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Alice Oswald

 
Wikipedia: Alice Oswald

Alice Oswald (born 1966) is a British poet.

Contents

Career

Oswald read Classics at New College, Oxford, has worked as a gardener at Chelsea Physic Garden, and today lives with her husband, the playwright Peter Oswald (also a trained classicist), and her three children in Devon, in the South of England.

In 1994, she was the recipient of an Eric Gregory Award. Her first collection of poetry, The Thing in the Gap-Stone Stile (1996), won a Forward Poetry Prize (Best First Collection) in 1996, and was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize in 1997.

Her second collection, Dart (2002), combined verse and prose, which tells the story of the River Dart in Devon from a variety of perspectives. Jeanette Winterson called it a '… moving, changing poem, as fast-flowing as the river and as deep … a celebration of difference …' (The Times, 27 July 2002). Dart won the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2002.

In 2004, Oswald was named as one of the Poetry Book Society's Next Generation poets. Her latest collection, Woods etc., was published in 2005 and was shortlisted for the Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year).

Bibliography

Awards and recognition

External links

  • Contemporarywriters.com Alice Oswald - Biography and Analysis of her Works
  • [1] London Review of Books Review of Woods etc by Aingeal Clare.

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