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Mark Strand was recognized as one of the premier American poets of his generation as well as an accomplished editor, translator, and prose writer. The hallmarks of his style are precise language, surreal imagery, and the recurring theme of absence and negation; later collections investigate ideas of the self with pointed, often urbane wit. Named the U.S. Poet Laureate in 1990, Strand’s career spanned five decades, and he won numerous accolades from critics and a loyal following among readers. In 1999 he was awarded the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for his collection Blizzard of One.
Born on Prince Edward Island, Canada, Strand grew up in various cities across the United States and in Colombia, Mexico, and Peru. Strand originally expressed interest in painting and hoped to become an artist. He earned a BA from Antioch College in 1957 and a BFA from Yale University in 1959, where he studied with... -
Poems By Mark Strand
- Black Maps
- Seven Poems
- The Untelling
- To Himself
- Keeping Things Whole
- Coming to This
- The Prediction
- “The Dreadful Has Already Happened”
- My Life
- In Celebration
- The Garden
- Lines for Winter
- The Idea
- Orpheus Alone
- The End
- Eating Poetry
- Mystery and Solitude in Topeka
- No Words Can Describe It
- The Minister of Culture Gets His Wish
- The Mysterious Arrival of an Unusual Letter
- Futility in Key West