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David Wagoner

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Name
  
David Wagoner


Role
  
Poet

David Wagoner mediadpublicbroadcastingnetpkuowfiles201307

Born
  
June 5, 1926 (age 97) Massillon, Ohio (
1926-06-05
)

Occupation
  
Poet, novelist, professor

Movies
  
The Escape Artist, Sunday Town Music Project

Education
  
Indiana University (1949), Pennsylvania State University

Awards
  
Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Poetry

Books
  
Traveling light, After the Point of No Return, A map of the night, The house of song, Good morning and good

Similar People
  
Theodore Roethke, Robert Frost, Caleb Deschanel, Greg Kuehn, Jonny Wickersham

Poets c d wright david wagoner


David Russell Wagoner (born June 5, 1926) is an American poet who has written many poetry collections and ten novels. Two of his books have been nominated for National Book Awards.

Contents

David Wagoner David Wagoner The Poetry Foundation

Born in Massillon, Ohio and raised in Whiting, Indiana from the age of seven, Wagoner attended Pennsylvania State University where he was a member of Naval ROTC and graduated in three years. He received an M.A. in English from the Indiana University in 1949 and has taught at the University of Washington since 1954 on the suggestion of friend and fellow poet Theodore Roethke.

Wagoner was editor of Poetry Northwest from 1966 to 2002 and his play An Eye For An Eye For An Eye was produced in 1973. Wagoner was elected chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 1978 and served in that capacity until 1999. One of his novels, The Escape Artist, was turned into a film by executive producer Francis Ford Coppola. He currently teaches in the low-residency MFA program of the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts on Whidbey Island.

lost by pacific northwest nature poet david wagoner


Pacific Northwest

The natural environment of the Pacific Northwest is the subject of much of David Wagoner's poetry. He cites his move from the Midwest as a defining moment: "[W]hen I came over the Cascades and down into the coastal rainforest for the first time in the fall of 1954, it was a big event for me, it was a real crossing of a threshold, a real change of consciousness. Nothing was ever the same again."

Awards

David Wagoner's Collected Poems was nominated for the National Book Award in 1977 and he won the Pushcart Prize that same year. He was again nominated for a National Book Award in 1979 for In Broken Country. He won his second Pushcart Prize in 1983. He is the recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Letters award, the Sherwood Anderson Foundation Fiction Award, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize (1991), the English-Speaking Union prize from Poetry magazine, and the Arthur Rense Prize in 2011. He has also received fellowships from the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts.

References

David Wagoner Wikipedia