April 2005 Updrafts

April 2005 Updrafts

Chaparral from the California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. serving Californiaupdr poets for over 60 yearsaftsVolume 66, No. 3 • April, 2005 President Ted Kooser is Pulitzer Prize Winner James Shuman, PSJ 2005 has been a busy year for Poet Laureate Ted Kooser. On April 7, the Pulitzer commit- First Vice President tee announced that his Delights & Shadows had won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. And, Jeremy Shuman, PSJ later in the week, he accepted appointment to serve a second term as Poet Laureate. Second Vice President While many previous Poets Laureate have also Katharine Wilson, RF Winners of the Pulitzer Prize receive a $10,000 award. Third Vice President been winners of the Pulitzer, not since 1947 has the Pegasus Buchanan, Tw prize been won by the sitting laureate. In that year, A professor of English at the University of Ne- braska-Lincoln, Kooser’s award-winning book, De- Fourth Vice President Robert Lowell won— and at the time the position Eric Donald, Or was known as the Consultant in Poetry to the Li- lights & Shadows, was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2004. Treasurer brary of Congress. It was not until 1986 that the po- Ursula Gibson, Tw sition became known as the Poet Laureate Consult- “I’m thrilled by this,” Kooser said shortly after Recording Secretary ant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. the announcement. “ It’s something every poet dreams Lee Collins, Tw The 89th annual prizes in Journalism, Letters, of. There are so many gifted poets in this country, Corresponding Secretary Drama and Music were announced by Columbia Uni- and so many marvelous collections published each Dorothy Marshall, Tw versity. The poetry award honors a “distinguished year. That mine has been selected is a great honor.” Members-at-Large Chair volume of original verse by an American author.” Poetry Daily said of Delights & Shadows: “For Frances Yordan, FG Finalists were The Orchard by Brigit Pegeen Kelly more than thirty years Ted Kooser has written poems Monthly Contest Chair and Collected Poems by the late William Matthews. that deftly bring dissimilar things into telling unities. Cleo Griffith, PSJ Throughout a long and distinguished writing career Convention Chair, 2005 Retired insurance man he has worked toward clarity and accessibility, mak- Katharine Wilson, RF puts a premium on verse ing poetry as fresh and spontaneous as a good water- James Shuman, PSJ color. A gyroscope balanced between a child’s hands, by Elizabeth Lund November 16, 2004 a jar of buttons that recalls generations of women, Convention Program Chair —excerpted from The Christian Science Monitor and a bird briefly witnessed outside a window — each Mary Rudge, AIP Ted Kooser isn’t embarrassed to say that the poems Annual Contest Chair he wrote in grade school were decidedly ordinary: “I reveals the remarkable within an otherwise ordinary Lisabeth Shuman, PSJ love my dog/ his padded paws/ at Christmas he’s my/ world.” Youth Contest Chair Santa Claus.” He doesn’t try to hide the fact that as a In addition to Delights & Shadows, Kooser is the Norma King Green, VW teenager “my impulse toward poetry had a lot to do author of 10 collections of poetry and prose includ- Children’s Poetry Fair and with girls.” Kooser, a 65-year-old retired insurance ex- ing Local Wonders, Seasons in the Bohemian Alps, Education Committee Chair ecutive, even admits to knocking the side-view mirror Linda McCarty, VW off his car after being named poet laureate of the United continued on page two: ‘Pulitzer’ States in August. He was so excited, he says in a phone Publications Chair interview, that he didn’t pay attention as he backed out Dana Gioia praises Kooser James Shuman, PSJ of his driveway in Garland, Nebraska. … Kooser has written more perfect poems than Roster and ByLaws Chair any other poet of his generation. In a quiet way, he is Jeremy Shuman, PSJ Some poets might not mention those stories, culti- vating instead a more worldly image. But for Kooser, also one of its most original poets. His technical and Archivist and Librarian the first US laureate from the Plains States, ordinary intellectual interest may be narrow (indeed, in terms Katharine Wilson, RF moments are the impetus for art. His poems are like of limited techniques, he shares a common fault of Millennium Poetry flashlights illuminating small dramas: a father watch- his generation), but his work shows an impressive C. Joy Haas, RF ing his son get married; a tattoo that has faded. The emotional range always handled in a distinctively per- Web Site setting may be rural America, but the scene is univer- sonal way. Finally, his work does coalesce into an www.ChaparralPoets.org sal. That resonance, along with his clear, graceful style, impressive whole. Read individually, his poems FEDERATION have earned him numerous awards Yet what really sparkle with insight. Read together, they provide a makes Kooser