Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jane Shore (poet)

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Name
  
Jane Shore

Role
  
Poet

Spouse
  
Howard Norman (m. 1984)



Education
  
University of Iowa (1971), Goddard College (1965–1969)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada, Poets' Prize, James Laughlin Award

Nominations
  
National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry

Books
  
That Said: New and Selected, A Yes‑or‑No Answer, Minute Hand, Music minus one, Happy Family: Poems

Jane Shore is an American poet.

Contents

Life

She graduated from Goddard College, and moved from Vermont to the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She graduated from Radcliffe College in 1972, where she was a student of Elizabeth Bishop.

Shore met Howard Norman in 1981, and they married in 1984 They have a daughter, Emma (born 1988).

Norman and Shore lived in Cambridge, New Jersey, Oahu, and Vermont, before settling into homes in Chevy Chase, Maryland near Washington, D.C. during the school year, and East Calais, Vermont in the summertime. Their friend, the author David Mamet and Shore's Goddard College classmate, lives nearby.

During the summer of 2003, poet Reetika Vazirani was housesitting the Normans' Chevy Chase home. There, on July 16, she killed her young son before committing suicide.

Career

She has edited Ploughshares, and her poems have been published in numerous magazines, including Poetry, The New Republic, and The Yale Review

She was Radcliffe Institute, fellow in poetry, 1971–73, and Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in English at Harvard University, 1973—, and Jenny McKean Moore Writer at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She was visiting distinguished poet at the University of Hawaii.

She is currently a professor at The George Washington University.

Awards

  • Eye Level, winner of the 1977 Juniper Prize
  • The Minute Hand, awarded the 1986 Lamont Poetry Prize
  • Music Minus One, a finalist for the 1996 National Book Critic Circle Award
  • 1991 Guggenheim Fellowship
  • two grants from the N.E.A.
  • fellow in poetry at the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute
  • Alfred Hodder Fellow at Princeton University
  • Goodyear Fellow at the Foxcroft School in Virginia
  • Critical reception

    Robert Boyers said of Shore:

    Put another way, there is in the poetry of Jane Shore, a freshness of outlook, even when the dominant instinct is retrospective. The poems seem a vivid refusal of desolation, though there is no reluctance in them, to confront the usual varieties of estrangement and suffering....This is a poet who gives to directness, honesty of emotion and fundamental sanity the good name they deserve.

    References

    Jane Shore (poet) Wikipedia