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         Mchugh Heather:     more books (57)
  1. New Voices. Eighth Edition, 1989-1998 by Heather, Editor McHugh, 2002
  2. Ploughshares (Vol. 27, No. 1)
  3. The Father of the Predicaments by Heather McHugh, 1999
  4. BOMB Issue 92, Summer 2005 (BOMB Magazine) by Paul Chan, Susan Wheeler, et all 2005-06-15
  5. The Academy of American Poets - Poetry Audio Archive by Heather McHugh, Gerald Stern, 1992
  6. Hinge & Sign by Heather McHugh, 1994
  7. A World of Difference by Heather McHugh, 1981-01-01
  8. Shades. by Heather. McHUGH, 1988
  9. Heather McHugh's "Three To's and an Oi": A Study Guide from Gale's "Poetry for Students" (Volume 24, Chapter 16)
  10. Ploughshares At Emerson College Spring 2001
  11. Euripides' Cyclops. by tr. Heather McHugh, 2001-01-01
  12. Zyzzyva: The Last Word: West Coast Writers and Artists (Volume XII, Numbers 3/4 Fall/Winter 1996 by Forrest Hamer, Victor Davis Hanson, Anna Keesey, Russell Leong, Robert Hill long, Heather McHugh, Kay Ryan, Aram Saroyan, Sallie Tisdale, Steve Yarabrough Peter Gizzi, 1996

41. Selected Reviews Of Poetry By Heather McHugh
Selected Reviews of Poetry by heather mchugh. heather mchugh's poemscombine wit and jazzy rhythms with a daring lyric velocity a
http://depts.washington.edu/nassr01/plenaries_files/mchugh.html
Selected Reviews of Poetry by Heather McHugh "Heather McHugh's poems combine wit and jazzy rhythms with a daring lyric velocity...a tough intellect: playful, sarcastic, and self-critical...All of McHugh's poems accelerate toward the epigram, the aphorism, the attempt to contain the heart's impulsive rush of sentiment within the bounds of a rational sensibility...a fluent, exuberant poet whose work expresses deep sentiment while resisting facile sentimentality." Threepenny Review "From the start, she's been in rebellion, stubborn in keeping a traditional though wily music in her work, and uncommonly quick, quirky in her language...among American writers only a handful seemed to have the 'sufficient creative and critical sense to produce with a degree of sustained excellence.' One feels this balance quite alive in McHugh's best work..." American Poetry Review "Heather McHugh's wit and skill with language serve poetry's noblest purpose, which is to create feeling...McHugh is one of those rare poets who learns about the world by speaking of it, and her voicewild, intelligent, eclecticdelights as much as it instructs." Harvard Book Review "McHugh makes good Robert Creeley's blurb promise of 'articulate toughness' and 'bedrock wisdom.' Her poems are honest and essential as a blood count."

42. Heather McHugh Vita
heather mchugh Department of English University of Washington Box 354330 Seattle,WA 981954330 (206) 543-2690. heather mchugh provides an exception.
http://depts.washington.edu/engl/vitamchugh.html
HEATHER McHUGH Department of English
University of Washington
Box 354330
Seattle, WA 98195-4330
Education

Employment

Grants and Awards

Publications
... McHugh homepage EDUCATION:
  • B.A., Harvard University, 1965-70 M.A., University of Denver, 1971-72
EMPLOYMENT:
  • Teaching Assistant, Denver University, 1971-72 Visiting Lecturer, Antioch College, 1973 Assistant Professor, Stephens College, 1974-75 Associate Professor, SUNY-Binghamton, 1976-82 Visiting Lecturer, Columbia University, 1980-81 Visiting Lecturer, University of California, Irvine, 1980 Associate Professor, University of Washington, 1984-86 Holloway Lecturer in Poetry, University of California, Berkeley, 1987 Visiting Professor, Syracuse University, Fall 1988 Professor, University of Washington, 1986-present Visiting Professor, Writers Workshop, University of Iowa, 1991, 1992, 1995, 1999. Coal-Royalty Chair in Poetry, University of Alabama, Spring 1992 Elliston Writer in Residence, University of Cincinnati, Spring 1993 Invited as Visiting Professor, University of California, Irvine, Spring 1994.

