short story collection After the Gold Rush (2006) and the memoir The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop (2006). He is also the author of the children's book Bridge of Time (2012). Buzbee's work has appeared in The Paris Review, Harper's, The New York Times Book Review, GQ and ZYZZYVA. His poem "Sunday, Tarzan in His Hammock" was featured in Best American Poetry 1995.[3]

Buzbee currently teaches in the MFA in Creative Writing program at the University of San Francisco. He is married to Canadian poet Julie Bruck.[4]

gollark: If we get self-programming computers that's basically the singularity, and who *knows* what happens with that.
gollark: There will, at the least, be people programming automation systems.
gollark: Unlikely.
gollark: If we can replace people with machines we should probably do so - no sense in having someone do work when they don't really need to.
gollark: Yay automation! MOAR AUTOMATION!

References

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