Susan Hutton

Susan Hutton (born December 1968 New York City) is an American poet.

Life

She was raised in and around Detroit, Michigan.

She graduated from Kalamazoo College, and from the University of Michigan with an MFA, where she studied with Linda Gregerson, David Baker, and Larry Goldstein.[1] She held a Wallace Stegner fellowship in poetry at Stanford University. She lived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was director of development for Autumn House Press.[2]

Her work hase appeared in Crazyhorse, DoubleTake, Poetry, FIELD, Mid-American Review,[3] Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner.[4]

She lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, with her husband and two children.

Awards

Works

  • "Atmospherics", Poetry, October 2006
  • "Seven Journeys"; "My List"; "On the Vanishing of Large Creatures", Michigan Today, September 2006
  • "Seven Journeys", AGNI, 2004
  • "On the Vanishing of Large Creatures", Ploughshares, Spring 2004
  • On the vanishing of large creatures. Carnegie Mellon University Press. 2007. ISBN 978-0-88748-465-0.

Reviews

Susan Hutton has put together a first book that feels completely finished—each poem has been smoothed over like a pebble in a stream. As a whole, it is airtight.[5]

gollark: I would probably just go for automatically generated machine-readable changelogs of some form.
gollark: *Currently* I can't do half of those because there's no actual versioning mechanism, and no way to compile stuff because it is all run straight off pastebin.
gollark: Having version control would probably make some potatOS things I've wanted possible, such as verified boot where potatOS ensures that the currently installed stuff matches a checksum, compressed updates, and updates which work if I change a non-core file (the updater logic is very weird).
gollark: And I think cloud catcher.
gollark: Monaco is the one VSCode uses.

References

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