Reg Saner
Reg Saner (born 1931, Jacksonville, Illinois) is an American poet.
Life
He graduated from St. Norbert College, near Green Bay, Wisconsin.
He served as an infantry platoon leader in the Korean War.
He studied at University of Illinois, an received a Fulbright Scholarship to study at University of Florence.
In the early 1960s he married Anne.[1]
From September 1962, to December 1998, he taught at the University of Colorado at Boulder.[2]
He lives in Boulder, Colorado.[3]
Awards
- 1975 Walt Whitman Award
- 1981 National Poetry Series open competition
- 1983 Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts
- 1998 Wallace Stegner award
- 1999 Boulder, Colorado city's first poet laureate
Works
Poetry
- Climbing into the roots: poems. Harper & Row. 1976. ISBN 978-0-06-013762-5.
- So This Is the Map. Random House. 1981. ISBN 978-0-394-51668-4.
- Essay On Air. Ohio Review. 1984. ISBN 978-0-942148-03-9.
- Red Letters (1981)
Non-fiction
- "Soldier Poets, a Gadfly, and the Long-Haired Persian" (PDF). WLA Journal. Fall–Winter 2000. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2006.
- The Four-Cornered Falcon: Essays on the Interior West and the Natural Scene. Johns Hopkins. 1993. ISBN 978-0-8018-4449-2. (Kodansha paperback, 1994)
- Reaching Keet Seel: Ruin’s Echo & the Anasazi (University Press of Utah, 1998)
- The Dawn Collector: On My Way to the Natural World Center for American Places 2005
Anthologies
- Lorrie Goldensohn, ed. (2006). American war poetry: an anthology. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13310-4.
- Short Takes (Norton, 2005)
- Old Glory: American War Poems from the Revolutionary War to the War on Terrorism (Persea, 2004)
- Poetry Comes Up Where It Can (University of Utah Press, 2000)
- Orpheus & Company (University Press of New England, 1999)
- Generations. Penguin. 1998. ISBN 978-0-14-058784-5.
gollark: My computer's PSU is 450W, sum of part TDPs or something is 227W, actual draw I never checked.
gollark: LEDs are, what, 10W or so at most for a lot of light.
gollark: The real power draw will be the computer doing motion detection.
gollark: I mean, I *suppose* so, but lighting uses power you know...
gollark: LSD lighting... would that just be taking drugs until you *hallucinate* that your room is lit?
References
Further reading
- Reg Saner, Richard Hugo, John Haines, William Matthews, Richard Shelton, Gary Soto, William Stafford, and David Wagoner (1982). Wild, Peter and Graziano, Frank (ed.). New Poetry of the American West. Durango, CO: Logbridge-Rhodes. pp. 104. ISBN 978-0937406199.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) OCLC 8589531, 655452420, 610178960 (print and on-line)
External links
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