Robert Mezey
Robert Mezey (born 1935) is an American poet, critic and academic. He is also a noted translator, in particular from Spanish, having translated with Richard Barnes the collected poems of Borges.[1]
He was born in Philadelphia, and attended Kenyon College as a contemporary of E. L. Doctorow and James Wright; after a time and serving in the army he finished in 1959 an undergraduate degree at the University of Iowa. Having worked for a while, he became a graduate student at Stanford University. Then he began teaching at Case Western Reserve University, in 1963. During a year at Franklin and Marshall College he was for a time suspended after an accusation of inciting students to burn draft cards. After holding other positions, he settled at 1976 at Pomona College, until retiring in 1999.[2][3]
He has received numerous awards including the 2002 Poets' Prize for Collected Poems: 1952-1999.
Works
- "Fishing Around", The New Yorker, January 21, 2008
- The Lovemaker (1960), poems, received the Lamont Poetry Prize in 1961.
- White Blossoms (1965), poems
- A Book of Dying, poems
- The Mercy of Sorrow, poems
- Naked Poetry (1969), anthology, editor with Stephen Berg
- The Door Standing Open: Selected Poems (1970)
- Poems from the Hebrew (1973), translator
- Small Song (1979), poems
- Tungsteno, novel by Caesar Vallejo (1982), translator
- Evening Wind (1987), poems
- Couplets
- "Pretends he knows what he's doing"
- Selected Translations
- The Collected Poems of Henri Coulette (1990), editor with Donald Justice
- Natural Selection (1995), poems
- Thomas Hardy: Selected Poems (1998), editor
- The Poetry of E. A. Robinson (1999), editor
- Collected Poems 1952-1999 (2000)
- Poems of the American West (2002), editor
- Poems of Jorge Luis Borges, translator with Richard Barnes
References
External links
- "Review: The Poetry of Robert Mezey", Chicago Review, Peter Michelson, Vol. 16, No. 2 (Summer, 1963), pp. 123–128
- New Poem, ‘Please?’ New Poetry at The Flea, Broadsheet 14, March 2011.
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