Stephen Cramer

Stephen Cramer is an American poet.

Life

He teaches at the University of Vermont.[1]

His work appeared in Atlanta Review, Cimarron Review,[2] Green Mountains Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, Mid-American Review,[3] New York Quarterly,[4] and Southwest Review.[5]

He is with the American poets opposed to the death penalty.[6]

Awards

Reviews

Imagine a man in the subway who removes his shirt and starts picking a scab. Would you look the other way? I would, but I think Stephen Cramer would watch and find an uncomfortable beauty about the scene. He writes with uncommon courage. His new book Tongue & Groove has poems of the sublime and the ugly. This collection builds on his first book, Shiva’s Drum, but Cramer owns his style more boldly. This book distinguishes itself with an earnest voice. He approaches even unorthodox subjects with the mindfulness of a Buddhist monk.[8]

Works

  • Shiva's drum: poems. University of Illinois Press. 2004. ISBN 978-0-252-07204-8. Stephen Cramer.
  • Tongue and groove. University of Illinois. 2007. ISBN 978-0-252-03236-3.
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gollark: And at very high clock rates, electromagnetic interference issues in some of the address lines can cause the wrong regions of memory to be read, in somewhat predictable and exploitable ways.
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gollark: It's too late, I already reverse-engineered ridiculously specific details of the processor via extrapolating from your current messages about it and GTech™️ orbital scans via our future prediction engines, then wrote code which does cool things but is highly dependent on weird implementation quirks.

References

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