Marvin Bell
Biographical Information

Marvin Bell has been called "an insider who thinks like
an outsider," and his writing has been called "ambitious without pretension."
He was for many years the Flannery O'Connor Professor of Letters at the Iowa
Writers' Workshop, and now teaches for the low-residency MFA program based at
Pacific University in Oregon. Mr. Bell served two terms as the state of Iowa's
first Poet Laureate. He has served also on the faculties of Goddard College
and the Universities of Hawaii, Washington, Wichita State, and Portland State. His list of former students reads like a Who's
Who of American Poetry. He has collaborated with composers, musicians and dancers
and is famous and infamous as the creator of what are known as the "Dead
Man" poems and the "Dead Man Resurrected" poems. The most recent
of his nineteen collections of poetry and essays are Iris of Creation, The Book
of the Dead Man, Ardor, Nightworks: Poems 1962-2000, Rampant, and his latest
collection, Mars Being Red (2007). Mr. Bell has received awards
from the Academy of American Poets, the American Academy of Arts and Letters
and the American Poetry Review, and has held Guggenheim and NEA Fellowships
as well as Senior Fulbright Appointments to Yugoslavia and Australia. Mr. Bell,
and his wife, Dorothy, divide their year between Iowa City and Port Townsend,
Washington.
From the book jacket of Rampant: (A) "Marvin Bell enlarges
our understanding of what poetry can do." --Georgia Review (B) "Marvin
Bell has the largest heart since Walt Whitman." --Harvard Review (C) "Bell's
poems, beyond their formal mastery, constitute an admirable project whose interrogations
run deep." --Poetry
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