Grace DiSanto explained

Grace DiSanto
Birth Name:Grace Johanne DeMarco
Birth Date:1924
Birth Place:Derby, Connecticut
Death Date:June 4, 1993
Death Place:Morganton, North Carolina
Spouse:Frank M. DiSanto
Alma Mater:Belmont Abbey College

Grace DiSanto (1924-1993) was an American journalist and poet based in North Carolina.

Biography

She was born in Derby, Connecticut, in 1924 to Richard and Grace DeMarco. After moving to North Carolina in 1961, she graduated summa cum laude from Belmont Abbey College with a bachelor's degree in English.[1] After college, she spent ten years working as a reporter, drama critic, and feature writer for the Australian Associated Press (New York City), the Ansonia Sentinel (Ansonia, Connecticut), and the Sunday Herald (New Haven, Connecticut).[2]

DiSanto published over 180 poems in journals and anthologies, including Southern Poetry Review, Yale Literary Magazine, and New Voices II: An Anthology of Cape Fear Writers. Her first volume of poetry, The Eye is Single (1981), received the 1982 Oscar Arnold Young Memorial Award from the North Carolina Poetry Society.[3] She also won several single-poem awards, including the 1982 Sam Ragan Poetry Prize for "At Grandfather Mountain II." She taught poetry at Western Piedmont Community College and was involved in the Poetry in the Schools program for Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. She was a member of the North Carolina Poetry Society, the Poetry Council of North Carolina, the New York Poetry Forum, and Centro Studie Scamb Internationale, Rome, Italy.

She married Frank M. DiSanto and had a son and two daughters. She died at her home in Morganton, North Carolina, on June 4, 1993, after a long illness. Her papers are on file at Western Piedmont Community College,[4] and in the Southern Appalachian Writers Collection of the Asheville Art Museum, University of North Carolina.[5]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Barolini . Helen . Helen Barolini . The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women . Syracuse University Press . 1985 . 9780815606628 . Grace DiSanto . 307–310 . https://books.google.com/books?id=9zl6HuQ7WnwC&pg=PA307.
  2. News: Asheville Citizen-Times . Grace DiSanto, 68, teacher, poet, journalist, dies at home . June 5, 1993 . Newspapers.com.
  3. Book: Eubanks . Georgann . Literary Trails of the North Carolina Mountains: A Guidebook . ReadHowYouWant.com . 2009 . 9781458716132 . 285 .
  4. Web site: Western Piedmont Community College . The Grace DiSanto Poetry Collection .
  5. Web site: Asheville Art Museum . Grace DiSanto .