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Maxine Kumin

 

(born June 6, 1925, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.) U.S. poet. She studied at Radcliffe College. Her poetry, written primarily in traditional forms, deals with loss, fragility, family, and the cycles of life and nature. Her New Hampshire farm inspired Up Country (1972, Pulitzer Prize); later collections include the acclaimed The Retrieval System (1978), Our Ground Time Here Will Be Brief (1982), Nurture (1989), and Connecting the Dots (1996). She wrote numerous children's books, some with Anne Sexton, as well as novels and short stories.

For more information on Maxine Kumin, visit Britannica.com.

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American Author: Maxine Kumin
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  • Born: 1925
  • Birthplace: Philadelphia, PA

Maxine Kumin won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1973 for her collection, Up Country.

Born and raised in Philadelphia, Kumin, the daughter of Jewish parents, attended Catholic schools. With a bachelor's and a master's degree from Radcliffe College, she went on to study poetry at the Boston Center for Adult Education. Kumin taught English for several years at Tufts University and has also held appointments as a visiting lecturer and poet-in-residence at many American colleges and universities.

Among other awards Kumin has won are the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize from Poetry (1972), an American Academy and Institute of Arts a Letters Award for excellence in literature (1980), an Academy of American Poets fellowship (1986), and six honorary degrees. In 1981-982, she served as the poetry consultant to the Library of Congress.

Kumin wrote 11 books of poetry, a book of short stories, Why Can't We Live Together Like Civilized Human Beings? (1982), and four novels. She has also published over twenty books for children, four of which she co-authored with her friend, poet Anne Sexton. Since 1976, she and her husband have lived on a farm in New Hampshire, where they breed Arabian and quarter horses.

Most Famous Works

  • Halfway (1961)
  • Through Dooms of Love (1965)
  • Up Country (1972)
  • Selected Poems, 1960-1990 (1997)
Biography: Maxine Winokur Kumin
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American writer and poet Maxine Kumin (born 1925) has published numerous books of poetry, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning volume "Up Country: Poems of New England". Highly decorated for her literary works, she has also written several children's books, a short story collection and a handful of novels, among others. She has served as a Library of Congress consultant on poetry and is the former poet laureate of New Hampshire.

Early Life and Influenced by Anne Sexton

The youngest of four children, Kumin was born Maxine Winokur on June 6, 1925, to Jewish parents in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania's Germantown neighborhood. As a child, she attended Catholic schools; as a young adult, she traveled to Boston, Massachusetts, for her higher education. There, she completed her Bachelor's degree at Harvard's Radcliffe College in 1946. That same year marked her marriage, in June, to Victor Kumin, an engineering consultant with whom she would later have two daughters and one son. In 1948, Kumin received a Master's degree also from Radcliffe; during her years at the college, she studied with notable literary scholars including the prolific literary critic Harry Levin.

After completing her M.A., Kumin taught English at colleges in the Boston area, notably Tufts University from 1958 - 1961 and again from 1965 - 1968. From 1961 to 1963, she was a Bunting Fellow at Radcliffe's Bunting Institute. Throughout her career, Kumin would teach and lecture at universities around the United States, from large, prestigious institutions such as Columbia and Princeton to small, regional learning centers like Davis and Elkins in West Virginia. In recent years, Kumin has limited her teaching engagements to universities in warmer climates such as Louisiana and California, finding that her body is no longer able to handle the harsh northern winters well.

At a poetry workshop taught by John Holmes at the Boston Center for Adult Education in 1957, Kumin met and befriended two other poets of what is called the "confessional" of writing: Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath. The works of these poets were particularly noted for their intensely personal reflection on their own psychological states and problems. Sexton, who had taken up poetry writing in the mid-1950s following her second nervous breakdown, had become immediately successful and was a major influence on Kumin's work. The two women were close friends and collaborators until the time of Sexton's death in 1974, writing four children's books together: 1963's Eggs of Things, 1964's More Eggs of Things, 1971's Joey and the Birthday Present, and 1975's The Wizard's Tears.

