The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010

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The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010 Page 27

by Lucille Clifton


  Born in Chicago, Illinois, Glaser received his B.A. from Denison University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Kent State University. He lives in St. Mary’s City with his wife, the educator Kathleen W. Glaser, who works with the Center for Courage and Renewal. He is the proud father of five grown children, Brian, Joshua, Daniel, Amira, and Eva, and nine grandchildren.

  About Lucille Clifton

  oh children

  think about the good times

  —Good Times, 1969

  Lucille Clifton was one of the most distinguished, decorated, and beloved poets of her time. She won the National Book Award for Poetry, and was the first Black female recipient of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize for lifetime achievement. Ms. Clifton received many additional honors throughout her career, beginning with the Discovery Award from the New York YW/YMHA Poetry Center in 1969 for her first volume Good Times, and including a 1976 Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for the television special “Free to Be You and Me,” a Lannan Literary Award in 1994, and the Robert Frost Medal in 2010. Her honors and awards give testament to the universality of her unique and resonant voice. She was named a Literary Lion by the New York Public Library in 1996, served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 1999 to 2005, and was elected a fellow in Literature of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1987, she became the first author to have two books of poetry—Good Woman and Next—chosen as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in the same year. She was also the author of eighteen children’s books, and in 1984 received the Coretta Scott King Award from the American Library Association for her book Everett Anderson’s Good-bye.

  Born June 27, 1936, in Depew, New York, Lucille Clifton lived in Buffalo, New York, from her early childhood until 1967 when she moved to Baltimore with her husband Fred and their six children: Sidney, Fredrica, Channing, Gillian, Graham, and Alexia. Her first book of poetry, Good Times, was published in 1969, shortly after her work had been introduced to Langston Hughes by her close friend Ishmael Reed. From 1969 to 1974 her poems and essays appeared in popular publications of the time, including The Negro Digest and Ms. magazine. She was appointed Maryland’s Poet Laureate in 1974 and remained in that post for eleven years. After her husband’s death in 1984, she moved to Santa Cruz, California, having been offered a professorship at University of California at Santa Cruz. Ms. Clifton taught at numerous colleges and universities, beginning at Coppin State College in Baltimore (1974–77) and including the University of California at Santa Cruz (1984–89), Memphis State University (1994–1995), Duke University, where she served for several terms as the William Blackburn Distinguished Visiting Professor (1998–99), and Dartmouth College (2007). Beginning in 1989, Ms. Clifton taught at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, where she served as Distinguished Professor of Humanities until her retirement in 2006. She was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa and received seven honorary doctorate degrees.

  Lucille Clifton’s integrity and moral voice about matters in our individual and communal lives served many as a beacon of courage and compassion. Her poems, forged from experience, emotion, and a fierce, truth-telling intellect, focus on the human struggle for dignity, justice, and freedom. As the citation from the National Book Awards so accurately asserts, her poems, “fueled by emotional necessity . . . [achieve] such clarity and power that her vision becomes representative, communal, and unforgettable.” Lucille, in her life and in her poetry, dwelt in the possibilities that truth redeems, that always there is hope. Her poetry engages its reader with the deeper and more complex truths of our lives, and it does so with such clarity that even the radical ambiguity within which we live seems filled with light.

  Lucille’s great courage and strength shine through her poems. Even when she wrote about personally difficult subject matter, she approached the world with infinite interest and tenderness toward the mystery of all that lives. Having survived sexual molestation, the loss of her home, and the deaths of her mother, husband, and two children, she forged a poetry that served as solace, explanation, redemption, and prayer for both herself and her audience. Ms. Clifton died on February 13, 2010, on the fifty-first anniversary of her mother’s death.

  And I could tell you about things we been through, some awful ones, some wonderful, but I know that the things that make us are more than that, our lives are more than the days in them, our lives are our line and we go on. . . .

  —Generations, 1976

  BOA EDITIONS, LTD. AMERICAN POETS CONTINUUM SERIES

  No. 1

  The Fuhrer Bunker: A Cycle of Poems in Progress

  W. D. Snodgrass

  No. 2

  She

  M. L. Rosenthal

  No. 3

  Living With Distance

  Ralph J. Mills, Jr.

