A.e. stallings sonnet
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A.E. Stallings: ‘I’m Optimistic About Poetry, but That’s Maybe the Only Thing’
A.E. Stallings is the author of Archaic Smile, which won the Richard Wilbur Award; Hapax, which won the Poet’s Prize and the American Academy of Arts and Letters’ Benjamin H. Danks Award; and Olives. She has also published a verse translation of Lucretius’ The Nature of Things. Stallings is a 2011 Guggenheim Fellow and a 2011 MacArthur Fellow. She lives in Athens, Greece.
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Peter Mishler: Could you talk about your upbringing, your childhood, and some aspect of it that you think speaks to your life as a poet now?
A.E. Stallings: My father was a professor at Georgia State University, my mother was a school librarian; one grandfather was in education, and the other was an Episcopal priest; both of my grandmothers were teachers at one point. So there were a lot of books around, for one thing. My father used to recite a lot of poetry—the usual things, like parts of “Hiawatha” or the opening of “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” or “Annabel Lee.” At my mother
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A.E. Stallings
Biography
A.E. (Alicia) Stallings studied classics in Athens, Georgia and has lived since 1999 in Athens, Greece. She has published two books of poetry, Archaic Smile(1999), which won the Richard Wilbur Award, and Hapax(2000). Her verse translation of Lucretius (in rhyming fourteeners!), The Nature of Things, was published by Penguin Classics in 2007. She lives with her husband, John Psaropoulos, editor of the Athens News, and their small argonaut, Jason.- •
A. E. Stallings
American poet, translator, and essayist (born 1968)
Alicia Elsbeth Stallings (born July 2, 1968)[1] is an American poet, translator, and essayist.
Stallings has published five books of original verse: Archaic Smile (1999), Hapax (2006), Olives (2012), Like (2018), and This Afterlife (2022). She has published verse translations of Lucretius's De Rerum Natura (The Nature of Things) and Hesiod'sWorks and Days, both with Penguin Classics, and a translation of Batrachomyomachia (The Battle of the Frogs and the Mice).
She has been awarded the Willis Barnstone Translation Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship,[2] a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship[3] and has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry[4] and the National Book Critics Circle Award.[5] Stallings is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences.[6] On June 16, 2023, she was named the University of Oxford's 47th Professor of Poetry.[7][8]
Background
Stallings was born and raised in D
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