Ploughshares Fall 1983 Guest-Edited by Richard Tillinghast and George Garrett

Ploughshares Fall 1983 Guest-Edited by Richard Tillinghast and George Garrett

Ploughshares Fall 1983 Guest-Edited by Richard Tillinghast and George Garrett

Ploughshares Fall 1983 Guest-Edited by Richard Tillinghast and George Garrett

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Overview

The Fall 1983 issue of Ploughshares, guest-edited by Richard Tillinghast and George Garrett. Ploughshares, a journal of new writing, is guest-edited serially by prominent writers who explore different personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles.

Table of Contents

FICTION
"A Family of Gothics: Three Sketches," by Heather Ross Miller
"Island," by Edward P. Jones
"My Only Homerun," by Tom Whalen
"The Letters," by Paul Ramsey
"Williams Lake, British Columbia, Canada," by David Tillinghast
Excerpt from "Departing as Air," by Allen Wier
"Hog-Killing Weather," by Paul Ruffin
"Wedding Night," by Tom Hawkins
"Cumberland Spring," by Joseph Maiolo
"The Auction," by Tom Alderson

NONFICTION
"An Interview with Shelby Foote," by Richard Tillinghast
"A Foreword to Andrew Lytle," by Douglas Paschall

POETRY
Robert Penn Warren
Donald Justice
Charles Wright
James Dickey
Paul Ramsey
Peter Cooley
R. H. W. Dillard
Andrew Hudgins
Fred Chappell
Turner Cassity
Everette Maddox
Jeanne Larsen
William Harmon
C. D. Wright
H. T. Kirby-Smith
Coleman Barks
David Bottoms
Bin Ramke
Henry Taylor
Yusef Komunyakaa
James Applewhite
Dave Smith
Gibbons Ruark
William Hathaway
Jeanie Thompson
Charles A. Kilmer
Van K. Brock
James Baker Hall
Dabney Stuart
Carolyne Wright
Ellen Bryant Voigt
Frances Mayes
Wyatt Prunty
David Huddle
Carol Cox
Thomas Rabbitt
Carol Poster
Marly Youmans
Roger Sauls
Jackson Davis
William Page
Cathryn Hankla
Reginald Gibbons
Don DuPree
David Spicer
David Kirby
Miller Williams
John Biguenet
Eleanor Ross Taylor

Product Details

BN ID: 2940148739586
Publisher: Ploughshares / Emerson College
Publication date: 09/01/1983
Series: Ploughshares , #93
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 236
File size: 966 KB

About the Author

Richard Tillinghast is the author of eleven books of poetry-most recently Selected Poems (Dedalus Press, 2009), and Sewanee Poems (Evergreen Press, 2009) as well as three non-fiction books: Finding Ireland (University of Notre Dame press, 2008), Damaged Grandeur, a critical memoir of the poet Robert Lowell, with whom he studied as a graduate student at Harvard in the mid-sixties (University of Michigan Press, 1995) and Poetry and What Is Real , a collection of essays (University of Michigan Press, 2004). With Julia Clare Tillinghast he has translated the poems of Edip Cansever from Turkish, published in 2009 as Dirty August. For this book the translators received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. For twenty years he reviewed new poetry for the New York Times Book Review. He has also reviewed and written literary essays for The Wall Street Journal, The Irish Times, The Washington Post, and The New Criterion, as well as writing travel articles for the New York Times. His poems have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The New Republic, Paris Review, American Poetry Review, Five Points, The Georgia Review, The New Yorker, Poetry, and other magazines, as well as online on Slate and Poetry Daily, in addition to having been featured on Garrison Keilor's NPR show, "The Writer's Almanac."

For over twenty years he was a faculty member in the Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Michigan and was also a Director of The Poets' House in Ireland. In 2001 he founded the Bear River Writers' Conference in northern Michigan and served as its director through 2005. Earlier in his career he was on the faculty at Harvard, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of the South at Sewanee. He has also done performance poetry; in 1998 he released a poetry/music CD, "My Only Friends Were the Wolves," with the Ann Arbor-based jazz fusion band, Poignant Plecostomus.

In 2005 he took early retirement from the University of Michigan and now lives in rural County Tipperary near the town of Kilkenny, where he is able to pursue writing full-time.
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