Poetry Northwest
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Poetry Northwest was founded as a quarterly, poetry-only journal in 1959 by Errol Pritchard, with Carolyn Kizer, Richard Hugo, and Nelson Bentley as co-editors. The first issue was 32 pages and included the work of Richmond Lattimore, May Swenson, Philip Larkin, James Wright, and William Stafford.
During the magazine’s four decades, it gained an international reputation for publishing some of the best poetry by established and up-and-coming poets in the U.S., Britain, and beyond including: Stanley Kunitz, Thom Gunn, Phillip Larkin, May Swenson, Theodore Roethke, John Berryman, Czeslaw Milosz, Harold Pinter, Joyce Carol Oates, Raymond Carver, Robert Pinsky, Annie Dillard, Richard Wilbur, Jorie Graham, Michael Harper, James Dickey, Mary Oliver, Wendell Berry and Anne Sexton.
In 1963, Poetry Northwest became a publication of the University of Washington. In 1964, Kizer became the sole editor of the magazine and would hold that post until 1966 when she resigned to become the Literature Director at the National Endowment for the Arts. David Wagoner assumed the role of editor, a position he would hold for 36 years.
In 2002, after several years of dire financial circumstances, Poetry Northwest — at the time one of the longest-running poetry-only publications in the country — temporarily ceased publication.
In 2005, the University of Washington appointed poet David Biespiel as the magazine's new editor, with the agreement that the editorial offices of the magazine would relocate to the Attic Writers’ Workshop in Portland, Oregon. The new series resumed publication in March 2006 and immediately re-established its reputation as one of most important and lively poetry magazines in the United States.
[edit] Theodore Roethke and Richard Hugo Prizes
Poetry Northwest currently awards two prizes each year for the best work published in its pages. Since 1963, it has awarded the Theodore Roethke Prize; since 1985, it has awarded the Richard Hugo Prize.[1]
[edit] External links
- Poetry Northwest — Official Website
[edit] References
- ^ "Theodore Roethke Prize and Richard Hugo Prize," webpage from the Poetry Northwest website, retrieved October 12, 2007.