Carolyn Kizer was born in 1925 in Spokane, Washington, to socially prominent parents. Highly accomplished even as a teenager, she published a poem in the New Yorker when she was just 17. At the University of Washington in Seattle, she studied poetry with Theodor Roethke, and from 1959 till ’65 she was editor of Poetry Northwest, a magazine she cofounded. In 1966, Kizer became the first director of Literary Programs for the National Endowment for the Arts. She won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1985 for her collection Yin. A poet of wit, irony, and intellectual precision, she described her poems as the kind that “have what you might call ‘a sting in the tail.’” Kizer died on October 9 of last year in Sonoma, California, where she had made her home for many years. “Bitch” is from her collection Cool, Calm & Collected: Poems 1960–2000, published by Copper Canyon Press, and is reprinted here with their permission.
Carolyn Kizer was born in 1925 in Spokane, Washington, to socially prominent parents. Highly accomplished even as a teenager, she published a poem in the New Yorker when she was just 17. At the University of Washington in Seattle, she studied poetry with Theodor Roethke, and from 1959 till ’65 she was editor of Poetry Northwest, a magazine she cofounded. In 1966, Kizer became the first director of Literary Programs for the National Endowment for the Arts. She won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1985 for her collection Yin. A poet of wit, irony, and intellectual precision, she described her poems as the kind that “have what you might call ‘a sting in the tail.’” Kizer died on October 9 of last year in Sonoma, California, where she had made her home for many years. “Bitch” is from her collection Cool, Calm & Collected: Poems 1960–2000, published by Copper Canyon Press, and is reprinted here with their permission.
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