Stanley Plumly
Stanley Plumly was an American poet and the director of University of Maryland, College Park's creative writing program.
Biography
Plumly was born in Barnesville, Ohio in a working class family with a farmland. He grew up in Ohio and Virginia. His working-class upbringing on farmland would feature heavily in his poetry and books. His upbringing was also influenced by Quakerism.He graduated from Wilmington College in Ohio and taught for a number of years at Ohio University, where he helped found The Ohio Review. He taught the writing program at the University of Maryland from 1985 to 2009. He was called "the most English American poet" and held Keats in high regard.
Plumly died on April 11, 2019, in Frederick, Maryland, at the age 79 of multiple myeloma.
Poetry
Collections
- How the Plains Indians Got Horses
- Giraffe
- Out-of-the-Body Travel
- Summer Celestial
- Old Heart
- Orphan Hours
- Against Sunset
- Middle Distance''
List of poems
| Title | Year | First published | Reprinted/collected |
| Brownfields | 2013 |
As editor
*Nonfiction
- Posthumous Keats: A Personal Biography
- The Immortal Evening: A Legendary Dinner With Keats, Wordsworth, and Lamb
- ''Elegy Landscapes: Constable and Turner and the Intimate Sublime''
Honors
- Poet Laureate for the State of Maryland
- Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism, 2015
- John William Corrington Award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature, 2010
- Beall Award in Biography from PEN, 2009
- Paterson Poetry Prize, 2008
- LA Times Book Prize, 2008
- Delmore Schwartz Memorial Award, 1972
- Ingram Merrill Foundation Award
- Pushcart Prize on six occasions
- Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters
- John William Corrington Award for Literary Excellence
Fellowships
- Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship
- Ingram-Merrill Fellowship
- 1973 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship
- National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship on three occasions
- 1991 poet in residence at The Frost Place