Occupation Poet, Professor Name L.S. Asekoff Nationality American Role Poet | Period Contemporary Partner Mary Louise Kalin | |
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Born December 17, 1939 (age 84) Waltham, Massachusetts, USA ( 1939-12-17 ) Books Dreams of a Work: Poems, Freedom Hill: A Poem, The Gate of Horn: Poems, Black Dog White Bark, North Star Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada |
Interview with l s asekoff
Louis S. Asekoff (born December 17, 1939) is an American poet and professor emeritus. Asekoff often incorporates surrealist imagery and monologue into his poetry, which is concerned with both the imagistic and aural dimensions of language. Asekoff's unconventional use of monologue as a poetic instrument is suggestive of "the inability of words to properly convey meaning" and a vehicle for implicating the readers who become "members of his poetic universe." In 2012, Poet laureate Philip Levine, who selected Asekoff for the Witter Bynner Poetry Prize, described Asekoff as "a true surreal visionary."
Contents
- Interview with l s asekoff
- Film Noir A Poem by LS Asekoff
- Background
- Books
- Selected Poems Online
- Selected Awards
- References

Asekoff taught poetry and coordinated the MFA Poetry Program at Brooklyn College for 42 years, where he also served as a Faculty Associate for The Wolfe Institute for Humanities.
"Film Noir" - A Poem by L.S. Asekoff
Background
Asekoff was born in Waltham, Massachusetts, a small industrial city near Boston. The son of a psychiatrist, he grew up on the grounds of the psychiatric hospitals Danvers State and Metropolitan State Hospital.