Emily Hiestand

American writer and poet (born 1947)

Emily Hiestand (born 1947 Chicago) is an American writer and poet.

Life

She grew up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. She graduated from the Philadelphia College of Art. In 1970, she moved to Boston, where she worked as a graphic designer. She studied at Boston University, with George Starbuck.[1]

She was an editor at Orion magazine and the Atlantic Monthly.[2]

Her work appears in Atlantic Monthly, Boston Globe Magazine, Bostonia, Georgia Review, Hudson Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, New York Times, Orion, Partisan Review, Prairie Schooner, Southeast Review, The Nation,[3] The New Yorker.[4][5]

Awards

  • 1988 National Poetry Series, for Green the Witch Hazel Wood, selected by U.S. Poet Laureate Jorie Graham
  • 1988 The Nation/ Discovery Prize
  • 1990 Whiting Award

Works

Essays

  • "The Constant Gardener". The Atlantic. March 2007.
  • "Real Places". The Atlantic. July–August 2001.
  • The Very Rich Hours: Travels in Orkney, Belize, the Everglades and Greece. Beacon Press. 1993. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8070-7117-5. Emily Hiestand poet.
  • Angela the Upside Down Girl: And Other Domestic Travels. Beacon Press. 1998. ISBN 978-0-8070-7128-1.

Poetry

  • Green the Witch Hazel Wood. Graywolf Press. 1989. ISBN 1-55597-120-2.

Anthologies

  • Robert Finch; John Elder, eds. (2002). "Zip-A-Dee-Do-Dah". Nature writing: the tradition in English. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 959. ISBN 978-0-393-04966-4. Emily Hiestand poet.
  • Jorie Graham; David Lehman, eds. (1990). The best American poetry, 1990. Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-19187-4.
  • Jim Elledge; Susan Swartwout, eds. (1999). Real things: an anthology of popular culture in American poetry. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33434-3.

Reviews

Emily Hiestand stretches the elastic border "around the place we call home," dissolving boundaries imposed by time and geography as she looks beneath the surface of the familiar.[6]

References

  1. ^ "BU Bridge Feature Article".
  2. ^ "Poetry Reading by Emily Hiestand | College of the Holy Cross". Archived from the original on 2010-06-07. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  3. ^ "The Nation Digital Archive 1865-2006". Archived from the original on 2006-07-03.
  4. ^ "Travel Slides". The New Yorker. 14 August 1995.
  5. ^ "Emily Hiestand". 25 May 1994.
  6. ^ Leslie Chess Feller (April 18, 1999). "Books in Brief". The New York Times.

External links

  • Author's website
  • Profile at The Whiting Foundation
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