  No. 4

  Not Just Any Death

  Michael Waters

  No. 5

  That Was Then: New and Selected Poems

  Isabella Gardner

  No. 6

  Things That Happen Where There Aren’t Any People

  William Stafford

  No. 7

  The Bridge of Change: Poems 1974–1980

  John Logan

  No. 8

  Signatures

  Joseph Stroud

  No. 9

  People Live Here: Selected Poems 1949–1983

  Louis Simpson

  No. 10

  Yin

  Carolyn Kizer

  No. 11

  Duhamel: Ideas of Order in Little Canada

  Bill Tremblay

  No. 12

  Seeing It Was So

  Anthony Piccione

  No. 13

  Hyam Plutzik: The Collected Poems

  No. 14

  Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969–1980

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 15

  Next: New Poems

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 16

  Roxa: Voices of the Culver Family

  William B. Patrick

  No. 17

  John Logan: The Collected Poems

  No. 18

  Isabella Gardner: The Collected Poems

  No. 19

  The Sunken Lightship

  Peter Makuck

  No. 20

  The City in Which I Love You

  Li-Young Lee

  No. 21

  Quilting: Poems 1987–1990

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 22

  John Logan: The Collected Fiction

  No. 23

  Shenandoah and Other Verse Plays

  Delmore Schwartz

  No. 24

  Nobody Lives on Arthur Godfrey Boulevard

  Gerald Costanzo

  No. 25

  The Book of Names: New and Selected Poems

  Barton Sutter

  No. 26

  Each in His Season

  W. D. Snodgrass

  No. 27

  Wordworks: Poems Selected and New

  Richard Kostelanetz

  No. 28

  What We Carry

  Dorianne Laux

  No. 29

  Red Suitcase

  Naomi Shihab Nye

  No. 30

  Song

  Brigit Pegeen Kelly

  No. 31

  The Fuehrer Bunker: The Complete Cycle

  W. D. Snodgrass

  No. 32

  For the Kingdom

  Anthony Piccione

  No. 33

  The Quicken Tree

  Bill Knott

  No. 34

  These Upraised Hands

  William B. Patrick

  No. 35

  Crazy Horse in Stillness

  William Heyen

  No. 36

  Quick, Now, Always

  Mark Irwin

  No. 37

  I Have Tasted the Apple

  Mary Crow

  No. 38

  The Terrible Stories

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 39

  The Heat of Arrivalsr />
  Ray Gonzalez

  No. 40

  Jimmy & Rita

  Kim Addonizio

  No. 41

  Green Ash, Red Maple, Black Gum

  Michael Waters

  No. 42

  Against Distance

  Peter Makuck

  No. 43

  The Night Path

  Laurie Kutchins

  No. 44

  Radiography

  Bruce Bond

  No. 45

  At My Ease: Uncollected Poems of the Fifties and Sixties

  David Ignatow

  No. 46

  Trillium

  Richard Foerster

  No. 47

  Fuel

  Naomi Shihab Nye

  No. 48

  Gratitude

  Sam Hamill

  No. 49

  Diana, Charles, & the Queen

  William Heyen

  No. 50

  Plus Shipping

  Bob Hicok

  No. 51

  Cabato Sentora

  Ray Gonzalez

  No. 52

  We Didn’t Come Here for This

  William B. Patrick

  No. 53

  The Vandals

  Alan Michael Parker

  No. 54

  To Get Here

  Wendy Mnookin

  No. 55

  Living Is What I Wanted: Last Poems

  David Ignatow

  No. 56

  Dusty Angel

  Michael Blumenthal

  No. 57

  The Tiger Iris

  Joan Swift

  No. 58

  White City

  Mark Irwin

  No. 59

  Laugh at the End of the World: Collected Comic Poems 1969–1999

  Bill Knott

  No. 60

  Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems: 1988–2000

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 61

  Tell Me

  Kim Addonizio

  No. 62

  Smoke

  Dorianne Laux

  No. 63

  Parthenopi: New and Selected Poems

  Michael Waters

  No. 64

  Rancho Notorious

  Richard Garcia

  No. 65

  Jam

  Joe-Anne McLaughlin

  No. 66

  A. Poulin, Jr. Selected Poems

  Edited, with an Introduction by Michael Waters

  No. 67

  Small Gods of Grief

  Laure-Anne Bosselaar

  No. 68

  Book of My Nights

