Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Rachel Wetzsteon

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Rachel Wetzsteon

Genre
  
Poetry


Rachel Wetzsteon wwwpoetryfoundationorguploadsauthors5b944cd70

Born
  
November 25, 1967New York City (
1967-11-25
)

Died
  
December 2009, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Sakura Park: Poems, Silver Roses: Poems, The Other Stars, Home and Away: Poems, Influential ghosts

5 poems by rachel wetzsteon


Rachel Todd Wetzsteon (November 25, 1967 – December 24/25?, 2009) was an American poet.

Contents

Rachel Wetzsteon httpsmediapoetryfoundationorgmimage1001we

Life

Born in New York City, New York, the daughter of editor Ross Wetzsteon (the name is pronounced "whetstone"), she graduated from Yale University in 1989 where she studied with Marie Borroff and John Hollander. She graduated from Johns Hopkins University with an MA, and from Columbia University with a Ph.D. She taught at Barnard College.

She lived in Manhattan and went on to teach at William Paterson University and the Unterberg Poetry Center of the Ninety-Second Street Y.

Her work appeared in many publications including The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The New Republic, The Nation, and The Village Voice. She was poetry editor of The New Republic.

Wetzsteon committed suicide on Dec. 24 or early on the 25th, 2009. Since 2010, a writing prize has been offered in her memory in the Columbia University English Department.

Awards

  • 2001 Witter Bynner Poetry Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters
  • Ingram Merrill grant
  • 1993 National Poetry Series, for Other Stars
  • Works

  • "Gold Leaves"; "Five-Finger Exercise", THE CORTLAND REVIEW, ISSUE 32, June 2006
  • "At the Zen Mountain Monastery", Very Like a Whale, September 7, 2006
  • "Pemberley". The Nation. October 3, 2002. 
  • "Manhattan Triptych"; "Sakura Park", Poetry Daily
  • Poetry

  • The Other Stars (Penguin, 1994) ISBN 978-0-14-058728-9
  • Home and Away (Penguin, 1998) ISBN 978-0-14-058892-7
  • Sakura Park (Persea, 2006) ISBN 978-0-89255-324-2
  • Silver Roses (Persea, 2010)
  • Anthologies

  • Mark Jarman and David Mason, eds. (1996). Rebel Angels: 25 Poets of the New Formalism. Story Line Press. ISBN 1-885266-30-8
  • Gerald Costanzo and Jim Daniels, eds. (2000). American Poetry: The Next Generation. Carnegie Mellon University Press. ISBN 978-0-88748-337-0
  • J. D. McClatchy, ed. (2001). "Commands for the End of Summer; Blue Octavo Haiku; And This Time I Mean It". Bright pages: Yale writers 1701-2001. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08944-8. 
  • Criticism

  • "Some Reflections on Eliot's "Reflections on Vers Libre": on Verse and Free Verse". poets.org. 
  • "Rachel Wetzsteon on Auden", NEWSLETTER 21, The W. H. Auden Society, February 2001
  • Influential Ghosts: A Study of Auden's Sources. Routledge. 2005. ISBN 978-0-415-97546-9.  (reprint CRC Press, 2007)
  • "Ruskin's Whip". Parnassus. January 1, 2005. 
  • "Marvellous Sapphics", Poetry Society: "Crossroads", Fall 1999
  • Editor

  • Virginia Woolf, Night and Day (Barnes and Noble Classics, 2005)
  • The Collected Poems of Emily Dickinson. Barnes and Noble Classics. 2003. ISBN 978-1-56619-030-5. 
  • Reviews

    In a perfect world, Rachel Wetzsteon would be one of the most popular poets of her generation. You would see people in the outdoor cafes along Upper Broadway reading copies of Sakura Park, her third collection, the way pilgrims to Greenwich Village carry Scott Fitzgerald or Edna St. Vincent Millay. For Wetzsteon's poems manage to turn Morningside Heights—a quiet, bourgeois neighborhood near Columbia University, home to the park of her title—into a theater of romance, an intellectual haven, a flaneur's paradise. Her poems evoke the kind of life that generations of young people have come to New York to live—earnest, glamorous, and passionate, full of sex and articulate suffering...

    Rachel Wetzsteon’s inheritance from W.H. Auden (she’s the author of Influential Ghosts: A Study of Auden’s Sources) is nowhere more apparent than in her third collection. Just as in Auden’s “Musée des Beaux Arts,” where life goes on as Icarus plunges into the sea, Wetzsteon has set a tale of personal heartbreak against the bustling, vivid life of New York City.

    References

    Rachel Wetzsteon Wikipedia