Valerie Wohlfeld
Encyclopedia

Life

She was educated at American University
American University
American University is a private, Methodist, liberal arts, and research university in Washington, D.C. The university was chartered by an Act of Congress on December 5, 1892 as "The American University", which was approved by President Benjamin Harrison on February 24, 1893...

, and Sarah Lawrence College
Sarah Lawrence College
Sarah Lawrence College is a private liberal arts college in the United States, and a leader in progressive education since its founding in 1926. Located just 30 minutes north of Midtown Manhattan in southern Westchester County, New York, in the city of Yonkers, this coeducational college offers...

, and received an M.F.A. from Vermont College in 1983. Valerie Wohlfeld’s 1994 collection, Thinking the World Visible, won the Yale Younger Poets Prize. Her book, Woman with Wing Removed, came out in 2010 from Truman State University Press. Her work has appeared in The Antioch Review, New England Review, Journal of the American Medical Association, and elsewhere.

Works


Books

  • Thinking the World Visible, Yale University Press, 1994, ISBN 0300060181
  • Woman with Wing Removed, Truman State University Press, 2010, ISBN 9781935503064

Anthologies

  • Poets of the New Century Editors Roger Weingarten and Richard M. Higgerson, David R. Godine, Publisher, Inc., 2001, ISBN 1567921787
  • The Yale Younger Poets Anthology Editor George Bradley, Yale University Press, 1998, ISBN 0300074735

Reviews

Publishers Weekly
Wohlfeld's gifts are considerable; she will not be for long 'a fruit/indiscernible to itself'.


Elizabeth Gunderson, Booklist
Her book, winner of the 1994 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition, shows why the judge, James Dickey, calls its author 'a female shaman of Eve who takes power over the natural world by naming it,' for Wohlfeld is an adept at defining such natural things as rain, spring, and the sea.


Library Journal
Wohlfeld has ambitious vision and a striking verbal facility to match.


Judith Hall, The Antioch Review
Wohlfeld makes the singed edges of disjunture visible, changing postmodern poetry to prayer.

External references

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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