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Lola
Haskins Literary Vita
P.O.
Box 18 LaCrosse FL 32658
books
| anthologies | periodicals
| honors/awards | broadcasting
| teaching | societies
| reviews
PERSONAL
B.A. Stanford University, Summa Cum
Laude (Major field,
Social Thought)
PUBLICATIONS
BOOKS:
Desire Lines, New and Selected
Poems. Forthcoming 2004.
The
Rim-Benders. Anhinga Press. 2001.
Extranjera. Story
Line Press,
1998.
A Lifetime from Any Land We Knew (chapbook).
Retrospective
issue, with interview. Yarrow, Kutztown University, 1998.
Visions of Florida. University Press of Florida, 1994. Introductory
essay (prose poem) to photographs by Woody Walters
Hunger. University of Iowa
Press, 1993. Winner, Edwin Ford
Piper Award (Iowa Poetry Prize),1992. Second Edition, Story Line Press,
1996.
Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano.
University Press of Florida, 1990. Second Edition, Betony Press, 1994.
Across Her Broad Lap Something Wonderful. State
Street Press
(NY), 1989.
Castings. Countryman Press (Woodstock,
VT), 1984. Second Edition, Betony Press , 1991.
Planting the Children. University Presses of
Florida, 1983.
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ANTHOLOGIES
"Prayer for the Everglades" in Book of the Everglades,
Milkweed Editions, 2002. "Love" in Poems to Set You Free, Warner Books,
2002.
"Love","She Drives","The Laws of Women", "At Eighty","Dearborn
North Apartments"," How I Learned", "Alda", and "Avalon" in The Kali
Guide, Zenprint, 2002.
"Florida", "Prayer for the Everglades", "Tortoise", "Panther", and
"The Sand-Hills" in Florida, an interactive disk, Stephen Robitaille,
producer, 2002.
"The Prodigy" and "The Carver of Masks" in Manthology, Invisible
Cities Press, 2002.
"The Swarm", "Three Views of Devotion", and "The Third Eye" in
Postcards from Pottersville II, 2002.
"How I Learned" and "Spell for a Poet Getting
On" in Tales
from the Cabin, Work Works, 2002. "Alda" in Micro: An Anthology of
Really Short Stories, White Pine Press, 2002. "Flight"
(essay) in Feary Tales, Rhonda J, Nelson, ed, forthcoming, 2002.
"Story" in an anthology on the life and work of Glenn Gould, J.D. Smith,
Editor, John Gordon Burke Publisher, Inc., 2002.
"Fishing" in Fresh Water, Pudding House Press, 2002.
"Jacked" and "Times" in Like Thunder, University of Iowa Press,
2002.
"Alda" in Micro: An Anthology of Really Short Stories, White Pine
Press, 2002.
"The Amateur" in Contexts and Possibilities, Stephen Murabito, Ed., Prentice-Hall,
2000.
"For Someone Considering Death" in American Diaspora, University of Iowa
Press, 2000.
"On Collaboration" in Making Musics. Garland Press, 2000.
" Hide and Seek", in Third Stream: Writing Across the Boundaries between
Poetry and Prose. Lonesome Traveler Publishing Company, Madison, WI. 1999.
"Lo Que Yo Me Entere", in Floating Borderlands, Twenty-Five Years of Hispanic
Poetry, University of Washington Press, 1998
"The Shoes" and "Message" in Best of Sojourner, University of Illinois
Press, 1998.
"Accidentals" in "In the Gulf with Balaji" in Always the Beautiful Answer:
A Prose Poem Primer. Kings Estate Press, 1998.
"Florida" and "Matanzas" in My Shameless St. Augustine Scrapbook, Ruth
Moon Kempher, ed, Kings Estate Press, 1998.
"Tools" in The World's Best Poetry, Roth Publishing, Great Neck, NY, 1998.
"Winston, you were Wrong" and "Cleaning Cotton at Night" in Florida in
Poetry, Pineapple Press, 1995.
"A Confluence", "The Prodigy", "How I Learned", "Matanzas", and "Uchepas"
in Isle of Flowers, Anhinga, 1995.
"This is How I Like It", "Today I Didn't Wear", "I Spent the Night", and
"I Want This Poem" in Woman as Is, William Packard, ed., Dell, New York
1995.
"A Note on the Acquisition..." in Articulations, University of Iowa Press,
1994.
"At Eighty" in Women and Death, Ground Torpedo Press, Ann Arbor, 1994.
