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Milton Kessler

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Name
  
Milton Kessler

Role
  
Poet


Died
  
2000

Education
  
Harvard University

Milton Kessler Harpur Palate HARRY BAULD Winner of the Milton Kessler Memorial

Books
  
Sailing too far; poems, Free Concert: New and Selected Poems, The grand concourse

Milton Kessler (1930 Brooklyn - 2000) was a poet and an English professor at Binghamton University. He was one of the founders of the university's Creative Writing Program.

Contents

Life

Kessler grew up in New York City in a Jewish family. He was a volunteer spear carrier and prop boy at the New York Metropolitan Opera as a teenager, and he had classical training as a singer. He worked selling cloth at the Sample Shop as a young adult, and he married his wife, Sonia, while working a range of modest jobs.

His first book, Sailing Too Far, was published by Harper & Row and became widely noted. He signed an anti-war letter to The New York Review of Books.

He attended graduate school at Harvard University, but after finding enough success as a poet he left doctoral studies and landed at Binghamton University, where his students included Camille Paglia (1964-1968). Paglia later wrote that the biggest impact on her thinking were the classes taught by poet Milton Kessler:

The way I was trained to read literature by Milton Kessler (at Harpur College, part of Binghamton University), who was a student of Theodore Roethke, he believed in the responsiveness of the body, and of the activation of the senses to literature. And oh did I believe in that. Probably from my Italian background -- that’s the way we respond to things, with our body. From Michelangelo, Bernini, there’s this whole florid physicality leading right down to the Grand Opera, the great arias.

His work appeared in Oregon Literary Review, The Nation,

Illness

Kessler had a brief bout with thyroid cancer, an affliction he shared with poet Paul Blackburn. Boarding a bus after a visit to Binghamton, Blackburn told Kessler, "How warm to share a common disease." Blackburn died not long after.

After Kessler's death, Binghamton University established a poetry award in his honor, the Milton Kessler Memorial Prize for Poetry.

Works

  • "Zero". The Los Angeles Times. September 2, 1990. 
  • Books

  • Free Concert: New and Selected Poems. Etruscan Press. 2002. ISBN 978-0-9718228-4-9. 
  • Riding first car: learning the boxes. Black Bird Press. 1995.  (Chapbook)
  • The Grand Concourse. State University of New York at Binghamton. 1990. ISBN 978-0-938621-02-7. 
  • Sailing Too Far. Harper & Row. 1973. ISBN 978-0-06-012354-3. 
  • Woodlawn North. Illustrator Robert Ernst Marx. Impressions Workshop. 1970. ISBN 0-932052-68-1. 
  • Called home: a sequence of poems : 1964-66. The Black Bird Press. 1967.  (Chapbook)
  • A Road Came Once. Ohio State University Press. 1963. 
  • Anthologies

  • Heather McHugh, David Lehman, eds. (2007). "Comma of God". The Best American Poetry 2007. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-9972-5. CS1 maint: Uses editors parameter (link)
  • Liz Rosenberg, ed. (1996). The invisible ladder: an anthology of contemporary American poems for young readers. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-8050-3836-1. 
  • References

    Milton Kessler Wikipedia