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Today's poem is "Out, Out"
from A Vertical Mile

Able Muse Press

Richard Wakefield, born in Renton, Washington, in 1952, earned his Ph.D. in American Literature at the University of Washington-Seattle with a dissertation on the poetry of Robert Frost. For nearly thirty years he has taught literature and composition at Tacoma Community College and the University of Washington-Tacoma. For over twenty-five years he has been a reviewer of fiction, literature, biography, and literary criticism for the Seattle Times. His collection of poetry, East of Early Winters, was published by the University of Evansville Press in 2006 and received the Richard Wilbur Award. His poem 'Petrarch' won the 2010 Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award. His poetry, fiction, and criticism have appeared in the Midwest Quarterly, Sewanee Review, Seattle Review, Atlanta Review, Light Quarterly, American Literature, Able Muse, Measure, The Formalist and many others. He and his wife, Catherine, have been married thirty-nine years and have two grown daughters.

Books by Richard Wakefield:

Other poems on the web by Richard Wakefield:
Nine poems

Richard Wakefield's Website.

Richard Wakefield according to Wikipedia.

About A Vertical Mile :

"Deeply rooted in the human history and natural order of his native state, Richard Wakefield’s A Vertical Mile depicts life in rural Washington—people, animals, plants, geological formations, the weather and the seasons. Building on his powerful and impressive first collection East of Early Winters, Wakefield, in A Vertical Mile, has now firmly established himself as one of America’s foremost formal poets. In their memorable presentation by way of deftly employed narrative, meter, rhyme, metaphor, symbol, and diction, the poems in this new collection, once read, cannot be easily dislodged from the mind. That, in itself, is evidence that Wakefield’s best poems are a permanent addition to American letters."
—David Middleton

"Richard Wakefield crafts his verse to exacting standards yet keeps it uncontrived. Throughout A Vertical Mile, Wakefield shows us much about ourselves and the various worlds we inhabit, often of our own making. What he reveals may be sobering or amusing, uplifting or distressing. But, carried by a voice as versatile as the intelligence behind it, it is sure to surprise and delight us as well."
— David Sanders

"Richard Wakefield writes with a rare metrical skill that calls to mind the poetry of Robert Frost, and like Frost he tells intricate and compelling stories about ordinary people living close to the land. But there’s nothing nostalgic here. There’s compassion, and decency, but never an easy answer. Wakefield’s choice of conventional form is a wry and subtle comment on the contemporary moment, and his mastery of that form raises his work above all the chaos and fads. No, these poems are not nostalgic. They are timeless."
—Chris Anderson

"The arc of discovery is what one traverses in Richard Wakefield’s poetry. It may be a remembered seascape made new by the dust of familial ashes or a lost town, covered by a century of a forest’s reclaiming growth. As a poet of the outdoors—one who sees and, seeing, makes new what he has seen—Wakefield is unsurpassed."
—R.S. Gwynn



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