Lucien Stryk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lucien Stryk is an American Zen poet, translator, and former English professor at Northern Illinois University (NIU).
Stryk was born in Poland, moved to Chicago aged three, and served on the NIU faculty from 1958 until his retirement in 1991. He also has taught at universities in Japan, and was a Fulbright lecturer both in Japan and in Iran.
Stryk has written or edited more than two dozen volumes of poetry, collections, and translations of Chinese and Japanese Zen poetry. His poetry has been influenced by Walt Whitman, Paul Éluard, and Basho, and translated into Japanese, Chinese, French, Spanish, Swedish and Italian.
[edit] Selected works
- And Still Birds Sing : New & Collected Poems
- The Awakened Self: Encounters With Zen
- Bells of Lombardy
- Bird of time: Haiku of Basho
- Cage Of Fireflies : Modern Japanese Haiku
- Encounter With Zen: Writings on Poetry and Zen
- Of Pen & Ink & Paper Scraps
- Triumph of the Sparrow: Zen Poems of Shinkichi Takahashi
- World of the Buddha: An Introduction to Buddhist Literature