“I
don't like poetry that doesn't give me a sense of ritual, but I don't like
poetry that doesn't sound like people talking to each other. I try to do both
at once.” – Miller Williams
Born
in Hoxie, Arkansas on April 8, 1930, Williams planned to become a natural
scientist – especially working with animals – and earned a master’s degree in
zoology. But, ultimately, his love of
writing got in the way of his planned career. By the time of his
death in 2015 he had produced nearly 40 books, created and read a poem at the
Presidential Inauguration of fellow Arkansan Bill Clinton, and helped found The
University of Arkansas Press.
He
had his first collection of poems Et Cetera published while he
was still an undergraduate student in biology at Arkansas State
University. His treatise on writing poetry, Making a Poem:
Some Thoughts About Poetry and the People Who Write It, is regularly
studied in colleges and universities around the world. A critic once
wrote that Miller had "a terrible honesty" and "(wrote) about
ordinary people in the extraordinary moments of their
lives."
Among
his many awards were the Porter Prize Foundation’s Lifetime Achievement in
Writing, the National Poets’ Prize – for his collection Living on the
Surface – and the National Arts Award for his lifelong contribution to
the arts.
“I
respond to mood. I hear some phrase, or pick up a rhythm,” he once said of his
writing style. “I always have pen and paper with me.”
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