Mark Statman's books of poetry include That Train Again (Lavender Ink, 2015), A Map of the Winds (Lavender Ink, 2013), and Tourist at a Miracle (Hanging Loose, 2010). His translations include Black Tulips:The Selected Poems of Jose Maria Hinojosa (University of New Orleans, 2012) and, with Pablo...
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Mark Statman's books of poetry include That Train Again (Lavender Ink, 2015), A Map of the Winds (Lavender Ink, 2013), and Tourist at a Miracle (Hanging Loose, 2010). His translations include Black Tulips:The Selected Poems of Jose Maria Hinojosa (University of New Orleans, 2012) and, with Pablo Medina, Federico Garcia Lorca's Poet in New York,(Grove 2008). He is the author of Listener in the Snow (Teachers & Writers, 2000), and, with Christian McEwen, edited The Alphabet of the Trees: A Guide to Nature Writing (Teachers & Writers, 2000) and his essays, poetry, and translations have appeared in ten other anthologies. Statman's writing has appeared in numerous publications, including Tin House, Hanging Loose, Cincinnati Review, Trespass, La Bloga, The Hat, Bayou, conduit, subtopics, The Florida Review, Ping Pong, and American Poetry Review. His work has been featured on Poetry Daily, as well as on The Bob Edwards Show, The Leonard Lopate Show, and PBS' New York Voices. A recipient of awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Writers Project, Statman is an associate professor of Literary Studies at Eugene Lang College, The New School for Liberal Arts. For more information, visit his website MarkStatman.com.
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