L. E. Sissman

Louis Edward Sissman (January 1, 1928 Detroit – March 10, 1976) was an American poet and advertising executive.

Biography
Sissman was raised in Detroit. He went to private schools, and in 1941 he became a national spelling champion when he won the 17th Scripps National Spelling Bee. He was a Quiz Kid.

Near the end of World War II Sissman entered Harvard. He was expelled but returned, graduating in 1949 as Class Poet.

In the 1950s he worked at Prentice-Hall as a copyeditor in New York City. In the 1960s he worked at odd jobs, including campaigning for John F. Kennedy. Eventually, he was hired by Quinn and Johnson Advertising, in Boston, and he rose to the position of Creative Vice President. He married Anne, and lived in Still River.

In 1965, he discovered he had Hodgkin lymphoma. He fought the disease for a decade. He wrote book reviews and poems for The New Yorker, monthly columns for The Atlantic, and was published in Harper's Magazine.

His papers are housed at Harvard University.

Awards

 * Guggenheim Fellowship, 1968
 * Garrison Prize
 * Golden Rose Award
 * Hello Darkness, won the 1978 National Book Critics Circle Award

Reviews
The poetry of Louis Edward Sissman speaks to us out of midcentury American life with all of the poise and formal elegance of W. H. Auden yet with the joie de vivre of Sissman's Harvard contemporary Frank O'Hara....The influence of Sissman's poetry has now survived into a second generation. The poet Brad Leithauser, born after Sissman graduated from college, declared in The New Criterion that "[Sissman] can serve as a model to every contemporary poet." And Edward Hirsch, in the foreword to Night Music, states, "He provides an example of wit schooled by feeling and deepened by experience, of intellect coming together with restrained but warm underlying emotion, of poetic freedom enabled by expertise."—P. Davison, The Atlantic, Mar 17, 1999