Kumin's relationship with Sexton was a remarkably close one. Critics often mention the two writers in the same breath; speaking years after Sexton's suicide, Kumin admitted in her book Inside the Halo and Beyond: The Anatomy of a Recovery that "we were very, very important to each other. That I have not been able to reproduce, that kind of intimacy: the word, the line, the phrase, the shape, the close reading." Much of Kumin's early poetry was read and commented on by Sexton; Kumin recollected that the two would physically move poems around her living room floor, deciding what order to place her poems in for projected books. Although later in life, Kumin found other writers and poets with whom to discuss her work, she never recaptured that working and personal relationship she had developed with Sexton.

Moved to New Hampshire

In 1976, Kumin and her family relocated from Boston to rural New Hampshire, a setting that would inspire much of her later poetry. The Kumins had purchased the 200-acre former dairy farm, which they named PoBiz - short for Poetry Business - in 1963 and had used it for family week-end and vacation trips before permanently moving there. In New Letters, Kumin was quoted as saying "everything that happens [on the farm] is related to my poetry…. It is my life. It's just that simple." Kumin's husband commuted back into Boston for his job for a short period of time before the couple settled full-time at PoBiz

Poetic Works

Kumin published her first collection of poetry, Halfway, in 1961. Influenced by the confessional style of poetry, it was followed in 1965 by The Privilege and in 1970 by The Nightmare Factory, both of which explore her Jewish identity and family. These kinds of personal reflections are typical of the confessional school of poetry, leading to Kumin's grouping with her contemporaries Sexton and Plath. However, much of Kumin's work focuses on what Women's Writing in the United States called "the rhythms of life in rural New England," comparable to the poems of more traditional writers like Robert Frost. This interest in New England drove Kumin's third book of poetry, 1973's Up Country: Poems of New England, inspired by life on the Kumin family's New Hampshire farm. This volume won Kumin the 1973 Pulitzer Prize Award for Poetry.

Over the decades, Kumin has steadily produced poetry. The 1970s saw Kumin publish two more volumes of poetry: House, Bridge, Fountain, Gate in 1975 and The Retrieval System in 1978. In 1982, she released Our Ground Time Here Will be Brief: New and Selected Poems and in 1989, The Long Approach. The Retrieval System and Our Ground Time Here Will be Brief have been noted for their musings on life and death, particularly Sexton's 1974 suicide. Beginning in the 1980s, Kumin began to address contemporary social issues in her poetry. After Nurture in 1992, Kumin wrote her most prestigious volume since Up Country. Looking for Luck, published in 1993, garnered Kumin a National Book Critics Circle Award nomination as well as the Outstanding Work of Poetry for 1993 award from the New Hampshire Writers and Publishers Project and, in 1994, The Poets' Prize. This collection was followed by 1996's Connecting the Dots: Poems and 1997's compilation, Selected Poems, 1960 - 1990. In 2001, Kumin returned to her roots with poems on her nearly fifty-year marriage to Victor Kumin and her deep affinity - what Library Journal called "a kind of covenant between the poet and her environment" - for her New England surroundings in The Long Marriage. Many of Kumin's previously rare poems were published together in 2003's Bringing Together: Uncollected Early Poems, 1958 - 1988.

Writing on Kumin's poetry, Meg Schoerke commented in Women's Writing in the United States that "throughout her career as a poet, Kumin has struck a balance between her sense of life's transience and her fascination with the dense physical presence of the world around her. At its worst, this latter impulse causes her to weigh her poetry down with catalogs of material details and an overabundance of similes; such poems seem to be merely exercises in record keeping. But at its best, her poetry offers details whose blend of quirkiness and exactness beautifully ground her meditations on endurance in the face of loss."

Other Works

Kumin's extensive written output has not been limited to poetry. Quoted in the Washington Post in 1980, Kumin said "I like writing prose. It keeps you honest: those simple, declarative sentences. It's good discipline after the ellipses of poetry." Her explorations into prose have primarily included children's books, but also novels for adults and essays on a variety on topics. These books include novels Through Dooms of Love, also published as A Daughter and Her Loves, released in 1965; The Passions of Uxport published in 1968; The Abduction, published in 1971; The Designated Heir, published in 1974; and mystery novel Quit Monks or Die!, published in 1999. This last piece mirrored Kumin's lifelong love of animals and her interest in social concerns; in Contemporary Authors Online, Quit Monks or Die! was described as "an unusual tale centering around the disappearance of a pair of monkeys at a testing lab and a murder of the lab director." The uncommon plot drew critical acclaim, reflecting Kumin's standing as not only a respected poet but also an accomplished novelist.

