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Everything about William De Witt Snodgrass totally explained

William De Witt Snodgrass (born January 5 1926 in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania), pseudonym S. S. Gardons, is an American poet and a 1960 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winner.

Life

Snodgrass was born in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1926, and was educated at Geneva College. His studies were interrupted when, during WWII, he was drafted into the Navy, and sent to the Pacific. After demobilization, Snodgrass resumed his studies, but transferred from Geneva College to the University of Iowa, eventually enrolling in the Iowa Writers' Workshop, which had been established in 1937, and was attracting as teachers some of the finest poetic talents of the day, among them John Berryman, Randall Jarrell and Robert Lowell.

Career

Snodgrass's first poems appeared in 1951, and throughout the 1950's he published in some of the most prestigious magazines: Botteghe Oscure, Partisan Review, The New Yorker, The Paris Review and The Hudson Review. However, in 1957, five sections from a sequence entitled 'Heart's Needle' were included in Hall, Pack and Simpson's anthology, New Poets of England and America, and these were to mark a turning-point. When Lowell had been shown early versions of these poems, in 1953, he'd disliked them, but now he was full of admiration.
   By the time Heart's Needle was published, in 1959, Snodgrass had already won the The Hudson Review Fellowship in Poetry and an Ingram Merrill Foundation Poetry Prize. However, his first book brought him more: a citation from the Poetry Society of America, a grant from the National Institute of Arts, and, most important of all, 1960's Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. It is often said that Heart's Needle inaugurated confessional poetry. Snodgrass disliked the term. Still, it should be pointed out that the genre he was reviving here seemed revolutionary to most of his contemporaries, reared as they'd been on the anti-expressionistic principles of the New Critics. Snodgrass's confessional work was to have a profound effect on many of his contemporaries, amongst them, most importantly, Robert Lowell.
   Snodgrass had a long and distinguished academic career, having taught at Cornell, Rochester, Wayne State, Syracuse, Old Dominion, and the University of Delaware. He retired from teaching in 1994, and devotes himself full-time to his writing. He lives with his fourth wife, writer Kathleen Snodgrass (née Brown). Snodgrass created a truly modern work with De/Compositions by taking 101 classic poems and reconstructing them to prove to readers exactly how important the tiniest elements in poems can be.

Poem Links

Here are some links that lead to poetry written by W.D. Snodgrass that are posted online.
   "Heart's Needle" - Heart's Needle "April Inventory" - April Inventory "Sitting Outside" - Sitting Outside Final Draft of "The Boy Made Out of Meat" - The Boy Made Out of Meat "After Experience Taught Me..." - After Experience Taught Me "A Locked House" - A Locked House "Dr. Joseph Goebbels (22 April 1945)" - Dr. Joseph Goebbels (22 April 1945) "Magda Goebbels (30 April 1945)" - Magda Goebbels (30 April 1945) "Mementos, 1" - Mementos, 1 "Monet: “Les Nymphéas”" - Monet: Les Nymphèas "Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring (1 April 1945)" - Reichsmarchall Herann Göring (1 April 1945) "Song" - Song "The Campus on the Hill" - The Campus on the Hill "The Poet Ridiculed by Hysterical Academics" - The Poet Ridiculed by Hysterical Academics "Vuillard: “The Mother and Sister of the Artist”" - Vuillard: The Mother and Sister of the Artist

Bibliography

Poetry
  • Heart's Needle (1959)
  • After Experience: Poems and Translations (1968)
  • Leaving the Motel (1968)
  • Remains (1970)
  • The Führer Bunker: A Cycle of Poems in Progress (1977)
  • If Birds Build with Your Hair (1979)
  • These Trees Stand (1981)
  • Heinrich Himmler (1982)
  • The Boy Made of Meat (1983)
  • Magda Goebbels (1983)
  • 6 Minnesinger Songs (Burning Deck, 1983)
  • D. D. Byrde Callying Jennie Wrenn (1984)
  • The Kinder Capers (1986)
  • A Locked House (1986)
  • Selected Poems: 1957-1987 (1987)
  • W. D.'s Midnight Carnival (1988)
  • The Death of Cock Robin (1989)
  • Each in His Season (1993)
  • The Führer Bunker: The Complete Cycle (1995)
  • Not for Specialists: New and Selected Poems (2006)
Prose
  • In Radical Pursuit: Critical Essays and Lectures (1975)
  • De/Compositions (2001)
  • To Sound Like Yourself: Essays on Poetry (2002) Anthology
  • Gallows Song (1967)
  • Six Troubadour Songs (1977)
  • Traditional Hungarian Songs (1978)
  • Six Minnesinger Songs (1983)
  • The Four Seasons (1984)
  • Five Romanian Ballads, Cartea Romaneasca (1993)
  • Selected Translations (1998) Drama The Führer Bunker (1981)

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