GRANTS AND AWARDS:
  • Residency fellowships at: the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, 1973-80.

43. Heather McHugh -- 4th Annual Literary Festival -- Old Dominion University -- Oct
4th Annual Literary Festival, 4th Annual Literary Festival Old DominionUniversity October 58, 1981. heather mchugh. The author of
http://courses.lib.odu.edu/litfest/4th/mchugh.html
4th Annual Literary Festival
Old Dominion University
October 5-8, 1981 Heather McHugh
The author of Dangers, published in 1978 in Houghton Mifflin's New Poetry Series, and A World of Difference, also a Houghton Mifflin publication (1981), Heather McHugh is a rare poet, known for her formal elegance, her piercing wit, and her supple use of rhyme and rhythm. The Denver Quarterly remarked on her interest in "seeing doubly and double-talking" and praised her "passionate intelligence" and "affection for the tongue's intimate intricacies." McHugh's Thursday evening reading will conclude the 1981 Literary Festival. McHugh grew up in Williamsburg and now teaches at the State University of New York at Binghamton. She is a member of the board of directors of the Associated Writing Programs. [extracted from 1981 brochure] 4th Annual Literary Festival Books Available
Web Sites

44. Heather McHugh -- 4th Annual Literary Festival -- Old Dominion University -- Oct
Books by heather mchugh. Following is a list of books available in the Old DominionUniversity Perry Library. Search the Online Catalog for availability.
http://courses.lib.odu.edu/litfest/4th/mchughbooks.html
4th Annual Literary Festival
Old Dominion University
October 5-8, 1981
Books by Heather McHugh Following is a list of books available in the Old Dominion University Perry Library. Search the Online Catalog for availability. Check your local bookstore or online bookseller for more books by this author. Dangers : poems. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1977. D'après tout : poems. Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1981.

45. Ploughshares, The Literary Journal
Authors Articles heather mchugh This bio was last updated on 06/11/2001.heather mchugh. Photo by Margaretta K. Mitchell. heather
http://www.pshares.org/Authors/authorDetails.cfm?prmAuthorID=1021

46. Ploughshares, The Literary Journal
Authors Articles About heather mchugh A Profil About heather mchughA Profile. by Peter Turchi. heather mchugh is wired.
http://www.pshares.org/issues/article.cfm?prmArticleID=7085

47. The Flow Of Desire, Seductive, Evasive Heather McHugh, By Colin Booy (04/18/02)
BOOKS-. THE FLOW OF DESIRE Seductive, Evasive heather mchugh by Colin Booy. LatelyI've been ambivalent toward contemporary (or postmodern, if you like) poetry.
http://www.thestranger.com/2002-04-18/books.html
Vol 11 No. 31, Apr 18 - Apr 24 2002
Enter search words:
-BOOKS- THE FLOW OF DESIRE
Seductive, Evasive Heather McHugh

by Colin Booy
Lately I've been ambivalent toward contemporary (or postmodern, if you like) poetry. No doubt this is largely because of my experience (as a writing major at a liberal-arts college) of the cultural machine that produces it. Not that the professor-poets who populate higher education don't write beautiful versesome of them certainly do. But often it seems like a beauty that draws a cultural blank, a poetry taking place nowhere. It's hard to imagine someone being gripped by this work in the way that, say, the German thinker Walter Benjamin was by the urban poetry of Charles Baudelaire, compelling him as it did to so obsessively excavate 19th-century Paris in, at least partly, an effort to simply understand. I want to suggest, however, that such a reading is a little too neat, and that her work contains compelling resistances to this milieu. McHugh suggests as much: "The 'poetry of place' bores me: It takes place too literally." Rather, the place of her poetry is recombinative, moving with a deceptive ease that seems borrowed from the Northwest's urban environs. The opening stanza of "The Starrier the Scarier""So it looks./It seems to look./Appears to seem."has such an ease, both effusive and evasive, progressing even as it takes back. The final passages of another poem, "Streaming Audio," are characteristically indicative as self-commentary: "No real/is closable./It dreams of drumming Innisfree,/ but seems to mean it's live./ To last it has/ to flow, and so/ to stream it has to strive."