"Things" in The State Street Reader, Judith Kitchen Editor, State Street
Press, Brockport NY, 1990.
"This is How I Like It" in The Art of Poetry Writing, William Packard,
St Martin's Press, NY 1993.
"To Play Pianissimo" and "The Prodigy" in Mixed Voices, Milkweed Editions,
1990.
"A Note on the Acquisition..." in North of Wakulla, Anhinga Press, 1990.
"To Wear the Veil" in Anthology of Magazine Verse and Yearbook of American
Poetry, Monitor Book Company, Los Angeles, 1989.
"Employment" in Polyphony, Panther Press, 1989.
"Secrets of the Fur Trade" in Anthology of Magazine Verse and Yearbook
of American Poetry, Monitor Book Company, Los Angeles, 1988.
"Identities" in Anthology of Magazine Verse and Yearbook of American Poetry,
Monitor Book Company, Los Angeles, 1985.
"This is How I Like It" and "I want this Poem" in Desire, St Martin's
Press, NY 1985.
"Married Blues" in A Space Behind the Clock, Anhinga Press, 1976.
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PERIODICALS
Abiko International Literary Quarterly (Japan)
Adirondack Review
Agni
Albatross
Alchemist/Light Pamphlets
Aldeberan
American Scholar
Americas Review
Artful Dodge
Atlanta Gazette
Atlantic Monthly
Back Door
Beloit Poetry Journal
Boulevard
California Quarterly
Can We Have Our Ball Back
Cantilever
Caprice
Carleton Miscellany
Chariton Review
Christian Science Monitor
Clay Palm Review
Connecticut Review
Controlled Burn
Cream City Review
Crazyhorse
Cum Posse
DeKalb Literary Arts Journal
Defined Providence
Epos
5 AM
Florida Review
Florida Quarterly
Flyway
Free Lunch
Gallery (England)
Georgia Review
Half Tones to Jubilee
International Quarterly
Iowa Review
Iris
Kalliope
Kestrel
Key
West Review
The Literary Magazine
The Little Magazine
A Local Muse
London Magazine
London Review of Books
Lowell Review
Many Mountains
Moving
The Midwest Quarterly
Minnesota Review
Mississippi Review
Missouri Review
Maine Edition
Negative Capability
New American and Canadian Poetry
New CollAge
New England Review/Breadloaf Quarterly
New York Quarterly
New Virginia Review
Nimrod
Nitty-Gritty
Octavo
Ohio Review
Outposts (England)
Passages North
Perspectives of New Music
Phatitude
Ploughshares
Poet Lore
Poetry Review (London)
Poultry
Prairie Schooner
Quarterly West
Quill River City
Shenandoah
Sunscripts
The Small Farm
This is Not Art
Sojourner
Southwest Review
Southern Humanities Review
Southern Poetry Review
Southern Review
Tampa Review
Texas Quarterly
The Review
The Third Muse
This is not Art
Turbo-Charged Fortune Cookie
West Branch
Wisconsin Review
Yarrow
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HONORS/
AWARDS
Writer in Residence, The Writer's Voice, Tampa, FL YMCA, Fall 2000.
MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, N.H. , fellow, 1998.
Teaching Improvement Program Award, 1997.
University-wide recognition for teaching excellence. 1996-97
Poetry Judge, Associated Writing Programs Intro Competition.
Abiko Quarterly (Japan) international poetry competition. Second place,
1996. For "Message Received in the Engine Room".
Business College Teacher of the Year, University of Florida College of
Business, 1996.
Citation for Outstanding Contribution to the Arts in Alachua County.
Award given by Penwomen, City of Gainesville Department of Nature and
Cultural Operations, and the Alachua County Council on the Arts, 1995.
The Alice Faye Di Castagnola Award, Poetry Society of America. Finalist.
For Extranjera. 1995.
The Writer Magazine/Emily Dickinson Award. Poetry Society of America.
For "Tuning". 1995.
Celia B. Wagner Award. Poetry Society of America. For "Nombres". Runner-up,
1993.
Edwin Ford Piper Award, (University of Iowa Press Book Prize), 1992.
Simon Daro Davidowicz International Poetry Competition. Honorable Mention
for "The Coup" 1992.
New England Review/Breadloaf Quarterly, First Prize in Narrative Poetry,
for "Six Cairns for Mary", 1989.
New York Quarterly, Madeline Sadin Award. For "The Man Who Worked with
Fellini", 1987.
First Lectureship in Historical Poetry, Library Company of Philadelphia,
1986.
