Mary K. Stillwell is the author of the first-ever biography of Ted Kooser, available this September. Below she writes about Kooser receiving the Mark Twain Award.
Ted Kooser, Nebraska’s Pulitzer Prize-winning former U.S. poet laureate, traveled to Michigan State in early May 2013 to receive the prestigious Mark Twain Award from the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature. I was pleased to be in the attendance as Jeffrey Hotz, associate professor of English, East Stroudsburg University, presented the award at a special luncheon held in conjunction with the group’s annual conference. Hotz noted that Kooser’s career, “defined by critical acclaim, popular appreciation, and admiration from fellow poets,” has been based on a trifecta of success: “writing poems of the highest order, valuing his readers, and doing his best to make reading poetry part of Americans’ everyday lives.”
Ted Kooser, following the presentation of the Mark Twain Award at the SSML Luncheon, May 11, 2013. (Photograph by Julie Knoeller, Purdue University.)
Hotz went on to say that “Kooser’s career has been inspiring.” In addition to two prose works, Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps and Lights on a Ground of Darkness, both published by the University of Nebraska Press, Kooser is the author of twelve volumes of poetry, a handbook for writing poetry, a graphic novel, and two children’s books. In all of his work, Hotz observed, Kooser “writes about small [Midwestern] communities … [with] a sense of genuine connection… The sense and dignity of people’s lives, whether suffering or in moments of joy and pleasure, remain an overarching them of his work.”
Given annually since 1980, the Mark Twain Award recognizes an outstanding body of creative work by a Midwestern resident. Recent winners have included Louis Erdrich, Jane Hamilton, and Scott Russell Sanders.
The luncheon was followed by a Conversation with Ted Kooser, moderated by Hotz and attended by conference attendees and students. The program opened with a showing of Dan Butler’s film adaptation of Kooser’s poem “Pearl.” Then the poet answered questions, talked about his career as a writer, and read from his work.
Ted Kooser reading from his Pulitzer Prize-winning collection, Delights & Shadows. (Photograph by Margaret Rozga, Professor of English Emerita, University of Wisconsin Waukesha.)
Earlier in the day, I participated in a conference session highlighting current Kooser criticism in a variety of genres. Hotz, a longtime admirer of the poet’s work, spoke on “Environmental Ethics and Community Vision in Ted Kooser’s Children's Fiction.” Other scholars included Phillip Howerton of Missouri State University in West Plains, who spoke on “The Poetry of Ted Kooser and the Politics of Diminishment,” and Margaret Rozga of University of Wisconsin at Waukesha, who gave a personal account titled “Repairing Poems with Ted Kooser’s Poetry Home Repair Manual.” An expanded version of my paper, “Cosmic Consciousness and the Education of Ted Kooser,” which focuses on the poet’s early years at the University of Nebraska and his study with poet and Prairie Schooner editor Karl Shapiro, will appear in The Life and Poetry of Ted Kooser, to be published this September by UNP. What a good day for poetry!
-Mary K. Stillwell
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