Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

James Richardson (poet)

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Name
  
James Richardson

Role
  
Poet

Awards
  
National Poetry Series



Education
  
University of Virginia, Princeton University

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Poetry, National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry

Books
  
Vectors: Aphorisms & Ten‑se, Interglacial, By the Numbers, Vanishing lives, Travels in Morocco

James richardson reads at the 2014 dodge poetry festival


James Richardson (born January 1, 1950) is an American poet.

Contents

James richardson shakespeare poem


Career and education

James Richardson is an American poet and critic. He is Professor of English & Creative Writing at Princeton University, where he has taught since 1980. He grew up in Garden City, New York and attended Princeton University, graduating summa cum laude in 1971. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in 1975.

Richardson is the author of several collections of poetry, criticism, and aphorisms, and has been awarded or nominated for some of the top awards in American literature, including the Jackson Poetry Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award.

His work has appeared in multiple editions of The Best American Poetry, and in publications including The New Yorker, Paris Review, and Slate.

Awards

  • Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters
  • Robert H. Winner Award, Poetry Society of America
  • Cecil Hemley Award, Poetry Society of America
  • Emily Dickinson Award, Poetry Society of America
  • NEH Fellowship
  • New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship
  • 1991 National Poetry Series
  • National Book Critics Circle Award finalist, for Interglacial: New and Selected Poems and Aphorisms
  • 2010 National Book Award finalist for By the Numbers
  • 2011 Jackson Poetry Prize
  • Reviews

    James Richardson became an academic and a poet by the usual means, but he is, by his own admission, an accidental aphorist. He regarded Vectors (2001), his book of five hundred aphorisms and “ten-second essays,” during its construction as “often… more as a questionable habit than as a book in progress.” The book became a cult favorite almost immediately.

    It is easy to see why some would call James Richardson a “nature poet”; not only do his poems, and especially his early ones, draw on fairly common images and the phenomena of the physical world, he also shows a likeably human relationship to his environment, the kind we tend to imagine Wordsworth had—this work is feeling and respectful, written very much from open-minded observation and experience.

    References

    James Richardson (poet) Wikipedia