Southern Poetry Review, First Prize for Narrative Poetry, for "Changing
the Speed Limit", 1981.
Southern Poetry Review, Third Prize for Narrative Poetry, for "Traffic",
1980.
National Endowment for the Arts, Fellowship in Literature, 1984.
Florida Division of Cultural Affairs, Fellowships in Literature, 1979,
1981, and 1990.
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BROADCASTING/MISCELLANEOUS Mata Hari
(ballet), with Kim Tuttle of Dance Alive!, choreographer;
Stella Sung,
Composer; Margaret Tolbert, sets. 2001
Poems and Commentary on WUFT-FM (Gainesville, Florida),
ongoing. "Jane's
War", A Civil War story and poems, with music.
WUFT-FM (National Public Radio), Gainesville, Florida, 1999.
Featured on Society of Underground Poets, hour-long program on World (Public)
radio; Lexington, KY February. 1999.
"Stefan and Marishka" a retelling of the Orpheus myth), ongoing collaboration
with Scott Wheeler, composer. To include dance, soloists, chorus, and
instrumental ensemble.
Four poems from Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano, with Jackie
Hairston on piano. Atlantic Center for the Arts, July 1998.
Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano, a performance with Kevin Sharpe, classical
piano and James Paul Sain, composer, at Florida State Music Teachers Annual
Conference, November 1998; repeated at Central Florida Community College,
April 1999.
Broadcast on WUFT-FM, April 2000 and October, 2000.
Four Poems (from Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano), music for saxaphone,
piano, and voice by Beth Weimann, 1998.
Winner, Orvis Composition Prize. Performed at the University of
Hawaii, 2000.
"Spiderweb with Insect" for Spiderwebs, symphonic tone poem by Raymond
Chobaz, Gainesville Symphony, 1997
"Boy in the Dark". Libretto for Chorus and Dance. With David Rakowski.
Boston Musica Viva, 1997.
"Etches": Four Songs (from Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano), for voice
and piano; composer Bud Udell, 1996.
Featured writer in 1995-1996 Poet's Market (Writer's Digest Books, 1995).
Two poems on Phone-A-Poem, Emerson College, Boston, 1994.
"New Letters on the Air", a syndicated NPR show, Missouri, ( Interview
and readings), 1994.
Interview, NPR, by Bill Dudley, Florida Humanities Council Series, 1993.
"Forty-Four Ambitions for the Piano", a performance with Kevin Sharpe
(pianist) and James Paul Sain (composer) 1992.
Speaker's Bureau, Florida Humanities Council, 1992, 1993.
"New Letters on the Air", a syndicated NPR show (with Pattiann Rogers),
Missouri, 1986.
"Poetry Now", BBC radio, London, thirteen poems at various times; readings,
Plath and HD.
"Symphony for a Saint", Libretto for Symphony Orchestra, Soloists and
Dance. Premiered in Tuscaloosa, Alabama 1988 (John White, composer).
"Momotaro the Peach Boy", Words and Photographs. With Dianne Farris, photographer.
The Art Collector Gallery, Gainesville, Florida, 1990.
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TEACHING
(selected):
Featured Speaker, Annual Convention of Federation of State Poetry Societies,
Melbourne, FL 2001.
Featured Speaker, Books Alive! Writer's Conference, Panama City, FL 1998
and 2001.
Keynote Speaker, Kirtland (MI) Young Writer's Conference, 2000.
Master Artist , Atlantic Center for the Arts, New Smyrna Beach, FL., 1998.
Faculty/Featured Speaker, Charleston (SC) Writer's Conference, 1998.
Keynote Speaker, Douglas Anderson School of the Arts, Annual Literary
Conference, Jacksonville, Florida, 1997.
Faculty, Suncoast Writer's Conference, St Petersburg FL, 1997.
Writer in residence, Writers and Books, Rochester NY, with workshop ("On
Performance"),1996.
Faculty, White River Writer's Workshop, Batesville, AR, 1995.
Faculty, The North Shore Young Writers' Conference. Waverly, MA. 1993-1996.
Gainesville, FL, Writers in the Schools Program, teaching the writing
of poetry to middle school and high school, 1986-1992.
Lecturer, Making Florida Home, a six week series on fiction set in Florida,
funded by Florida Humanities Council, 1994.
Lecturer, Let's Talk About It, a six week series on women's history, funded
by the State Library of Florida, 1993.
Lecturer, Encounters, a six week library class in great poets, funded
by the Florida Humanities Council (2 series), 1991.