In addition to Kumin's novels, she has written collections of essays and short stories. Her short story collection Why Can't We Live Together Like Civilized Human Beings?, published in 1982, discussed the interpersonal relationships between men and women, another recurring theme in Kumin's work. Two collections of purely essays appeared in the 1980s, first To Make a Prairie: Essays on Poets, Poetry, and Country Living in 1980 and later, In Deep in 1987. One mixed work of essays and stories, Women, Animals, and Vegetables: Essays and Stories was published in 1994. Kumin is also an accomplished children's book author. In addition to the four children's book she wrote with Anne Sexton, Kumin published numerous works for children in the 1960s and 1970s.

Career Achievements

In addition to the 1973 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, Kumin has received many poetry awards. These include the 1972 Eunice Tiejens Memorial Prize; the 1978 Radcliffe College Alumnae Recognition Award; the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters award, 1980, for excellence in literature; the 1986 Levison award; the 1994 Poets' Prize; and in 1999, the prestigious Ruth Lily Poetry Prize. In 2005, Harvard University awarded Kumin the 11th annual Harvard Arts Medal.

In 1976, Centre College awarded Kumin an honorary Doctor of Hebrew Letters degree, the first in a series she would receive over the ensuing twenty years. Other institutions honoring Kumin include the University of New Hampshire and Keene State College. Another professional honor came in 1980, when she was made the poetry consultant to the Library of Congress in Washington, DC; she served from 1981 - 1982 and was only the fifth woman to hold the position. During her tenure at the Library of Congress, Kumin split her time between her New Hampshire home and Washington. In 1989, New Hampshire made Kumin their Poet Laureate, a position she held until 1994.

Kumin in Recent Years

In 1998, the 73-year-old Kumin was injured when a horse she was training for a marathon carriage competition was spooked. Thrown to the ground, Kumin avoided being trampled by the animal but was crushed under the 350-pound carriage; the accident left her with fractured vertebrae, broken ribs, a punctured lung, a damaged kidney and liver, internal bleeding, loss of neurological function and temporary numbness. Although she suffered from extensive injuries - enough to kill most people within minutes - Kumin remarkably recovered enough to again ride horses and lead a normal life. In 2000, she published a memoir of her accident and recovery process titled Inside the Halo and Beyond: the Anatomy of a Recovery. Stephanie Schorow, reviewing the book for the Boston Herald, noted that "the memoir eschews platitudes, gratitude and misplaced grace. Kumin will have none of the pious and the pat … What she does celebrate is the resilience of the human spirit."

Despite her injuries and advanced age, Kumin continued to teach, write and publish; she has been reported to be at work on a sixth novel and to still write poetry at her typewriter. In 2000, Anne Roiphe wrote in the New York Times that Kumin "is a woman with a certain spiritual wholeness, as if her mind, unlike so many of her readers', had not been fractured with resentments, failures of humankind. Her respect for life in all its forms, animal, vegetable and mineral, is both gracious and soothing." This respect continued to inform her poetry and prose, and made Kumin as well-respected today as she was early in her career-a career that survived the author's personal injuries as well as Kumin herself had.

Books

Kumin, Maxine, Inside the Halo and Beyond: The Anatomy of a Recovery, W.W. Norton, 2000.

Periodicals

Boston Herald, May 18, 2000; April 16, 2005.

New Letters, Vol. 66, Issue 3, 2000.

Times-Picayune, November 8, 2000.

Washington Post, May 6, 1980.

Online

"Gale Literary Databases: Maxine (Winokur) Kumin," http://www.galenet.galegroup.com (January 1, 2006).

"On Maxine Kumin's Life and Career," http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/kumin/life.htm, includes excerpt from Women's Writing in the United States, Oxford University Press, 1995.

Fairy Tale Companion: Maxine Kumin
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Kumin, Maxine (1925– ), American poet, novelist, and essayist. Kumin advised her close friend Anne Sexton on Transformations and also occasionally experimented herself with fairy‐tale motifs. Poems like ‘Changing the Children’ and ‘Seeing the Bones’ in her 1978 volume Retrieval System dwell on Grimm‐like spells and metamorphoses. ‘The Archaeology of a Marriage’, also in that volume, is the sardonic story of a 50‐ish suburban Sleeping Beauty who suddenly wakes to contemplate her ‘Planned Acres Cottage’, her husband, and her long marriage: ‘Why … should any | twentieth‐century woman | have to lie down at the prick of | a spindle etcetera etcetera’.

