Lucille Clifton is the author of eleven books of poetry, one prose collection and nineteen books for children.
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
the angels have no wings they come to you wearing their own clothes they have learned to love you and will keep coming unless you insist on wings
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
whether in spirit or out of spirit we don’t know only that balance is the law balance or be balanced whether in body or out of body we don’t know
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
the air you have polluted you will breathe the waters you have poisoned you will drink when you come again and you will come again the air you have polluted you will breathe the waters you have poisoned you will drink ■
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the editors of the following journals, in which some of these poems first appeared: Callaloo, Kestrel, Lyric, and Runes.
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
Thanks also to National Public Radio, which aired Ms. Clifton reading her sequence “september song: a poem in 7 days.”
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
Her collection, Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000 received the National Book Award for Poetry.
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
Other honors include an Emmy Award from the American Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Shelley Memorial Prize, the Charity Randall Citation, and a Lannan Literary Award.
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
In 1996, she was a National Book Award Finalist for The Terrible Stories and was the only poet ever to have two books (next: new poems and good woman: poems and a memoir 1969-1980) chosen as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in the same year.
Menna Abu Zahraцитирует4 года назад
Appointed a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets in 1999 and elected a Fellow in Literature of The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Clifton currently resides in Columbia, Maryland, where she is a Distinguished Professor of Humanities and holds the Hilda C. Landers Chair in the Liberal Arts at St. Mary’s