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William Logan (poet)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Logan
Born1950
NationalityAmerican
Academic background
Alma materYale University
University of Iowa
Academic work
DisciplinePoetry
InstitutionsUniversity of Florida

William Logan (born 1950) is an American poet, critic and scholar.

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Transcription

Life

Logan was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to W. Donald Logan, Jr. and Nancy Damon Logan. He lives in Gainesville, Florida and Cambridge, England with his wife, the poet and artist, Debora Greger. Educated at Yale (BA, 1972) and the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa (MFA, 1975), he has authored eight books of poetry as well as five books of criticism.

Work

He is a professor of creative writing at the University of Florida. Logan's poetry reviews have appeared in the New York Times Book Review. Many of these reviews have been quite controversial, leading Slate magazine to call him "the most hated man in American poetry...  [and] its guiltiest pleasure".[1] Logan's own poetry has received generally positive reviews. The poet Richard Tillinghast wrote, "when he manages to avoid obscurity, Mr. Logan writes with vigor, almost classical restraint and a fine sense of musicality." Logan's work has also received positive notices from The New York Times Book Review, Poetry and Publishers Weekly.[2] In a review in Poetry magazine, Michael Scharf favorably compared the poetry from Logan's 1999 collection Night Battle with the work of the poet Geoffrey Hill.[2]

Reviews

Being a formalist poet himself, Logan's handful of positive reviews tend to go to well-established, conservative poets (usually deceased) who were/are masters of formal verse like Geoffrey Hill, Frederick Seidel, Robert Lowell, and Elizabeth Bishop.[3] But he has also fiercely criticized other formalist poets like Les Murray and Derek Walcott and praised a few free verse poets like Louise Gluck and Anne Carson. Logan has been especially critical of popular free verse poets like Mary Oliver, Billy Collins, and Sharon Olds as well as more experimental poets like Jorie Graham and Rae Armantrout.[4] Although he's best known for his often extreme reviews of poets, Logan has written some mixed reviews of poets like Kay Ryan, John Ashbery, and Frank O'Hara whom he has judged to be flawed but admirable.

Awards

Bibliography

Poetry

Criticism

  • All the Rage (1998)
  • Reputations of the Tongue (1999)
  • Desperate Measures (2002)
  • The Undiscovered Country (2005)
  • Our Savage Art (2009)
  • Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure: The Dirty Art of Poetry (2014)[5]
  • Dickinson's Nerves, Frost's Woods: Poetry in the Shadow of the Past (2018)
  • Broken Ground: Poetry and the Demon of History (2021)

References

  1. ^ McHenry, Eric (January 28, 2002). "Poetry's cruelest and guiltiest pleasure". Slate Magazine. Retrieved December 5, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Foundation, Poetry (December 5, 2021). "William Logan". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved December 5, 2021.
  3. ^ Ford, Mark. "Samurai Critic." The New York Times Book Review. April 4, 2009 [1]
  4. ^ See W. Logan's "Chronicles" columns in The New Criterion magazine.
  5. ^ Logan, William (April 5, 2014). Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure: The Dirty Art of Poetry. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231537230. Retrieved December 5, 2021.

External links

This page was last edited on 12 October 2023, at 22:36
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