Joseph Donahue Explained

Joseph Donahue (born 1954[1]) is an American poet, critic, and editor. Born in Dallas, Texas and growing up in Lowell, Massachusetts, Donahue attended Dartmouth College for his undergraduate degree and went on to Columbia University and lived for many years in New York City. He now resides in Durham, North Carolina, where he is a professor of the Practice at Duke University.[2]

Poetry collections by Joseph Donahue

Anthologies edited by Joseph Donahue

Critical reception

Of Donahue's collection Incidental Eclipse, John Ashbery has written "Something is going under, something is coming to the surface; each is documented by two voices, one speaking in italics. There is little comfort here, but there is glamor in the inevitable, 'incidental' screen of darkness moving across the light. This sequence confirms Donahue as one of the major American poets of this time."

Of the same collection, the poet Gustaf Sobin has stated that "In these sustained breath-strips, life's disparate, hopelessly disassociated elements find themselves spliced into single, all-inclusive sequences. In associating myth with matter, our deepest longings with our most dire anxieties, Donahue strikes an uninterrupted series of grace notes..."

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Donahue, Joseph, 1954- - LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies Library of Congress . id.loc.gov . 10 May 2019 .
  2. Web site: Joseph Donahue. Duke University.
  3. Book: Shams, Ishteyaque. New Perspectives on American Literature. 6 August 2011. 2004. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. 978-81-269-0393-1. 62.