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Patricia
Clark grew up in Tacoma, Washington, later graduating from the
University of Washington with a B.A. in Economics. Her other
degrees include an MFA from the University of Montana, where
she studied with Richard Hugo and Madeline DeFrees, and a Ph.D.
in English from the University of Houston. Patricia is the author
of North of Wondering, which won the first book award
from Women in Literature Press and was published in 1999 (reissued
in 2003, it is now available from Michigan State University
Press). She is also the co-editor of Worlds in Our Words:
An Anthology of Contemporary American Women Writers, published
by Blair Press/Prentice-Hall in 1997. Her poems have appeared
in The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, Slate, Stand, and the Poets
Against the War anthology (Nation Books). In 2003, she received
a grant from ArtServe Michigan and was also awarded a residency
at the Tyrone Guthrie Center in Annaghmakerrig, Ireland. Other
awards include The Mississippi Review Poetry Award (1996), the
Lucille Medwick Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America
(1990), an award from the Fine Lines/Oil of Olay Contest co-sponsored
by the Poetry Society of America (2004), and residencies at
The MacDowell Colony, the Virginia Center for the Arts, and
the Ragdale Foundation.
She teaches
creative writing at Grand Valley State University in Michigan,
where she is Professor in the Department of Writing and the
university's poet-in-residence. In her role at GVSU, Patricia
coordinates the fall Poetry Night readings which have featured
Billy Collins, Robert Hass, Naomi Shihab Nye, Rita Dove, and
Charles Wright. She is also the director of GVSU's Writing in
Ireland program, which brings students to Trinity College, Dublin
and Queens University, Belfast.
"Wondering
is a small town in Montana. In Patricia Clark's North of Wondering,
with its ambitious allusion to Robert Frost's first collection
North of Boston, place, culture, and climate intersect with
reasoning and emotions to map the contours of wondering, as
if the word itself were a small town, or a particular region,
somewhere, that she wanted us to experience in all its complexity,
from the nuances of questioning to marveling - Mary
Stewart Hammond
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