Poet Lore and The Writer’s Center celebrate the release of Sue Ellen Thompson’s new poetry collection, Sea Nettles. Sue Ellen is in conversation with poet Lee Woodman.
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Sue Ellen Thompson’s poems have been read on National Public Radio by Garrison Keillor, have been featured in U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser’s nationally syndicated newspaper column, and have received numerous awards, including the 1986 Samuel French Morse Prize, the 2003 Pablo Neruda Prize, and two Individual Artist’s Grants from the State of Connecticut. She is the author of six books, most recently Sea Nettles: New & Selected Poems (Grayson Books, 2022), They (Turning Point Books, 2014), and The Golden Hour (Autumn House, 2006), which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. She is also the editor of The Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry (2005), a selection from the work of 94 American poets that is now being used in college classrooms across the country.
Of The Golden Hour, poet B. H. Fairchild has said, “Odd, in this chronicle of a woman’s life borne with bravery, endurance, and the kind of all-out love that opens itself to both pain and moments of the purest happiness, to think of Hemingway’s ‘grace under pressure,’ but such is, for me, the defining quality of Sue Ellen Thompson’s work. The Golden Hour is a book of both courage and the finest sort of craft: elegant, wild, beautifully disciplined quatrains and casually rhymed sonnets, seemingly effortless yet stunningly precise tropes…the utterly fluid syntax with its subtle pulsations, and that Donne-like marriage of the conceptual and the sensuous.”
Sue Ellen has taught poetry at Middlebury College, Wesleyan University, Binghamton University, Central Connecticut State University and the University of Delaware. She has given readings throughout New England, as well as at the National Arts Club in New York, the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, and Galway University in Ireland. She was the 1998 poet-in-residence at The Frost Place in Franconia, NH , and participated for 13 summers in the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference in Vermont.
After spending most of her adult life in Mystic, CT, Thompson moved in late 2006 to the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake. She is now teaching at The Writers’ Center in Bethesda and tutoring adult poets. In January 2010, the Maryland Library Association selected her as the winner of its prestigious Maryland Author Award, which is given to a poet every four years for his or her body of work.
About the Book
As the title poem reminds us, “For each of us/ there is a place,/ a period of time,// a lover’s face/ that we must veer away from…” Sea Nettles is a book of poems about what we are often reluctant to confront: the memories that still trouble us and the losses we would just as soon forget. Former friends, old lovers, and mortality make frequent appearances, along with migrating birds and rising waters. Behind these poems lurks the knowledge that none of us can know what fate has in store for us. As the opening poem warns, “For you, the Universe has something else in mind.”
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