E. Ethelbert Miller
Eugene Ethelbert Miller is an African-American poet, teacher and literary activist, based in Washington, DC. He is the author of several collections of poetry and two memoirs, the editor of Poet Lore magazine, and the host of the weekly WPFW morning radio show On the Margin.
Life and career
Miller was born in the Bronx, New York.He received his B.A. from Howard University. He is the author of 13 books of poetry, two memoirs and is the editor of three poetry anthologies. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Poet Lore, and Sojourners.
Miller was the founder and director of the Ascension Poetry Reading Series, one of the oldest literary series in the Washington area. He was director of Howard University's African-American Resource Center from 1974 for more than 40 years. Miller has taught at various schools, including American University, Emory & Henry College, George Mason University, Harpeth Hall School and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He was also a core faculty member of the writing seminars at Bennington College. He worked with Operation Homecoming for the National Endowment for the Humanities.
He currently serves as board chairperson of the Institute for Policy Studies. He is also on the boards of Split This Rock and the Writer's Center, and since 2002 has been co-editor of Poet Lore magazine, the oldest poetry journal in the US. He is former chair of the Humanities Council of Washington, D.C., and has served on the boards of the AWP, the Edmund Burke School, PEN American Center, PEN/Faulkner Foundation, and the . He hosts a weekly morning radio show on WPFW called On the Margin.
In 1979, Marion Barry, the Mayor of Washington, D.C., where Miller lives, proclaimed September 28, 1979, as "E. Ethelbert Miller Day." Subsequently, on May 21, 2001, an "E. Ethelbert Miller Day" was also proclaimed by the Mayor of Jackson, Tennessee.
Miller's papers are held at Emory & Henry College and The George Washington University.
Awards and honors
- 1979: September 28 proclaimed as "E. Ethelbert Miller Day" by the Mayor of Washington, D.C.
- 1982: Mayor's Art Award for Literature
- 1988: Received the Public Humanities Award from the D.C. Humanities Council
- 1993: Columbia Merit Award
- 1994: Made an Honorary Citizen of the city of Baltimore on July 17 by the Mayor of Baltimore
- 1994: PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award
- 1995: O. B. Hardison, Jr. Poetry Prize
- 1996: Honorary doctorate of literature awarded on May 18 by Emory & Henry College
- 1997: Stephen Henderson Poetry Award from the African American Literature and Culture Society
- 2001: May 21 declared as "E. Ethelbert Miller Day" by the Mayor of Jackson, Tennessee
- 2003: Fathering Words selected by DC WE READ for the one book, one city program sponsored by the D.C. Public Libraries
- 2003: Honored by First Lady Laura Bush at the White House
- 2004: Fulbright Scholarship recipient
- 2015: Inducted into the Washington, DC Hall of Fame
- 2016: AWP George Garrett Award for Outstanding Community Service in Literature and the DC Mayor's Arts Award for Distinguished Honor
- 2018: Inducted into Gamma Xi Phi, a fraternity for artists
- 2025 Reginald Lockett Lifetime Achievement Award from PEN Oakland
Poetry
- "The Land of Smiles and the Land of No Smiles: A Poem." 1974.
- The Fire This Time: 1992 and Beyond Los Angeles, White Fields Press, 1993.The Collected Poems of E. Ethelbert Miller, Willow Books, 2016. If God Invented Baseball: Poems, Simon and Schuster, 2018. When Your Wife Has Tommy John Surgery and Other Baseball Stories, Simon and Schuster, 2021.
Anthologies
- Jonathan Andersen, ed.. Seeds of Fire: Contemporary Poetry from the Other U. S. A. Smokestack Books.