Audio archive of Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize winner Eleanor Ross Taylor
By the Branta Webcrawler • Apr 14th, 2010 • Category: Editor's Picks, From the Interweb, PoetryEleanor Ross Taylor (1920 - )
BIOGRAPHY
Eleanor Ross Taylor was born in 1920 in Norwood, North Carolina, and graduated from Women’s College, now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, in 1942. While studying at Vanderbilt University, Allen and Caroline Tate introduced her to novelist Peter Taylor, whom she would marry in 1943.
Her poetry has been described as elegiac, lyric and feminine; writer Erica Howsare explains, “The southernness of her background makes her tend to rein in her formidable intellect and biting wit with an uneasy deference to form and convention. This tension may be witnessed in her use of both metrical and nonmetrical lines. Just when the organization of her poems seems on the verge of wavering, she returns to the restraint with which most of them begin.” Since her first publication, Wilderness of Ladies in 1960, Taylor has published five collections of poetry: Welcome Eumenides (1972), New and Selected Poems (1983), Days Going/Days Coming Back (1991), Late Leisure (1999), and Captive Voices: New and Selected Poems (2009), which have earned her critical acclaim and several awards. Among these awards are the Poetry Society of America’s Shelley Memorial Prize (1997-1998), a fellowship with the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1998), the Library of Virginia’s Literary Award for Poetry (2000) and the Aiken Taylor Award for Modern Poetry (2001).
Of her work, Adrienne Rich has said, “speak of the underground life of women, the Southern white Protestant woman in particular, the woman-writer, the woman in the family, coping, hoarding, preserving, observing, keeping up appearances, seeing through the myths and hypocrisies, nursing the sick, conspiring with sister- women, possessed of a will to survive and to see others survive.”
Taylor’s husband Peter Taylor died in 1994 after retiring from the University of Virginia. Now both a mother and grandmother, Taylor is currently living in Charlottesville, Virginia and has been elected to the Fellowship of Southern Writers in 2009.
Photo: Taylor Family Collection
Audio Archive:
Against the Kitchen Wall
Kitchen Fable
Limits
Pain in the House
Te Deum
To Future Eleanors
Where Somebody Died
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Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize
Awarded annually, the $100,000 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize honors a living U.S. poet whose lifetime accomplishments warrant extraordinary recognition. Established in 1986 by Ruth Lilly, the Prize is one of the most prestigious awards given to American poets and is one of the largest literary honors for work in the English language.
Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize Recipients
1986 Adrienne Rich
1987 Philip Levine
1988 Anthony Hecht
1989 Mona Van Duyn
1990 Hayden Carruth
1991 David Wagoner
1992 John Ashbery
1993 Charles Wright
1994 Donald Hall
1995 A.R. Ammons
1996 Gerald Stern
1997 William Matthews
1998 W.S. Merwin
1999 Maxine Kumin
2000 Carl Dennis
2001 Yusef Komunyakaa
2002 Lisel Mueller
2003 Linda Pastan
2004 Kay Ryan
2005 C.K. Williams
2006 Richard Wilbur
2007 Lucille Clifton
2008 Gary Snyder
2009 Fanny Howe
Read more at The Poetry Foundation website.
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