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Burton Norval Hatlen (April 9, 1936 – January 21, 2008) [1] was an American literary scholar and professor at the University of Maine. [1] Hatlen worked closely with Carroll F. Terrell, an Ezra Pound scholar and co-founder of the National Poetry Foundation, to build the Foundation into an internationally known institution.
The National Poetry Foundation (NPF) is a book publisher founded in 1971 by Carroll F. Terrell [1] who built its reputation with Burton Hatlen at the University of Maine in Orono. Today it publishes poetry by individual authors as well as both journals and scholarship devoted to Ezra Pound and poets in the Imagist and "Objectivist" traditions ...
After returning to his native Portland, Maine, in 1827, he set to work on expanding it, consulting Robert Calef's More Wonders of the Invisible World, which had been republished in 1823. [41] The resulting novel Rachel Dyer is longer, but not substantially different from the original tale, which Neal eventually published as "New-England ...
Each chapter is devoted to one character's point of view, ... National Poetry Foundation (Orono, Maine), 1994. Novels. The Hospital, Random House, 1939.
Elizabeth "Betsy" Sholl (born 1945) [1] is an American poet who was poet laureate of Maine from 2006 to 2011 and has authored nine collections of poetry. [2] Sholl has received several poetry awards, including the 1991 AWP Award, and the 2015 Maine Literary Award, as well as receiving fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Maine Arts Commission.
Orono, Maine: National Poetry Foundation, 1986; reprint ed. with a new afterword, 2002. This groundbreaking anthology of language poetry serves as a very useful primer, and includes an extract from Seaton's The Son Master and a "Contributor's Note" penned by Seaton himself. "Ward on Seaton", L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, Volume 3, Number 13 [December 1980] [12]
The Maine Poets Society was established in 1936 when the Waterville Poets Club and the Dover-Foxcroft Poetry Circle merged to form the Poetry Fellowship of Maine. In 1993 the organization changed its name to Maine Poets Society to better reflect the organization's changing mission to a statewide network of writers sharing their interests. [1]
Set of first editions. Paterson is an epic poem by American poet William Carlos Williams published, in five volumes, from 1946 to 1958. The origin of the poem was an eighty-five line long poem written in 1926, after Williams had read and been influenced by James Joyce's novel Ulysses.