- Life
- Bibliography Poetry Essays Theory
- References
- External links
Mary Kinzie (born 1944) is an American poet. LifeShe received her B.A. from Northwestern University in 1967, and returned there to teach in 1975. She won Fulbright and Woodrow Wilson fellowships to do graduate work at the Free University of Berlin and Johns Hopkins University. Kinzie won the Folger Shakespeare Library's 2008 O. B. Hardison, Jr. Poetry Prize, the only major American prize to recognize a poet for teaching as well as writing.[1] BibliographyPoetry- {{cite book| title=California Sorrow| year=2007| isbn=978-0-307-26680-4| publisher=Alfred A. Knopf }}
- {{cite book| title=Drift| year=2005| isbn=978-0-375-41463-3| publisher=Alfred A. Knopf }}
- {{cite book| title=The Ghost Ship| year=1996| publisher=Alfred A. Knopf | isbn=978-0-679-44645-3 }}
- {{cite book| title=Autumn Eros and Other Poems| year=1991| isbn=978-0-394-58992-3| publisher=Alfred A. Knopf }}
- {{cite book| title=Summers of Vietnam and Other Poems| year=1990| isbn=978-0-935296-83-9| publisher=The Sheep Meadow Press }}
- Masked Women (1990)
- {{cite book| title=The Threshold of the Year| year=1982| isbn=978-0-8262-0361-8| publisher=University of Missouri Press }}
Essays- {{cite book| title=The Cure of Poetry in an Age of Prose: Moral Essays on the Poet's Calling| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qa3FZafhLi8C | publisher=University of Chicago Press| year=1993| isbn=978-0-226-43736-1 }} (which includes the influential and controversial essay "The Rhapsodic Fallacy").
Theory- {{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rBSCbOZ0O1YC | title=A Poet's Guide to Poetry| year=1999| isbn=978-0-226-43739-2| publisher=University of Chicago Press }}
References1. ^{{cite web| url=http://www.folger.edu/Content/Whats-On/Folger-Poetry/OB-Hardison-Jr-Poetry-Prize/About-the-2008-OB-Hardison-Jr-Poetry-Prize-Winner.cfm| title=About the 2008 O.B. Hardison, Jr. Poetry Prize Winner| work=The Folger Shakespeare Library}}{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
External links- An interview with Mary Kinzie and audio clips of her reading three of her poems at the National Humanities Center
- Mary Kinzie's homepage at Northwestern University
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Kinzie, Mary}}{{US-poet-1940s-stub}} 10 : 1944 births|Living people|Formalist poets|Guggenheim Fellows|American women poets|Northwestern University alumni|Johns Hopkins University alumni|Northwestern University faculty|20th-century American poets|20th-century American women writers |