a “thoroughly American laureate” — as broad and believable portrait of contemporary of predecessor Billy Collins has called him — is not just America. his approach but the way his perspective seems to mirror CHAPARRAL —excerpted from “The Anonymity of the Regional Poet,” that of “average” Americans. an essay on Ted Kooser from Can Poetry Matter? Essays “Most of us would prefer to look at cartoons in a maga- on Poetry and American Culture. poets CALIFORNIA inc. continued on page four: ‘Insurance’ printed 1992; 2002, Graywolf Press. Copyright 2005 California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. Chaparral Updrafts, Volume 66, No. 3, April 2005. All rights reserved. Poets retain rights to their poems. Copyright 2005 California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. All rights reserved. Poets retain rights to their poems. Chaparral Pulitzer Prize goes to Poet Laureate Kooser continued from page one year; One World at a Time (1985); Weather updrafts (2002) and The Poetry Home Repair Manual Central (1994); and Winter Morning Walks: (2005) published by University of Nebraska One Hundred Postcards to Jim Harrison Editor & Publisher .......James Shuman Press. Kooser was born in (2000), winner of the 2001 2521 Meadow Rue Drive Ames, Iowa, in 1939 and at- Nebraska Book Award for Modesto, CA 95355-3910 tended public school there Poetry. Local Wonders also 209-523-6954 FAX 209-521-8778 before earning his bachelor’s won the Nebraska Book Treasurer .................. Ursula T. Gibson degree at Iowa State Univer- Award for Nonfiction in P O Box 806, Tujunga, CA 91043 sity (1962). He taught school 2003. The book was also 818-353-7174 for one year before moving chosen as the Best Book Corresponding Secretary to Nebraska to pursue gradu- Written by a Midwestern ........................... Dorothy Marshall ate school. He received his Writer for 2002 by Friends of American Writers, and it 430 Eleventh St, Pomona, CA 91766 master’s degree at the Uni- won the Gold Award for Au- 888-308-7488 versity of Nebraska in 1968. He has lived all of his life in tobiography in ForeWord Please send news and information items to Nebraska and Iowa. Magazine’s Book of the Year the editor one month in advance of intended Awards. He has an upcom- publication date. Kooser’s other collec- ing release, Flying at Night, For questions involving membership, either tions of poetry include Sure a new compilation from Uni- new or renewal, please contact the treasurer. Signs (1980), which re- versity of Pittsburg Press Be sure to visit our new web site: ceived the Society of Mid- that will include poems from Sure Signs and http://www.ChaparralPoets.org land Authors Prize for the best book of po- etry by a Midwestern writer published in that One World at a Time. This new book will be out in 2005. Kooser is also the author, with his long- Poets Laureate listed by dates of service time friend Jim Harrison, of Braided Creek: The following poets have been appointed by the Librarian of Congress to the Consultant A Conversation in Poetry (2003), for which position. In 1986 Robert Penn Warren was the first to be designated Poet Laureate Consult- the two poets received the 2003 Award for ant in Poetry. The Poet Laureate “serves as the nation’s official lightning rod for the poetic Poetry from the Society of Midland Authors. impulse of Americans. During his or her term, the Poet Laureate seeks to raise the national Among Kooser’s other awards and honors are consciousness to a greater appreciation of the reading and writing of poetry.” two National Endowment for the Arts fellow- ships, the Pushcart Prize, the Stanley Kunitz Joseph Auslander 1937-41 William Jay Smith 1968-70 Prize, the James Boatwright Prize and a Merit Allen Tate 1943-44 William Stafford 1970-71 Award from the Nebraska Arts Council. Robert Penn Warren 1944-45 Josephine Jacobsen 1971-73 Louise Bogan 1945-46 Daniel Hoffman 1973-74 Since retiring from the insurance business, Karl Shapiro 1946-47 Stanley Kunitz 1974-76 Kooser has had more time for writing and Robert Lowell 1947-48 Robert Hayden 1976-78 has published three books. He teaches po- Leonie Adams 1948-49 William Meredith 1978-80 etry and nonfiction writing as a visiting pro- Elizabeth Bishop 1949-50 Maxine Kumin 1981-82 fessor at UNL and is on faculty for the Ne- Conrad Aiken 1950-52 Anthony Hecht 1982-84 braska Summer Writers’ Conference. Since William Carlos Williams Robert Fitzgerald 1984-85 his appointment in September as the U.S. appointed in 1952 but did not serve Reed Whittemore 1984-85 Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Randall Jarrell 1957-58 Interim Consultant in Poetry Library of Congress, he has traveled exten- Robert Frost 1958-59 Gwendolyn Brooks 1985-86 sively to readings, events and literary con- Richard Eberhart 1959-61 Robert Penn Warren 1986-87 ferences, while attending to his office in Louis Untermeyer 1961-63 Richard Wilbur 1987-88 Washington, D.C.

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