Susan Wheeler

Susan Wheeler is a poet and Associate Professor and Director of the Creative Writing Program at Princeton University. She has taught in writing programs at the New School, New York University, the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and Columbia University. She earned a BA at Bennington College and did graduate work in Art History at the University of Chicago. Her first poetry collection, Bag o’ Diamonds (1993), won the Norma Faber First Book Award. The Village Voice Literary Supplement described that book as displaying “limber intelligence and visual wit … with influences including John Berryman, Wallace Stevens, John Ashbery, and the Language poets;” the reviewer noted that Wheeler “risks echoing everybody while sounding like no one.” Wheeler’s work is noted for its sonic and lyric intensity, surrealist imagery, use of pop culture, pastiche, and non seuqitur, as well as its playful relationship to received form. According to literary critic Majorie Perloff, “Wheeler is that rare thing among poets, a genuine cultural critic; her poems use image and allusion with such exactitude that we see the things around us—from pop tarts to polyvinylled toilet seats—as if for the first time.” Other collections include Smokes(1998), selected by Robert Hass for the Four Way Book Prize and a featured selection of the Poetry Book of the Month Club; Source Codes (2001); Ledger (2005), which won the Iowa Poetry Prize;Assorted Poems (2009); and Meme (2012), which was a finalist for the National Book Award. Her novel, Record Palace (2005) won high praise for its atmospheric portrayal of Chicago and deft blending of coming-of-age narrative with noir. Wheeler has won numerous awards and honors for her work, including fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She has received the Boston Review Poetry Award, the Robert D. Richardson Award for Non-Fiction from the Denver Quarterly, and a Witter Bynner Prize for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Events

Reading

A Tribute to the Poet Ai

Mon, Oct 19, 2015
7:00 PM