“The
kinds of things that poetry can offer are timeless - mainly the kind of
compression it offers of powerful language, powerful feelings and images, and,
you know, the inner experience becoming outer.” – Brenda
Hillman
Born
in Tucson, Ariz., on this date in 1951, Hillman is the author of 11 collections
of poetry, including Bright Existence; Practical Water, for
which she won the LA Times Book Award for Poetry, and Seasonal
Works with Letters on Fire, which earned her both the Griffin Poetry Prize
and the Northern California Book Award for Poetry. Her most recent book is 2024’s In a Few
Minutes Before Later.
A
“writer” of poetry since age 9, Hillman is known for poems that draw on
elements of found texts and documents, personal meditation, and observation on everything from geology to spirituality.
Recipient of the 2025 PEN
Oakland "Reginald Lockett Lifetime Achievement Award," she also serves as the Olivia Filippi Chair in
Poetry at Saint Mary’s College of California and is a Chancellor of the Academy of
American Poets.
“The
techniques of contemporary poetry are probably the techniques of your daily
life,” she says. “I don't know a single
person who goes into the grocery store and thinks in complete sentences. We often think in fragments, we think in
little lists, we think in non-sequiturs, we think in feelings that may not
match up with each other.”
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