Entries from Key West Literary Seminar | Audio Archives tagged with 'Paul Muldoon'

Paul Muldoon | The Borderline

Paul Muldoon was born and raised in Northern Ireland and has lived in the United States since 1987. He is poetry editor for <em>The New Yorker</em> and the author of more than 10 collections of poems, including the 2002 <em>Moy Sand and Gravel</em>, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the International Griffin Poetry Prize. He has also written rock lyrics for Warren Zevon and his own band, Rackett, in which he plays rhythm guitar.<br> <br> In this recording from the 2010 Key West Literary Seminar, Muldoon delivers a presentation entitled &quot;The Borderline.&quot; In it, Muldoon talks about his childhood growing up in a Catholic ghetto in Northern Ireland, and discusses how the political and military struggles around the Irish border and beyond affected the lives of his family and friends. The selection of poems Muldoon reads speak to similar issues; they include &quot;Anseo,&quot; &quot;Cuba,&quot; &quot;A Christmas in the 50s,&quot; &quot;The Loaf,&quot; and &quot;Side Man.&quot;

Entries from L I T T O R A L | the journal of the Key West Literary Seminar tagged with 'Paul Muldoon'

Paul Muldoon | The Borderline

Paul Muldoon was born and raised in Northern Ireland and has lived in the United States since 1987. He is poetry editor for <em>The New Yorker</em> and the author of more than 10 collections of poems, including the 2002 <em>Moy Sand and Gravel</em>, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the International Griffin Poetry Prize. He has also written rock lyrics for Warren Zevon and his own band, Rackett, in which he plays rhythm guitar.<br> <br> In this recording from the 2010 Key West Literary Seminar, Muldoon delivers a presentation entitled &quot;The Borderline.&quot; In it, Muldoon talks about his childhood growing up in a Catholic ghetto in Northern Ireland, and discusses how the political and military struggles around the Irish border and beyond affected the lives of his family and friends. The selection of poems Muldoon reads speak to similar issues; they include &quot;Anseo,&quot; &quot;Cuba,&quot; &quot;A Christmas in the 50s,&quot; &quot;The Loaf,&quot; and &quot;Side Man.&quot;

One more look @ the 28th annual Key West Literary Seminar

Photo-caption highlights from &quot;Clearing the Sill of the World,&quot; the 28th annual Key West Literary Seminar. An extraordinary literary event, which brought together seven U.S. Poets Laureate, as many winners of the Pulitzer Prize, up-and-coming poetic talents, and a truly remarkable audience of readers, writers, teachers, and poetry lovers of all stripe.

KWLS adds Paul Muldoon, Matthea Harvey

With the addition of <em>The New Yorker</em> poetry editor and Pulitzer Prize winner <a href="http://www.kwls.org/lit/2010/bio.cfm?auth_id=217">Paul Muldoon</a> and Kingsley Tufts Award winner <a href="http://www.kwls.org/lit/2010/bio.cfm?Auth_id=216">Matthea Harvey</a>, the Key West Literary Seminar continues to buttress an already-impressive lineup for its 28th annual event in January 2010.

Feed Subscription

If you use an RSS reader, you can subscribe to a feed of all future entries tagged 'Paul Muldoon'. [What is this?]

Subscribe to feed Subscribe to feed

Other Tags