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George Garrett (poet)

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Occupation
  
Poet, writer

Name
  
George Garrett


Role
  
Poet

Movies
  
The Playground

George Garrett (poet) static01nytcomimages20080530artsgarrett190jpg

Genre
  
Poetry, theatre, fiction

Died
  
May 25, 2008, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States

Education
  
Princeton University (1985)

Awards
  
PEN/Malamud Award, Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Books
  
Death of the fox, The Succession: A Novel o, Entered from the Sun, An evening performance, Double Vision: A Novel

Similar People
  
R H W Dillard, Michael Mewshaw, Arthur Miller, William Shakespeare, Frederic Raphael

Extream poetry confesion by the lightman george garrett anastasia


George Palmer Garrett (June 11, 1929 – May 25, 2008) was an American poet and novelist. He was the Poet Laureate of Virginia from 2002 to 2004. His novels include The Finished Man, Double Vision, and the Elizabethan Trilogy, composed of Death of the Fox, The Succession, and Entered from the Sun. He worked as a book reviewer and screenwriter, and taught at Cambridge University and, for many years, at the University of Virginia. He is the subject of critical books by R. H. W. Dillard, Casey Clabough, and Irving Malin.

Contents

George Garrett (poet) 2006 Thomas Wolfe Prize and Lecture George Garrett English

Biography

George Palmer Garrett was born in Orlando, Florida on June 11, 1929. He attended The Hill School. He graduated from the Sewanee Military Academy in Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1945. He earned his BA from Princeton University in 1952, having matriculated in 1947 and having attended Columbia University in 1948-49. He also received his MA (1956) and PhD (1985) from Princeton.

Garrett served in the US Army (1946–47), and was stationed in Europe, in Leonding, Austria.

He began his teaching career as an assistant professor at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1957–60). After one year as a visiting lecturer at Rice University, he became associate professor of English at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, where he taught for five years before accepting a post as professor of English at Hollins College (now University, Virginia, in 1967. In 1964-65 he was writer-in-residence at Princeton University. In 1971, he became professor of English and writer-in-residence at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, where he taught until 1973. From 1974 to 1977 he was senior fellow at the Council of the Humanities, Princeton University. He was then one year at Columbia University as adjunct professor (1977–78), one semester as writer-in-residence at Bennington College, Vermont, one semester at the Virginia Military Institute, and several years at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (1979–84). In 1984 Garrett was appointed Henry Hoyns Professor of English at the University of Virginia, the position in which he continued until his retirement in December 1999.

Garrett's service to the arts was substantial. He served a two-year term as president of the Associated Writing Programs (1971–73). A charter member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers, he was the organization's vice-chancellor (1987–93) and chancellor (1993–97). Over the years, he edited several magazines and book series. He was Contemporary Poetry Series editor at the University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1962–68; and Short Story Series editor at the Louisiana State University Press, 1966-69. From 1958 to 1971 he was United States poetry editor for Transatlantic Review and, from 1965 to 1971 co-editor of Hollins Critic. He was a contributing editor for Contempora and assistant editor of The Film Journal. With Brendan Galvin he edited Poultry: A Magazine of Voice; and he was fiction editor at The Texas Review.

He is well known for his Elizabethan trilogy, Death of the Fox, The Succession, and Entered from the Sun, a body of work that is so imbued with its subject matter and time as to create the sense that he lived through it all, and had total recall of life in the respective courts of Queen Elizabeth I and James I. Death of the Fox, the first of the books, raises questions about the nature of the form itself, and in fact all of Mr. Garrett's writing challenges the accepted ideas about the various forms in which he chose to work. The vast panorama of fictional and historical people that occupy the stage in the three novels is equaled by the beautifully drawn contemporary cast of characters in his other novels: the political novel The Finished Man; Do Lord, Remember Me; Which Ones Are the Enemy?; and The King of Babylon Shall Not Come Against You. Garrett never repeated himself, and the variety of his output has perhaps been a bit daunting to the critical establishment of his time, American critics tending to prefer their subjects to be rather one-noted, consistent and readily classified as to type, or theme, or treatment.

Along with this profoundly rich body of work as a writer, George Garrett was utterly unparalleled in his generous treatment of other writers. Dozens of younger writers, both students of his and others with whom he came in contact, were helped at crucial points in their careers by Garrett. Until the last days of his life, he was interested in furthering the work of younger colleagues, and of people whose work he had been championing for decades. He was a widely beloved and even revered figure, a man about whom the poet R.H.W. Dillard said that when he once took someone's hand in friendship, he never let go.

Garrett died at home in Charlottesville, Virginia, at the age of 78 of cancer. He had been diagnosed with cancer in 2006 after having suffered from myasthenia gravis for some years. He was buried at the University of Virginia cemetery.

George Garrett's papers are housed in the Duke University Special Collections Library.

Awards

  • Sewanee Review fellowship (1958)
  • American Academy in Rome fellowship (1958)
  • Ford grant, for drama (1960)
  • National Endowment for the Arts grant (1967)
  • Contempora award (1971)
  • Guggenheim fellowship (1974)
  • American Academy award (1985)
  • New York Public Library Literary Lion award (1988)
  • T. S. Eliot Award (1989)
  • PEN/Malamud Award for short fiction (1990)
  • Aiken-Taylor Award (1999)
  • Lifetime Achievement Award from the Library of Virginia (2004)
  • Cleanth Brooks Medal for Lifetime Achievement from the Fellowship of Southern Writers (2005)
  • Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize (2006)
  • References

    George Garrett (poet) Wikipedia