Talk:Bill Zavatsky

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Corrections to biography of Bill Zavatsky[edit]

Dear Friends at Wikipedia, I thought that I’d offer some corrections and bibliographical additions to your writeup of me. I have put suggested corrections in brackets below where the errors appear. If you have any questions about my suggestions, please don’t hesitate to contact me at billzavatsky@gmail.com. Many thanks, BZ

Bill Zavatsky From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Bill Zavatsky (born 1943 Bridgeport, Connecticut) is an American poet, journalist, jazz pianist, and translator.[1] Zavatsky has worked as a journalist; his articles have appeared in The New York Times Book Review and Rolling Stone. He was editor-in-chief of SUN press and SUN magazine. He has taught workshops for Teachers & Writers Collaborative, Long Island University, and University of Texas-Austin.[2] For many years he taught English at Trinity School in New York City, where his students frequently won creative writing awards. His cotranslation of André Breton's Earthlight received the International PEN/Book-of-the-Month Club Translation Prize.[3] He was the editor and publisher of SUN press and SUN magazine from 1971-1985.

[No italics on “magazine,” above. The publication was simply known as SUN.] [received the PEN/Book-of-the-Month Club Translation Prize.]

Zavatsky could be described as a second-generation New York School poet, influenced by such writers as Frank O'Hara and Kenneth Koch. Koch was his professor at Columbia University. In addition to the wry humor typical of the New York School, Zavatsky adds to his poetry an emotional poignancy that gives it additional depth. Like some of his predecessors in the New York School, Zavatsky also excels as a translator of poetry. His work in this area has included English versions of the writers André Breton, Valery Larbaud, Robert Desnos, and Ramón Gómez de la Serna.

[3 Valery Larbaud, Arthur Rimbaud, Robert Desnos]

His artistic influences include the jazz pianist Bill Evans, whom Zavatsky got to know late in the musician's career. Zavatsky has eloquently eulogized Evans, both in liner notes to two of his albums, and in his poem "Live at the Village Vanguard." [Zavatsky has eloquently eulogized Evans in the poem “Elegy,” which appeared as the liner note to You Must Believe in Spring, the first Evans recording to be issued after his death, and in his poem “Live at the Village Vanguard.” He also contributed a poem to Momentum, the 1972 Evans recording released in 2012. Zavatsky has also contributed fourteen poems as liner notes to as many recordings by the American jazz pianist Marc Copland.]

Zavatsky grew up in a working-class family in Bridgeport, Connecticut. His father was a mechanic who owned a garage. Zavatsky was the first member of his family to graduate from a four-year college. He attended Columbia University, where his fellow students included a dynamic cohort of budding writers, such as Phillip Lopate, Ron Padgett, and David Shapiro.

[His father was an automobile mechanic who owned a repair shop. Zavatsky and a cousin were the first members of their generation to graduate from four-year colleges. He attended Columbia University, where his fellow students included a dynamic cohort of budding writers, including David Shapiro, Hilton Obenzinger, Paul Auster, David Lehman, and Hugh Seidman. His friends also included Columbia graduates Phillip Lopate, Ron Padgett, and Alan Feldman, as well as later Columbia graduates Jessica Greenbaum and Jeffrey Harrison.]

Zavatsky lives in New York City.[4] [5] Contents [hide] • 1 Awards • 2 Works o 2.1 Poetry o 2.2 Translations • 3 References • 4 External links [edit] Awards • 2008 Guggenheim Fellowship [6] 2004 PEN/Book-of-the-Month Club Translation Award [edit] Works • "Up in Grandma’s Room", Poetry Magazine [edit] Poetry • Theories of Rain and Other Poems, Sun, 1975, ISBN 9780915342037 • For Steve Royal and Other Poems, Coalition of Publishers for Employment, 1985 • Where X Marks the Spot Hanging Loose Press, 2006, ISBN 9781931236683 SUN (all caps.) [edit] Translations • The Poems of A.O. Barnabooth Valéry Larbaud, Translators Ron Padgett, Bill Zavatsky, Mushinsha, 1977; revised edition, 2008, Black Widow Press • Earthlight: Poems of André Breton Translator Bill Zavatsky, Zack Rogow, Sun & Moon Press, 1993, ISBN 9781557130952; revised edition, 2004, Green Integer; to be republished in a new edition in 2016 by Black Widow Press.

[• Ten Poems by Arthur Rimbaud (Omertà Press, 2014)]

[edit] References 1. ^ http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/595 2. ^ http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/595 3. ^ Where X Marks the Spot Hanging Loose Press: Brooklyn, New York (2006) 4. ^ http://www.pw.org/content/bill_zavatsky 5. ^ http://www.poetrymagazine.com/archives/2005/Holi_Day56/Features/zavatsky.html 6. ^ http://writingpolishdiaspora.blogspot.com/2008/04/bill-zavatsky-wins-guggenheim-award.html [edit] External links • "Interview with Bill Zavatsky", Big Bridge, Dave Brinks • "Still Believe In The Rainbow", The Brooklyn Rail, John Yau • "Where X Marks The Spot by Bill Zavatsky", Cold Front Magazine, Mike McDonough Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Zavatsky"108.46.202.88 (talk) 20:55, 26 July 2015 (UTC)[reply]


In addition, there is an error in the Wikipedia display page:

There I am listed as the author of the Rebel Without a Cause Book. I did work on such a book, but for a variety of reasons it was never published. Please remove that credit from this page.

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