Carol Moldaw

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Carol Moldaw
Carol Moldaw
Carol Moldaw
Born1956 (age 67–68)
Oakland, California, U.S.
EducationHarvard University (BA)
Boston University (MA)
GenrePoetry, fiction, essays
Notable worksSo Late, So Soon; The Widening; The Lightning Field
Notable awardsPushcart Prize, NEA, FIELD Poetry Prize
Website
carolmoldaw.com

 Literature portal

Carol Moldaw (born 1956) is an American poet, novelist and critic. Her book The Lightning Field won the FIELD Poetry Prize.

Biography[edit]

Carol Moldaw was born in Oakland, California and grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. Moldaw holds an A.B. from Harvard University and an M.A. from Boston University.

She is the author of six books of poetry: Beauty Refracted; So Late, So Soon: New and Selected Poems; The Lightning Field, which won the FIELD Poetry Prize; Through the Window; Chalkmarks on Stone; and Taken from the River. She is also author of the novel The Widening. A forthcoming book of poems, Beauty, Refracted, was published in 2018 by Four Way Books.

Noted for their deep intelligence and lushness of language, Moldaw's poems have been published widely. Her work has appeared in AGNI, Denver Quarterly, FIELD, The New Republic, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Parnassus, The Threepenny Review, TriQuarterly, and a number of other well-known journals and magazines.[which?]

Frieda Gardner wrote in The Women's Review of Books, "[Moldaw] courts revelation . . . in a voice variously curious, passionate, surprised, meditative, and sensual. On the surface of her work are rich sounds and varitations of rhythm and line. A few steps deeper in lie wells of feeling and complexities of thought." A review in The New Yorker of Chalkmarks on Stone noted her work "repeatedly achieves lyric junctures of shivering beauty," calling Moldaw's poems "oblique, wily, and intensely intelligent." D. Nurkse called Moldaw “a treasured poet, a master of lyric intensity," observing her work as "a fascinating act of exploration." “Here are poems of intelligent consideration and a deft and heart-born music," wrote acclaimed poet Jane Hirshfield, "filled with the gleam of particularity and a lushness of language and substance.”

Moldaw’s prose has also been published in numerous journals and magazines including AGNI, The Antioch Review, The Boston Review, Broad Street, FIELD, The Massachusetts Review, Partisan Review' and Plume. Her poems have been anthologized in Western Wind: An Introduction to Poetry (McGraw-Hill) and Under 35: A New Generation of American Poets (Anchor), and her work has been translated into Chinese, Portuguese and Turkish.

Moldaw is the recipient of several literary distinctions including an NEA Creative Writing Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize and a Lannan Foundation Marfa Writer’s Residency.

While never a full-time academic, Moldaw has taught creative writing in a number of programs across the US, including the Stonecoast MFA Program in Creative Writing and the creative writing program at the College of Santa Fe (now Santa Fe University of Art and Design). She was a Visiting Writer at Bucknell University's Stadler Center for Poetry and the Louis D. Rubin, Jr., Writer-in-Residence at Hollins University. Moldaw has taught workshops at the Taos Summer Writers' Conference, Vermont Studio Center and Naropa University.

She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico with her husband, Arthur Sze, and their daughter.

Books[edit]

Poetry[edit]

Fiction[edit]

Honors and awards[edit]

  • Lannan Foundation Marfa Writers Residency, 2006.
  • The FIELD Poetry Prize, 2002.
  • Pushcart Poetry Prize, 2002.
  • National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in Poetry,1994.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "So Late, So Soon, Carol Moldaw | Etruscan Press". Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-04.

External links[edit]

Website[edit]

Articles and Interviews[edit]

Selected writings[edit]