| Kay Ryan Awarded Pulitzer Prize for Poetry - 2011
LANCASTER - Kay Ryan, an Antelope Valley High School and Antelope Valley College graduate appointed U.S. poet laureate in 2008, has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry.
Columbia University on Monday, announced that the Pulitzer Prize Board named Ryan as this year's recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, according to Steve Standerfer, AV College's director of Public and Governmental Relations.
The board awarded Ryan the prize based on her book "The Best of It: New and Selected Poems."
Board members extolled her book as "a body of work spanning 45 years - witty, rebellious and yet tender, a treasure trove of an iconoclastic and joyful mind."
Pulitzer Prizes for poetry are awarded to American authors who produce "a distinguished volume of original verse."
Ryan, nee Pedersen, graduated from Antelope Valley High School in 1963, then attended AVC for two years, earning her Associate in Arts degree in 1965.
"It was during Ryan's two years attending AVC that she was introduced to (the) poetry that was to influence her writing," Standerfer noted.
From Antelope Valley College she transferred to the University of California, Los Angeles, where she attained her bachelor's and master's degrees prior to joining the faculty as an English instructor at the College of Marin in Kentfield, roughly 16 miles north of San Francisco near San Rafael.
She taught there for more than 30 years and, at the same time, wrote several poetry books, Standerfer stated.
As the nation's 16th poet laureate at the Library of Congress, Ryan joined the ranks of distinguished poets selected for that position.
"During two one-year terms as poet laureate (beginning in 2008), Ryan sought to create an appreciation for poetry as well as pay tribute to the work being done through the nation's community colleges," Standerfer said.
Ryan, 65, returned to AVC in December 2009 to read her poetry, take part in a question-and-answer session with the audience and sign copies of her books. She was greeted in the campus cafeteria by a standing room-only crowd, who listened intently as she captivated them with her every word.
"Kay has been an uplifting presence as laureate during the past year, and her poetry continues to awe and delight readers," said James H. Billington, head librarian at the Library of Congress, when he appointed her to the prestigious post.
In a July 13, 2009 Newsweek article titled "The Reluctant Poet Laureate," writer Louisa Thomas noted Ryan's introduction to poetry at AVC influenced her writing:
"That is where she began reading poetry, when a stern teacher led her to Gerard Manley Hopkins, Emily Dickinson, John Donne (all poets who, not coincidentally, echo in her own work) in part by demanding that their poetry be taken seriously or not at all," Thomas wrote.
Numerous poetry buffs have drawn parallels between Ryan and Dickinson.
Ryan was born in San Jose in 1945, but lived in Rosamond for a time.
Back when Ryan was appointed poet laureate, a former high school classmate shared some school-day memories.
"I had a class with her our senior year anatomy and physiology taught by Mr. (Harold) Huffman," said Connie Pursell, who worked in the health care insurance field in Orange County. "It was the year we dissected a cat. I sat directly in front of Ryan.
"She was a real cut-up, always had a wry or amusing one-liner for most any occasion, and Mr. Huffman often stopped his lectures to wait for her to be quiet. Mr. Huffman tried to be stern, but even he was amused.
"She had that 'wild and crazy' sort of enthusiasm, like Steve Martin or Robin Williams. I laughed a lot over her comments," Pursell recalled.
Today, Ryan reportedly is much more reserved and typically shies away from publicity, according to a Library of Congress report.
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"I came from sort of a self-contained people who didn't believe in public exposure, and public investigation of the heart was rather repugnant to me," the Library of Congress report quoted Ryan as saying. "I have tried to live very quietly, so I could be happy."
In that she appears much like Dickinson, who in the final nearly 31 years of her life never left the boundaries of her family's Amherst property. Ryan described herself to The Associated Press as a "modern hermit" who enjoys riding her mountain bike.
Ryan has lived in Marin County since 1971 and has shared a home with her life partner, Carol Adair, for 30 years, the Library of Congress reported.
"In her poems, Ryan enjoys re-examining the beauty of everyday phrases and mining the cracks in common human experience," the Library of Congress report noted.
Her work has earned her the 2005 gold medal for poetry from the San Francisco Commonwealth Club; the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from The Poetry Foundation and a Guggenheim fellowship in 2004; a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and the Maurice English Poetry Award in 2001; and several other honors dating back to 1995.
Since 2006, she has been a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. Her duties as poet laureate included opening the Library of Congress' annual literary series with a reading of her work. Before that, she was be the featured guest at the library's National Book Festival.
Ryan, who succeeded Charles Simic as poet laureate, shares the honor with a list of predecessors including Donald Hall, Ted Kooser, Louise Glck, Billy Collins, Stanley Kunitz, Robert Pinsky, Robert Hass and Rita Dove.
"Kay Ryan is a distinctive and original voice within the rich variety of contemporary American poetry," Billington said. "She writes easily understandable short poems on improbable subjects. Within her compact compositions, there are many surprises in rhyme and rhythm, and in sly wit pointing to subtle wisdom."
