Enid Shomer

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Enid Shomer
Image:Http://www.enidshomer.com/images/eshomer-140-exp-Shomer enid fp-.jpg
Occupation Novelist, short story writer, poet
Nationality Flag of the United States United States
Genres Literary fiction, poetry

Enid Shomer is an award-winning American author of fiction and poetry.

Contents

[edit] Widely Published

Her poems have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, Paris Review, Best American Poetry, The New Criterion, Kenyon Review, Tikkun, etc. Her stories have appeared in The New Yorker, New Stories from the South, the Year's Best, Modern Maturity, New Letters, Prairie Schooner, Shenandoah, Virginia Quarterly Review, etc. Her stories, poems, and essays have been included in more than fifty anthologies and textbooks, including POETRY: A HarperCollins Pocket Anthology.

[edit] Award-Winning

Shomer's many awards include two fellowships in poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts, three fellowships from the State of Florida, the Eunice Tietjens Prize from Poetry, the Celia Wagner Award of the Poetry Society of America, the Randall Jarrell Prize, Wildwood Prize, and Eve of St. Agnes Prize. Her poem sequence, Pope Joan, was adapted into a dance oratorio by composer Anne LeBaron and choreographer Mark Taylor and premiered in October of 2000. In fiction, she has also won the H.E. Frances Prize, the Iowa Woman Prize and, the 2004 Emily Clark Balch Prize from the Virginia Quarterly Review.

In March 2007 she won the Gold Medal in the Florida Book Awards for her collection of short stories Tourist Season.

[edit] Teaching

Shomer has taught at the University of Arkansas, Florida State University, and the Ohio State University, where she was the Thurber House Writer-in-Residence.

[edit] Reviewing

Her book reviews and essays have appeared in The New Times Book Review, The Women's Review of Books, and elsewhere. Two of her books, Stars at Noon and Imaginary Men, were the subject of feature interviews on NPR's Morning Edition and also All Things Considered.

[edit] Editing

She is Poetry Series Editor for the University of Arkansas Press.

[edit] Writing

Shomer's writing is literary, and is largely set in, influenced by, and about life in the State of Florida.


[edit] Published work

[edit] Poetry

Enid Shomer is the author of four collections of poetry:

Stars at Noon: Poems from the Life of Jacqueline Cochran (University of Arkansas Press, 2001)

Black Drum (Arkansas, 1997)

This Close to the Earth (Arkansas, 1992)

Stalking the Florida Panther (The Word Works), which won the Washington Prize.

[edit] Fiction

Imaginary Men (University of Iowa Press, 1993)

Tourist Season (Random House, 2007)


[edit] Notes

[edit] References

http://www.enidshomer.com/

http://www.sptimes.com/2008/03/06/Books/Tampa_Bay_area_author.shtml



Persondata
NAME Shomer, Enid
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Novelist, short story writer, poet
DATE OF BIRTH
PLACE OF BIRTH
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH