David Lee | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1944 (age 80–81) Post, Texas, U.S. |
| Occupation | Poet |
| Education | Colorado State University Utah State University (PhD) |
| Notable awards | Western States Book Award (1995) |
David Lee (born 1944) is an Americanpoet and the first poet laureate of the state of Utah. His 1999 collectionNews From Down to the Café was nominated for thePulitzer Prize for Poetry and, in 2001, he was a finalist for the position ofUnited States Poet Laureate. He has been acclaimed by the Utah Endowment for the Humanities as one of the twelve greatest writers to ever emerge from the state.[1] A former farmer, he is the subject of the PBS documentaryThe Pig Poet. His poems have appeared widely in publications includingPoetry,Ploughshares,The Missouri Review,Narrative Magazine, andJuxtaProse Literary Magazine. He has been cited as an influence on writers such asLance Larsen andBonnie Jo Campbell.
Lee was born inPost, Texas and graduated fromColorado State University and took his PhD atUtah State University, for a current biography see Samara Press and Lee's most recent book,Rusty Barbed Wire. He published his first book of poetry,The Porcine Legacy, in 1974. Prior to his writing career he explored careers as a seminary student, pig farmer, and boxer. He was also the last white athlete to play on aNegro league baseball team, and the only one to do so after the dissolution of the Texas Blue Stars. Lee earned his PhD with a concentration in the poetry of John Milton and taught atSouthern Utah University for three decades, where he served as Chairman of the Department of Language and Literature.
Lee served as Utah's inaugural poet laureate from 1997 to 2002[2] and later received the Utah Governor’s Award for lifetime achievement in the arts. He is the recipient of the Mountains & Plains Booksellers Award in Poetry and theWestern States Book Award in Poetry.[3] In 1999, his collectionNews From Down to the Café was nominated for thePulitzer Prize for Poetry. In 2001, he was selected as a finalist for the position ofUnited States Poet Laureate.[4] His bookSo Quietly the Earth was among the 25 books chosen for the New York Public Library's 2004 "Books to Remember" list.[5]
Jasmine Ellis, Granddaughter