Results for Amy Clampitt
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Columbia Encyclopedia: Clampitt, Amy,
1920–94, American poet, b. New Providence, Iowa. A librarian and editor, she wrote little until the 1960s. Her first major magazine publication was in 1974, and her first commercially published volume of poems, The Kingfisher (1983), appeared when she was 63. Later volumes are What the Light Was Like (1985), Archaic Figure (1987), Westward (1990), and A Silence Opens (1994). Clampitt's collected poems appeared in 1997. Her densely ornate and richly allusive verse is often elegiac in tone, and much of her best work concerns the natural world. She also published an essay collection, Predecessors, et Cetera (1990).

Bibliography

See her selected letters, ed. by W. Spiegelman (2005).

 
 
Works: Works by Amy Clampitt
(1920-1994)

1983The Kingfisher. The first major collection by the sixty-three-year-old poet is called by reviewer Edmund White "one of the most brilliant debuts in recent American history." Clampitt treats with mastery scenes of growing up in rural Iowa, observations along the Maine coast, and appreciations of John Keats. Two additional acclaimed collections would appear during the decade--What the Light Was Like (1985) and Archaic Figure (1987).
1985What the Light Was Like. Critics praise the poet's luminous verse, which delicately focuses on moments of perception, suffused with sounds and images evoking the evanescent quality of experience. Her settings include the Maine coast, the Midwest, Europe, and California.
1990Westward. Clampitt's collection prompts reviewer Phoebe Pettingell to declare the poet "our new Virgil--guiding us through the middle of our lives' journeys along the tortuous spiral tracks of our culture."
1994A Silence Opens. Clampitt's fifth and final collection before her death shows the poet's characteristic wry and challenging meditations on the forces of history and life's odd juxtapositions. These are revealed in "Discovery," which connects the perspective of a manatee with the liftoff of a space shuttle.
1997Collected Poems. Clampitt's work, which has been compared with Emily Dickinson's and Elizabeth Bishop's, vividly focuses on an object (such as a single seedling in "Fireweed") and endows it with both sensuous and metaphysical properties. Although a city poet in many respects ("Times Square Water Music" is representative), her subject matter ranges wide in poems such as "The Prairie" and "Grasmere" (a tribute to Wordsworth).

 
Wikipedia: Amy Clampitt

Amy Clampitt (1920 - 1994) was an American poet and author.

Life

Amy Clampitt was born on June 15, 1920 of Quaker parents, and brought up in New Providence, Iowa. In the American Academy of Arts and Letters and at nearby Grinnell College she began a study of English literature that eventually led her to poetry. She graduated from Grinnell College, and from that time on lived mainly in New York City. To support herself, she worked as a secretary at the Oxford University Press, a reference librarian at the Audubon Society, and a freelance editor. Not until the mid-1960s, when she was in her forties, did she return to writing poetry. Her first poem was published by The New Yorker in 1978. In 1983, at the age of sixty-three, she published her first full-length collection, The Kingfisher. In the decade that followed, Clampitt published five books of poetry, including What the Light Was Like (1985), Archaic Figure (1987), and Westward (1990). Her last book, A Silence Opens, appeared in 1994. She also published a book of essays and several privately printed editions of her longer poems. She was also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and taught at the College of William and Mary, Smith College, and Amherst College, but it was her time spent in Manhattan, in a remote part of Maine, and on various trips to Europe, the former Soviet Union, Iowa, Wales, and England that most directly influenced her work. Clampitt was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a MacArthur Fellowship, and she was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Poets. She died of cancer in September, 1994.

Works

Poetry collections

  • Multitudes, Multitudes (Washington Street Press, 1973).
  • The Summer Solstice (Sarabande Press, 1983).
  • The Kingfisher (Knopf, 1983). ISBN 0-394-52840-9.
  • What the Light Was Like (Knopf, 1983). ISBN 0-394-54318-1.
  • Archaic Figure (Knopf, 1987). ISBN 0-394-75090-X.
  • Westward (Knopf, 1990). ISBN 0-394-58455-4.
  • Manhattan: An Elegy, and Other Poems (University of Iowa Center for the Book, 1990).
  • A Silence Opens (Knopf, 1994). ISBN 0-679-75022-3.
  • The Collected Poems of Amy Clampitt (Knopf, 1997). ISBN 0-375-70064-1.

Prose

  • A Homage to John Keats (Sarabande Press, 1984).
  • The Essential Donne (Ecco Press, 1988). ISBN 0-88001-480-6.
  • Predecessors, Et Cetera: Essays (University of Michigan Press, 1991). ISBN 0-472-06457-6.

External links


 
 

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Copyrights:

Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Amy Clampitt" Read more

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