Lecturer, University of Florida, Computer and Information Sciences. 1979
to date.
Creative Writing workshops at various universities and arts venues, 1973
to date.(references available)
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PROFESSIONAL
SOCIETIES
Poets and Writers (NY), listed since 1978.
Phi Beta Kappa (academic honor soc.), Chair, Creative Arts Committee,
1994-97, Vice President 1997-98, President 1998-99.
Poetry Society of America.
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SELECTIONS
FROM REVIEWS
Extranjera
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With inklings of Vallejo, Haskins takes the stance of a foreigner tottering
between "home" and "other" in this thin but powerful collection of poetry.
Haskins' other poems are small vignettes and stories, of brief glimpses
into the lives of locals and travelers. Tightly worded, they snap with
a mariachi's nimble feel for music. Haskins has a gift for juggling pain
and pleasure, wisdom and fear, life and death, as she explores Mexican
culture. She understands Lorca's idea of duende, a passionate spirit,
and evokes it naturally in her work. Her writing demonstrates an acuteness
of perception and a maturity of restraint that are refreshing because
they produce subtle, thoughtful expressions that stand out from today's
stream of in-your-face, confessional and theraputic verse. Extranjera,
Haskins' seventh book of poetry, seems flawed in only one way, its title.
For the cumulative effect of this collection of poems is to reveal Lola
Haskins as no foreigner to these poetic landscapes. Here, she is on solid
home ground.
Booklist
Hunger
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Hunger is a cabinet of crystals each one with a cutting edge. It's
a wonder. Beloit Poetry Journal
She knows we are rooted to the earth but long for stars...And she's wise
enough to know that love searches us out. Dazzling.
Charlotte (N.C.) Observer -
She takes risks and the risks pay off. This is an altogether satisfying
book.
Northwest Arkansas Times
(the poems) richly present the experience of women, as the complexity
of their material, emotional, and imaginative lives presses against the
constraints of their assigned roles... wonderfully evocative
Hudson Review
..convincing and exquisitely visual. It plays off a painterly use of visualization
and technique even as it enacts the limits of such artistry in the face
of real feeling...It is the clarity of Haskins' poems (and her speakers')
observations combined with the sometimes elegant, sometimes searing restraint
with which the observations are made, that gives these poems their impact.
Colorado Review
The poems, if they are feminist, are so in the best sense of that
term, because they do more than prescribe political territory. They engage
in real exploration. (These poems) have depth of feeling as well as historical
insight..true radiance.
Southern Humanities Review
Forty-Four Ambitions
for the Piano
This charming work should appeal to musicians as much as
to readers of poetry...More books like this would widen poetry's audience.
Booklist.
Throughout the history of Western music composers have joined poets in
setting existing poems to music. The profoundly gifted poet, Lola Haskins,
has accomplisted a splendid reversal by writing about the piano and its
interpreters... Haskins is a first-rate poet, and Forty-Four Ambitions
is recommended for delightful reading and a modest gift to a fellow
teacher of piano.
American Music Teacher.
I first saw this exquisite book as a Ravenna mosaic, the impact of the
carefully set, dazzling, tesserae much more than the sum of their parts.
On re-reading I learned to appreciate it as a single piece of music, playing
through the pages like the Bach sarabande that runs across the seven chapter
titles. A magician of metaphor, Haskins composes these forty-four compact
poems so the whole book becomes a glowing metaphor for the relationship
of art and life.
Beloit Poetry Journal
The reader is continually delighted by juxtapositions that are audacious
yet fitting...Patterns of Haskins' pieces continue to resonate after closing
the book. (Forty-Four Ambitions) is no small achievement.
New Letters
Already I find myself looking at scores in a new and fresh way. Thank
you!
Nelita True, Chair Piano Department, Eastman School of Music
A unique book!
American College of Musicians
Across Her Broad Lap Something Wonderful
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Enjoyed it thoroughly. It's especially fine how the poems all reflect
on each other.
Beloit Poetry Journal
Castings
She is certainly one of the few original voices among young American poets.
She takes big risks, and her poetry penetrates straight to the marrow
of the bone.
Midwest Quarterly.
Historical accuracy blends easily with lyrical invention ... Haskins unavoidably
enters the lives of those she considers ... stunning realism.
Southern Poetry Review.
Elegant, thoughtful, sophisticated poems.
Beloit Poetry Journal
Planting the Children
A fine first volume. The poems spring to life like plants.
Hudson Review -
What she has to say is likely to remain in memory.
Booklist.
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