William Heyen

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William Helmuth Heyen (born November 1, 1940) is an American poet, editor, and literary critic. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in Suffolk County. He received a BA from the State University of New York at Brockport; he earned a doctorate in English from Ohio University in 1967.

He taught American literature and creative writing at his undergraduate alma mater for over 30 years before retiring in 2000. He also briefly served as Director of the Brockport Writers Forum, a series of readings by and video interviews with numerous American and international authors.

His work has been published in numerous literary journals and periodicals, including The New Yorker, The Ontario Review, Harper’s, TriQuarterly, The Georgia Review, Poetry, American Poetry Review, and The Southern Review. His work has also been published in 200 anthologies, in dozens of limited-edition chapbooks and broadsides, and on audio.

He spent the 1971-1972 academic year as a Senior Fulbright Lecturer in American literature in Germany. He has been awarded NEA, Guggenheim, American Academy & Institute of Arts & Letters, and other prizes.

His books of poetry include Depth of Field (1970), Noise in the Trees (1974), The Swastika Poems (1977), Long Island Light (1979), Erika: Poems of the Holocaust (1984), Pterodactyl Rose (1991), Crazy Horse In Stillness (1995), Pig Notes & Dumb Music: Prose on Poetry (1998), and Diana, Charles, & the Queen (1998). He also authored a novel, Vic Holyfield and the Class of ’57 (1986).

Selections of his poems have been translated into Italian (by poet Frank Judge) and into German.

He edited two major collections of poetry, The Generation of 2000: Contemporary American Poets, and American Poets in 1976. He is also the editor of September 11, 2001: American Poets Respond (2002).

Many of his manuscripts, correspondence, and his collection of first editions of modern American authors are archived in the Rare Books Collection at University of Rochester, at Boston University, at the Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at Yale University, and at the University of New Hampshire. In 2004, he was one of the five finalists for the National Book Award for poetry for his volume Shoah Train. Other volumes of the past few years are September 11, 2001: American Writers Respond (2002) a collection of short stories, The Hummingbird Corporation (2003, and a collection of 30 years of essays called Home: Autobiographies, etc. His most recent collections are Confessions of Doc Williams and Other Poems (2006) and Titanic & Iceberg: Early Essays and Reviews (2006).

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