  Li-Young Lee

  No. 69

  Tulip Farms and Leper Colonies

  Charles Harper Webb

  No. 70

  Double Going

  Richard Foerster

  No. 71

  What He Took

  Wendy Mnookin

  No. 72

  The Hawk Temple at Tierra Grande

  Ray Gonzalez

  No. 73

  Mules of Love

  Ellen Bass

  No. 74

  The Guests at the Gate

  Anthony Piccione

  No. 75

  Dumb Luck

  Sam Hamill

  No. 76

  Love Song with Motor Vehicles

  Alan Michael Parker

  No. 77

  Life Watch

  Willis Barnstone

  No. 78

  The Owner of the House: New Collected Poems 1940–2001

  Louis Simpson

  No. 79

  Is

  Wayne Dodd

  No. 80

  Late

  Cecilia Woloch

  No. 81

  Precipitates

  Debra Kang Dean

  No. 82

  The Orchard

  Brigit Pegeen Kelly

  No. 83

  Bright Hunger

  Mark Irwin

  No. 84

  Desire Lines: New and Selected Poems

  Lola Haskins

  No. 85

  Curious Conduct

  Jeanne Marie Beaumont

  No. 86

  Mercy

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 87

  Model Homes

  Wayne Koestenbaum

  No. 88

  Farewell to the Starlight in Whiskey

  Barton Sutter

  No. 89

  Angels for the Burning

  David Mura

  No. 90

  The Rooster’s Wife

  Russell Edson

  No. 91

  American Children

  Jim Simmerman

  No. 92

  Postcards from the Interior

  Wyn Cooper

  No. 93

  You & Yours

  Naomi Shihab Nye

  No. 94

  Consideration of the Guitar: New and Selected Poems 1986–2005

  Ray Gonzalez

  No. 95

  Off-Season in the Promised Land

  Peter Makuck

  No. 96

  The Hoopoe’s Crown

  Jacqueline Osherow

  No. 97

  Not for Specialists: New and Selected Poems

  W. D. Snodgrass

  No. 98

  Splendor

  Steve Kronen

  No. 99

  Woman Crossing a Field

  Deena Linett

  No. 100

  The Burning of Troy

  Richard Foerster

  No. 101

  Darling Vulgarity

  Michael Waters

  No. 102

  The Persistence of Objects

  Richard Garcia

  No. 103

  Slope of the Child Everlasting

  Laurie Kutchins

  No. 104

  Broken Hallelujahs

  Sean Thomas Dougherty

  No. 105

  Peeping Tom’s Cabin: Comic Verse 1928–2008

  X. J. Kennedy

  No. 106

  Disclamor

  G.C. Waldrep

  No. 107

  Encouragement for a Man Falling to His Death

  Christopher Kennedy

  No. 108

  Sleeping with Houdini

  Nin Andrews

  No. 109

  Nomina

  Karen Volkman

  No. 110

  The Fortieth Day

  Kazim Ali

  No. 111

  Elephants & Butterflies

  Alan Michael Parker

  No. 112

  Voices

  Lucille Clifton

  No. 113

  The Moon Makes Its Own Plea

  Wendy Mnookin

  No. 114

  The Heaven-Sent Leaf

  Katy Lederer

  No. 115

  Struggling Times

  Louis Simpson

  No. 116

  And

  Michael Blumenthal

  No. 117

  Carpathia

  Cecilia Woloch

  No. 118

  Seasons of Lotus, Seasons of Bone

  Matthew Shenoda

  No. 119

  Sharp Stars

  Sharon Bryan

  No. 120

  Cool Auditor

  Ray Gonzalez

  No. 121

  Long Lens: New and Selected Poems

  Peter Makuck

  No. 122

  Chaos Is the New Calm

  Wyn Cooper

  No. 123

  Diwata

  Barbara Jane Reyes

  No. 124

  Burning of the Three Fires

  Jeanne Marie Beaumont

  No. 125

  Sasha Sings the Laundry on the Line

  Sean Thomas Dougherty

  No. 126

  Your Father on the Train of Ghosts

  G.C. Waldrep and John

  Gallaher

  No. 127

  Ennui Prophet

  Christopher Kennedyr />
  No. 128

  Transfer

  Naomi Shihab Nye

  No. 129

  Gospel Night

  Michael Waters

  No. 130

  The Hands of Strangers: Poems from the Nursing Home

  Janice N. Harrington

  No. 131

  Kingdom Animalia

  Aracelis Girmay

  No. 132

  True Faith

  Ira Sadoff

  No. 133

  The Reindeer Camps and Other Poems

  Barton Sutter

  No. 134

  The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965–2010

 

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