— Elizabeth Wanning Harries

Works: Works by Maxine Kumin
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(b. 1925)

1961Halfway. Kumin's first collection explores characteristic themes of religious and cultural identity, loss, and the relationship between humanity and nature. It contains admired works such as "One Dead Friend" and "400-Meter Free Style." The Privilege would follow in 1965, exploring Kumin's Jewish background and including the poem "Pawnbroker," about her father's death. Born and raised in Philadelphia, Kumin began her career as a poet after enrolling in a poetry workshop conducted by John Clellon Holmes, where she met poet Anne Sexton.
1965Through Dooms of Love. Kumin's first novel is an autobiographically based story of the relationship between a radical Radcliffe student and her pawnbroker father. It would be followed by The Passions of Uxport (1968), about suburban life near Boston.
1972Up Country. Kumin's collection of unsentimental meditations and observations about her life in rural New England wins the Pulitzer Prize. The collection invites comparisons with Thoreau, but as Joyce Carol Oates has observed, Kumin's work provides "a sharp-edged, unflinching and occasionally nightmarish subjectivity exasperatingly absent in Thoreau."
1975House, Bridge, Fountain, Gate. Kumin's collection of verse written between 1971 and 1975 offers a reexamination of her life, family connections, childhood, and motherhood.
1997Selected Poems, 1960-1990. This collection draws on nine separately published volumes, many of which focus on Kumin's New Hampshire farm, which is presented as a complete, unified world, with vivid descriptions of farm animals, crops, and the poet's family. Poems such as "The First Rain of Spring," "The Hermit Wakes to Bird Sounds," and "The Death of the Uncles" display Kumin's evocation of the cycle of the seasons, human life, and nature itself in vivid images and metaphors.

Wikipedia: Maxine Kumin
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Maxine Kumin

Born Maxine Winokur
6 June 1925 (1925-06-06) (age 84)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation Poet, author
Nationality United States

Maxine Kumin (born June 7, 1925) is an American poet and author. She was appointed Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress in 1981-1982.[1]

Contents

Biography

Early years

Born in Philadelphia, Kumin, the daughter of Jewish parents, attended Catholic kindergarten and lower schools. She received her B.A. in 1946 and her M.A. in 1948 from Radcliffe College. In June 1946 she married Victor Kumin, an engineering consultant; they have two daughters and a son. In 1957, she studied poetry with John Holmes at the Boston Center for Adult Education. There she met Anne Sexton, with whom she started a friendship that continued until Sexton's suicide in 1974. Kumin taught English from 1958 to 1961 and 1965 to 1968 at Tufts University; from 1961 to 1963 she was a scholar at the Radcliffe Institute for Independent Study. She has also held appointments as a visiting lecturer and poet in residence at many American colleges and universities. Since 1976, she and her husband have lived on a farm in Warner, New Hampshire, where they breed Arabian and quarter horses.[citation needed]

Career

Kumin's many awards include the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize for Poetry (1972), the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry (1973) for Up Country, the Aiken Taylor Prize, the 1994 Poets' Prize (for Looking for Luck), an American Academy and Institute of Arts a Letters Award for excellence in literature (1980), an Academy of American Poets fellowship (1986), the 1999 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, and six honorary degrees. In 1981-1982, she served as the poetry consultant to the Library of Congress.

Critics have compared Kumin with Elizabeth Bishop because of her meticulous observations, and with Robert Frost, for she frequently devotes her attention to the rhythms of life in rural New England. She has been grouped with confessional poets such as Anne Sexton, Sylvia Plath, and Robert Lowell. But unlike the confessionalists, Kumin eschews high rhetoric and adopts a plain style. Throughout her career Kumin has struck a balance between her sense of life's transience and her fascination with the dense physical presence of the world around her. She served as the 1985 judge of the Brittingham Prize in Poetry and she selected Patricia Dobler's Talking To Strangers.

She currently teaches poetry in New England College's Low-Residency MFA Program.

