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FURTHER READING
Related Prose
A Brief Guide to Language Poetry
Beyond the Manifesto: Language Poetry and Lyn Hejinian's The Language of Inquiry
by Srikanth Reddy
Great Anthology: In the American Tree
Other Language Poets
Bernadette Mayer
Charles Bernstein
Jackson Mac Low
Lyn Hejinian
Michael Palmer
Ron Silliman
Susan Howe
External Links
Seeming is Believing
Review of Veil: New and Selected Poems from Electronic Poetry Review.
Three readings at PENNsound
Audio recordings from three different readings given by Armantrout, archived by PENNsound.
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Rae Armantrout
Photo: Paul Barnett
Rae Armantrout

Rae Armantrout was born in Vallejo, California, in 1947, and grew up in San Diego. She holds a bachelor's degree from the University of California, Berkeley, where she studied with Denise Levertov, and a master's degree in creative writing from San Francisco State University.

She has published ten books of poetry, including: Next Life, (Wesleyan, 2007), selected by the New York Times as one of the most notable books of 2007; Up to Speed (2004), a finalist for the PEN USA Award in Poetry; Veil: New and Selected Poems (2001), also a finalist for the PEN Center USA Award; The Pretext (2001); Made To Seem (1995); and The Invention of Hunger (1979).

Part of the first generation of Language poets on the West Coast, her work has been praised for syntax that borders on everyday speech while grappling with questions of deception and distortion in both language and consciousness. About her poems, Robert Creeley has described “a quiet and enabling signature,” adding, “I don’t think there’s another poet writing who is so consummate in authority and yet so generous to her readers and company alike.”

In the preface to her selected poems, Veil, Ron Silliman describes her work as: "the literature of the anti-lyric, those poems that at first glance appear contained and perhaps even simple, but which upon the slightest examination rapidly provoke a sort of vertigo effect as element after element begins to spin wildly toward more radical...possibilities."

Armantrout's poetry has been widely anthologized, appearing in Language Poetries, (New Directions), In The American Tree, (National Poetry Foundation), Postmodern American Poetry (Norton), Poems for the Millennium, Vol. 2 (University of California), American Women Poets of the 21st Century (Wesleyan), and several editions of Best American Poetry. She is also the author of a prose memoir, True, which was published by Atelos in 1998. She has taught writing for almost twenty years at the University of California, San Diego.

Poems by
Rae Armantrout

Scumble
Thing
Two, Three
Upper World
Yonder



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