48. Heather McHugh "Ghoti"
heather mchugh. Ghoti. The gh comes from rough, the o from women's, andthe ti from unmentionables presto there's the perfect English
http://www.wmich.edu/thirdcoast/mchugh_ghoti.html
Heather McHugh
Ghoti
The gh comes from rough, the o from women's,
and the ti from unmentionables presto:
there's the perfect English instance of
unlovablility complete with fish. Our wish was for a better
revelation: for a correspondence
if not lexical, at least
phonetic; if not with Madonna then at least with Mary Magdalene.
Instead we get the sheer
opacity of things: an accident
of incident, a tracery of history: the dung inside the dungarees, the jock strap for a codpiece, and
the ruined patches bordering the lip. One boot (high-heeled) could make Sorrento sorry, Capri corny, even little Italy a little ill. Low-cased, a lover looks one over eggs without ease, semen without oars and there, on board, tricked out in fur and fin, the landlubber who wound up captain. Where's it going, this our (H)MS? More west? More forth? The quest itself is at a long and short behest: it's wound in winds. (Take rough from seas, and women from the shore, unmentionables out of mind). We're here for something rich, beyond appearances. What do I mean? (What can one say?)

49. Heather McHugh
from The Father of the Predicaments by heather mchugh. He came at nightto each of us asleep And trained us in the virtues we most lacked.
http://www.engl.virginia.edu/meridian/1999spring/father.html
from "The Father of the Predicaments"
by Heather McHugh
He came at night to each of us asleep
And trained us in the virtues we most lacked.
Me he admonished to return his stare
Correctly, without fear. Unless I could,
Unblinking, more and more incline
Toward a deep unblinkingness of his,
He would not let me rest. Outside,
In the dark of the world, at the foot
Of the library steps, there lurked A Mercury of rust, its cab half-lit. (Two worldly forms who huddled there Knew what they meant. I had no business With the things they knew. Nor did I feel myself Drawn back through Circulation into Reference, Until I was completely in the blue Of its unstoppable TVs, all seven monitors abuzz With is's etymologies...)

50. Poet Heather McHugh Will Give Reading At UI Dec. 8
0073; fax (319) 3840024 e-mailwinston-barclay@uiowa.edu. ReleaseImmediate. Poet heather mchugh will give reading at UI Dec. 8.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~ournews/1997/november/1121mchugh.html
CONTACT: JENNY BURMAN
CONTACT: WINSTON BARCLAY
100 Old Public Library
Iowa City IA 52242
(319) 384-0073; fax (319) 384-0024
e-mail:winston-barclay@uiowa.edu
Release: Immediate
Poet Heather McHugh will give reading at UI Dec. 8 IOWA CITY, Iowa Award-winning poet Heather McHugh, a recent visiting faculty member in the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, will read from her work at 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 8. in Lecture Room II of UI Van Allen Hall. The reading is sponsored by the Writers' Workshop and is free and open to the public. McHugh is the author most recently of the collection "Hinge and Sign: Poems 1968-1993," a National Book Award finalist and winner of the Pollock/Harvard Book Review prize. She has built a reputation as a rebellious poet working traditional forms, in conversation with the language. She recently published the essays "Broken English: Poetry and Partiality." The Village Voice Literary Supplement writes of her work: Heather McHugh's "poems are as honest and essential as a blood count . . . Her speech is stripped down to the last contraction, tested for resonance and worked back into idioms that can bear ironic weight. You can open anywhere, almost at random, and find plain revelations. By turning language into courage she manages to bounce you back from despair. Her poems are open, resilient, invisibly twisted: part safety net, part trampoline." Nobel Prize winner Seamus Heaney writes of McHugh's poetry: "Wonderful fluency and happy skepticism, the world beautifully seen and sung, the word relished and suspected. Lots of impulse and energy, bravura."