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| Fairfax,
Woodacre residents named Guggenheim Fellows
by
Gary Klien, IJ reporter - Marin Independent Journal
Tuesday,
April 13, 2004
Information sent in by Neil Wiley (no relation to other person
in the article)
A writer from
Fairfax and an artist in Woodacre have been named 2004 Guggenheim
Fellows. Kay Ryan, a poet, and William T. Wiley, a nationally
recognized visual artist, are among 185 artists, writers and scholars
from around the world who were awarded fellowships this year.
The winners will share a grant pool of $6.9 million. More
than 3,200 people applied for the fellowships, awarded by the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in New York. The fellowships
are awarded to people who have shown "exceptional capacity for
productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the
arts," according to the foundation's Web site. Ryan, a part-time
English instructor at College of Marin for the past 33 years,
said this application was her fourth try. She said her grant is
for about $40,000. "I was utterly delighted," said Ryan, 58, who
has lived in Fairfax since 1979. "It's never something that you
can expect. "The assumption is, they will buy you some freedom.
They will remove the financial burden from you for a while. They
mean to make your work easier for you to get done." Ryan's poetry
has been published in several collections, and her work has appeared
in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New Republic and other national
publications. She has bachelor's and master's degrees in English
from the University of California at Los Angeles. Wiley, a 66-year-old
Indiana native, has been producing art in his Woodacre studio
since 1968. He has been described as an early force behind the
"Bay Area Funk Art" movement, a style in which artists use cast-off
materials to make whimsical and irreverent creations. "You have
to feel it's alive and not some formula that you're repeating,"
Wiley, describing his work, told the Independent Journal in an
interview last August. Wiley has bachelor's and master's degrees
in fine arts from the San Francisco Art Institute. His work has
been exhibited extensively in the United States and abroad. Previous
Guggenheim winners from Marin have included the late medical professor
Malcolm Miller, author Annie Lamott, architect Sim Van der Ryn
and the late author Gina Berriault. The John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation was established in 1925 by U.S. Sen. Simon
Guggenheim and his wife Olga Hirsh Guggenheim in memory of a son
who died in 1922.
More about
Kay:
http://www.salonmag.com/weekly/ryan.html
http://www.danagioia.net/essays/eryan.htm
http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=361
|
Honors
add up for Marin poet By
Gary Klien, IJ reporter - Marin Independent Journal
Tuesday,
June 15, 2004
Information sent in by Neil Wiley
Kay Ryan has
become the rarest of things - a poet with a six-figure income.
But she's quick to note that her run of good fortune seems much
less of a windfall when "amortized over a long career."
"You
can't be in it for the money," said Ryan, 58, of Fairfax.
"You can't even think about money."
Ryan has been
awarded the 19th annual Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, a $100,000 prize
named for the drug company heiress. The announcement, by the Chicago-based
Poetry Foundation, came just weeks after Ryan was awarded a Guggenheim
fellowship of about $40,000.
"I think
she's created a body of work that's going to last and is very
distinctive, and I think her work hasn't gotten nearly the attention
it deserves," Christian Wiman, editor of Poetry magazine
and a judge for the 2004 Lilly prize, told the Associated Press.
The awarding
of the Lilly prize was big news both in the poetry community and
the mainstream press, here and abroad.
With all the
prize money coming in, Ryan joked she can trade her 1989 Saab
for a new Hummer and become a "muscle poet."
In reality,
she plans to stash the money away as long-deferred savings. Ryan,
a San Jose native who moved to Fairfax in 1979, said she did not
begin writing seriously until she was about 30 years old, and
that was followed by two decades of persistent rejection and nonrecognition.
Ryan structured
her life around the writing - living modestly, earning a living
as a part-time English instructor at College of Marin, and blocking
out as much time as possible for privacy and creativity. She lives
quietly in a wood-shingled home she shares with her longtime companion
Carol Adair, whom she married at San Francisco City Hall in February,
and their two cats, Wally and Ubu.
She writes
in her pajamas, usually in the morning.
"It's
of the great perks of being a poet, the dress code," she
said.
Before she
achieved widespread recognition, Ryan wondered whether her succinct
poems would ever find their place in the world of serious poetry.
Now they have been published in the New Yorker, the Atlantic Monthly,
the New Republic and numerous books.
Jane Hirshfield,
a Mill Valley poet who has won a Guggenheim herself, said the
recognition now being accorded to Ryan is "long-deserved,
well-deserved.
"I believe
what I said to her was, 'Your canoe, kayak, sailboat, rubber-ducky,
submarine and cruise ship have all come in,'" said Hirshfield,
51, a friend of Ryan's for 20 years. "I am cheering wildly.
This is terrific."
While Ryan
has no wild plans for her windfall, she does plan to take the
fall semester off at College of Marin. She also plans to skip
her annual tradition of filing for summertime unemployment benefits.
For any struggling
poets thinking of throwing in the towel, Ryan has simple advice:
"Don't give up if you can help it. Otherwise, go ahead and
give up."
"If you
can give up," she said, "you weren't made of the right
stuff." |