Together with fellow-poet Carolyn Kizer, she first served on and then resigned from the board of chancellors of the Academy of American Poets, an act that galvanized the movement for opening this august body to broader representation by women and minorities.[2]

Bibliography

Poetry

  • Still To Mow, W. W. Norton & Company, 2007
  • Jack and Other New Poems, W.W. Norton Co., 2005
  • Bringing Together: Uncollected Early Poems 1958-1988, W.W. Norton Co., 2003
  • The Long Marriage, W.W.Norton Co., 2001, cloth, paper; finalist for the Lenore Marshall Award of the Academy of American Poets, 2002
  • Selected Poems 1960-1990, W.W. Norton Co., 1997 cloth; paper ; New York Times notable book of the year
  • Connecting the Dots, W.W. Norton Co.,1996 cloth, paper
  • Looking for Luck, W.W. Norton Co., 1992 cloth; paper
  • Nurture, Viking/ Penguin 1989, o. o. p.
  • The Long Approach, Viking /Penguin, 1985-6, o.o.p.
  • Our Ground Time Here Will Be Brief, New and Selected Poems, Viking/Penguin 1982, o. o. p.
  • The Retrieval System, Viking/Penguin, 1978, o.o.p.
  • House, Bridge, Fountain, Gate, Viking/ Penguin, 1975, o.o.p.
  • Up Country, Harper & Row, 1972, o.o.p.
  • The Nightmare Factory, Harper & Row, 1970, o.o.p.
  • The Privilege, Harper & Row, 1965, o.o.p.
  • Halfway, Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1961, o.o.p.

Novels

  • Quit Monks or Die (animal rights mystery), Story Line Press, 1999
  • The Designated Heir, Viking, 1974, o.o.p.; Andre Deutsch (England) o.o.p.
  • The Abduction, Harper & Row, 1971, o.o.p.
  • The Passions of Uxport, Harper & Row, 1968, Dell paper, 1969, o.o.p.
  • Through Dooms of Love, Harper & Row, 1965; Hamish Hamilton & Gollancz (England), Panther paper, o.o.p.

Essays and short stories

  • Why Can't We Live Together Like Civilized Human Beings? Viking 1982, o.o.p.
  • Always Beginning: Essays on a Life in Poetry, Copper Canyon Press, 2000
  • Inside the Halo and Beyond, W. W. Norton Co., 1999
  • Women, Animals, and Vegetables: Essays and Stories, Norton, 1994, o.o.p.; Ontario Review Press, paper, 1996
  • In Deep: Country Essays, Viking 1987, o.o.p.; Beacon Press 1988, o.o.p.
  • To Make a Prairie: Essays on Poets, Poetry and Country Living, University of Michigan Press, 1980 paper
  • Telling the Barn Swallow: Poets on the Poetry of Maxine Kumin, ed. by Emily Grosholz, University Press of New England, 1997

Children's Books

  • 1961 Follow the Fall (illustrated by Artur Marokvia)
  • 1961 Spring Things (illustrated by Artur Marokvia)
  • 1961 Summer Story (illustrated by Artur Marokvia)
  • 1961 A Winter Friend (illustrated by Artur Marokvia)
  • 1962 Mittens in May (illustrated by Elliott Gilbert)
  • 1964 Sebastian and the Dragon (illustrated by William D. Hayes)
  • 1964 Speedy Digs Downside Up (illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats)
  • 1967 Faraway Farm (illustrated by Kurt Werth)
  • 1969 When Grandmother Was Young (illustrated by Don Almquist)
  • 1971 When Great-Grandmother Was Young (illustrated by Don Almquist)
  • 1984 The Microscope (illustrated by Arnold Lobel)
  • 2006 Mites to Mastodons (illustrated by Pam Zagarenski)

co-written with Anne Sexton:

  • 1963 Eggs of Things (illustrated by Leonard Shortall)
  • 1964 More Eggs of Things (illustrated by Leonard Shortall)
  • 1974 Joey and the Birthday Present (illustrated by Evaline Ness)
  • 1975 The Wizard's Tears (illustrated by Evaline Ness)

References

  1. ^ "Poet Laureate Timeline: 1971-1980". Library of Congress. 2008. http://www.loc.gov/poetry/laureate-1981-1990.html. Retrieved 2008-12-19. 
  2. ^ http://www.maxinekumin.com/ Maxin Kumin's Biography

External links


 
 

 

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