51. UI Writers' Workshop Faculty Heather McHugh, Chris Offutt To Read
0024 email winston-barclay@uiowa.edu. Release Nov. 19, 1999. UIWriters' Workshop faculty heather mchugh, Chris Offutt to read.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~ournews/1999/november/1119mchugh.html
CONTACT: WINSTON BARCLAY
100 Old Public Library
Iowa City IA 52242
(319) 384-0073; fax (319) 384-0024
e-mail: winston-barclay@uiowa.edu Release: Nov. 19, 1999 UI Writers' Workshop faculty Heather McHugh, Chris Offutt to read "The Father of the Predicaments" is McHugh’s 10th book. Her collection "Hinge & Sign: Poems 1968-1993" was a National Book Award finalist and chosen as Best Book of the Year by the New York Times and Publishers Weekly. In a review of "Hinge & Sign," Linda Gregerson wrote in the New York Times Book Review, "If ours were a more reverent country than the one John Ashbery and Heather McHugh gorgeously exemplify, these two would long ago have been made to endure the title of national treasures. For the treasure we too long have taken for granted our fractious, healing, double-dealing, on-the-make vernacular is nowhere so richly turned to account as in the poems they have been giving us for years." McHugh’s other works include "Shades," "To the Quick," a collection of critical essays titled "Broken English: Poetry and Partiality," a translation of Blaga Dimitrova’s "Because the Sea is Black," and a translation of Jean Follain’s "D’Apres Tout."

52. Heather Mchugh Books
heather mchugh. Glottal Stop 101 Poems (Wesleyan Poetry (Cloth)) byPaul Celan Hinge Sign Poems, 19681993 by heather mchugh.
http://www.absolutebook.com/poetry/m/heathermchugh.html

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Heather Mchugh
Cyclops (The Greek Tragedy in New Translations)
by Euripides
Shades

by Heather McHugh
by Heather McHugh The Father of the Predicaments (Wesleyan Poetry) by Heather McHugh Broken English: Poetry and Partiality by Heather McHugh Glottal Stop: 101 Poems (Wesleyan Poetry (Cloth)) by Paul Celan Dangers: Poems by Heather McHugh Ploughshares Spring 2001 : Poems and Stories by Heather McHugh A world of difference : poems by Heather McHugh D'Apres Tout: Poems by Jean Follain by Heather McHugh For all SciFi, Fantasy and Horror books see the SciFi Bookstore In Association with Amazon.com

53. Heather McHugh Poetry Reading
Poet heather mchugh to Read at Smith. NORTHAMPTON, Mass.The Poetry Center atSmith College will present poet heather mchugh at 730 pm on Tuesday, Oct.
http://www.smith.edu/newsoffice/Releases/01-026.html
Office of College Relations
Smith College
Garrison Hall
Northampton, Massachusetts 01063
www.smith.edu/newsoffice October 4, 2001
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Poet Heather McHugh to Read at Smith
NORTHAMPTON, Mass.-The Poetry Center at Smith College will present poet Heather McHugh at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 23, in Wright Hall Auditorium.
McHugh is the author of six books of poetry, a book of essays and translations from several languages. Called a "postmodern metaphysician" by Booklist, McHugh is widely praised for her attention to, and fascination with, language itself. Her poems, which have won many awards, often revolve around complicated wordplay and etymological games. Former U. S. Poet Laureate Robert Hass described her as "a poet for whom wit is a form of spiritual survival." The Village Voice Literary Supplement declared that McHugh's poems "are honest and essential as a blood count."
Born in California and raised in Virginia, McHugh entered Harvard at the age

