Peter Johnson (poet) explained

Peter Johnson
Birth Date:1951
Birth Place:Buffalo, New York
Occupation:Poet, Novelist
Education:B.A. from the State University of New York at Buffalo, M.A., and Ph.D. in English from the University of New Hampshire
Notable Works:"Miracles & Mortifications", "Eduardo & 'I'", "Pretty Happy!", "Love Poems for the Millennium", "I'm A Man", "What Happened", "Loserville"
Awards:2001 James Laughlin Award

Peter Johnson (b. 1951 Buffalo, New York) is an American poet, and novelist.

Life

He received his B.A. from the State University of New York at Buffalo, and his M.A. and Ph.D. in English from the University of New Hampshire.

His poems and fiction have appeared in Field, Denver Quarterly, The Iowa Review, Indiana Review, Quarterly West, North Dakota Quarterly,[1] The Party Train: A Collection of North American Prose Poetry,[2] and Beloit Fiction Journal.

Johnson is the founder and editor of The Prose Poem: An International Journal,[3] and the editor of The Best of The Prose Poem: An International Journal (White Pine Press, 2000). He is contributing editor to American Poetry Review, Web del Sol, and Slope,[4] and teaches creative writing and children's literature at Providence College,[5] Rhode Island, where he lives with his wife, Genevieve, and two sons, Kurt and Lucas.

Awards

He is the winner of the 2001 James Laughlin Award for his second collection of prose poems, Miracles & Mortifications (2001). He received a creative writing award in 2002 from Rhode Council on the Arts and a fellowship in 1999 from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Works

Poetry books

Chapbooks

Novel

Short stories

Review

About his work, the poet Bruce Smith has said:

Because Peter Johnson does not guide himself either by the turns and counterturns of verse or the horizontal urge of prose, he must continually reinvent the wheel and its destination. He writes with a lover's lavish extravagance and a yogi's self-discipline. His funny poems are heartbreaking and his serious ones are hilarious.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NDQ: North Dakota Quarterly. 1995.
  2. Book: The American prose poem . registration. 245. Peter Johnson (poet).. Michel Delville. University Press of Florida. 1998. 978-0-8130-1591-0 .
  3. Web site: The Prose Poem. www.webdelsol.com.
  4. http://www.slope.org/archive/ten/about.html
  5. Web site: Providence College - Peter Johnson . www.providence.edu . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041019224536/http://www.providence.edu/English/Faculty/Peter+Johnson.htm . 2004-10-19.