54. The Poetry Center At Smith College -- Biographies
heather mchugh is the author of six books of poetry, a book of essays, and translationsfrom several languages. poems by heather mchugh. Etymological Dirge.
http://www.smith.edu/poetrycenter/bios.php?name=hmchugh

55. Heather McHugh
There's been. some terrible mistake We're all about to die.
http://wso.williams.edu/~cbirtche/mpm/mchugh.html
There's been some terrible mistake
We're
... about to die

56. The Retort Room By Heather McHugh
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. The Retort Room By heather McHughUpdated Wednesday, October 27, 1999, at 1230 AM PT Abandoned
http://slate.msn.com/id/36021/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
The Retort Room
By Heather McHugh
Updated Wednesday, October 27, 1999, at 12:30 AM PT
Abandoned, it had tottered for years
on the water's lip, or lap. Squatter-pigeons
occupied its nights, dreaming of drowning in glottals. Then suddenly some trucks arrived and hauled away enormous rusted remnants of the cannery's cookery. Inside a week, the great stained concrete that had poured down fifty years and twenty feet into the tide was sheathed in plywood trundled from a local lumberyard. The whole place bloomed with polyester greenery and sky-blue styrofoam. And sure enough, from somewhere south, with a flourish of romance, and a big RV, he brought his wife of decades here to live in dreamlandat the dead end of the island's eastmost street, where he would twinkle, she abide. The new red retort room now bore his greatest masterwork: nailed near the Wal-Mart welcome sign, a homemade

57. Voice By Heather McHugh
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. Voice By heather mchugh Posted Wednesday,July 31, 1996, at 1230 AM PT I am born is passive, I am dying's active.
http://slate.msn.com/id/3343/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
Voice
By Heather McHugh
Posted Wednesday, July 31, 1996, at 12:30 AM PT
I am born is passive,
I am dying's active. Speaking from inside of speaking, these two,
being deeply incommensurate, may tell us more of telling (fore- and re-) than ever of a life, and life's two ends. But still one harbors a suspicion (sneaking) language has a longer memory than anyone, so anyone had better reconceive the all- essential pair: to die's ally becomes to bear. And as for being born (inside unwilled) its analog's not dying ("I came out"): it's being killed. Heather McHugh's most recent collection of poetry, , was nominated for a National Book Award. More poem "Two Poems" posted March 18, 2003 Michalle Gould "As Close as Breathing" posted March 11, 2003 Mark Jarman "Trampoline" posted March 4, 2003 Joshua Weiner "February 26" posted February 25, 2003 David Lehman "Hate Hotel" posted February 18, 2003

58. Poet: Heather McHugh - All Poems Of Heather McHugh
Unsubscribe. heather mchugh, Poem. 8, With Due Respect To Thor. Books by heathermchugh; Click here to search for books of / about heather mchugh at Amazon;
http://www.poemhunter.com/p/t/poet.asp?poet=9122

59. EMC: Topics For: Combating Verbal Noise (Heather McHugh)
EMC Topics for Combating Verbal Noise (heather mchugh). EMC Home, New Titles, All Titles, Abstracts, Topical Index, Withdrawn, CSS Home. Search,
http://pokey.css.washington.edu/css/emc/topics.php?mid=6898

60. Arts/Literature/Authors/M/McHugh,_Heather
Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligentsearch feature. / Arts / Literature / Authors / M / mchugh, heather.
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/M/McHugh,_H
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors M McHugh, Heather Heather McHugh
"The Academy of American Poets presents a biography photograph and selected poems." Also includes an audio recording (in RealAudio file-format) of the author reading her poem "What He Thought."
URL: http://www.poets.org/lit/poet/hmchufst.htm

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