Rebecca Hazelton

Rebecca Hazelton Stafford (born 1978) is an American poet and editor.

Early life
Rebecca Hazelton was born in 1978 in Richmond, Virginia. She graduated from Davidson College in 2000, receiving a Bachelor of Arts in English; University of Notre Dame, where she got her Master of Fine Arts in Poetry; and Florida State University where she received her Ph.D. in English and Poetry.

Career
A former editor at The Southeast Review and Devil's Lake, Hazelton presently reviews contemporary poetry for Southern Indiana Review. She was also a member of the English faculty of Beloit College from 2011 to 2012. She was then on the creative writing faculty of Oklahoma State University. Her poetry has been published in various journals such as FIELD, Pleiades, and The Sycamore Review. She serves as assistant professor of English at North Central College. Her poem "Letter to the Editor" was published in The New Yorker in May 2016.

With her former Davidson professor Alan Michael Parker, Hazelton is editor of the Manifesto Project.

Hazelton is the author of four collections of poetry: Fair Copy (2012, for which she won the Ohio State University Press/The Journal Award in Poetry), Vow (2013), No Girls No Telephones (written with Brittany Cavallaro and published in 2013), and Bad Star (2013). In Fair Copy, Hazelton engages with the poetry of Emily Dickinson, using the first lines of Dickinson poems as acrostics from which Hazelton wrote her own poems. (Begun on Hazelton's 29th birthday, the project used the first line of every 29th poem from The Complete Works of Emily Dickinson.) Reviewing the collection in The Emily Dickinson Journal, Christina Pugh said Hazelton's "handling of line is often astonishingly virtuosic, and [her] material is only 'personal' in the coyest and most mercurial of ways," noting that these qualities echo Dickinson's own body of work.

A Publishers Weekly review of Vow said that "real bodies and adult relationships mingle and complement one another in this clear, witty second effort from Hazelton," noting "her elegantly colloquial" style.

Hazelton's work has been anthologized in the Best New Poets series in 2011 and The Best American Poetry series in 2013 ("Book of Forget") and 2015 ("My Husband").

Awards

 * 2012, Cleveland State Poetry Center Open Competition Prize
 * 2012, Vinyl 45 Chapbook Prize, YesYesBooks
 * 2012, "Discovery"/Joan Leiman Jacobson Prize
 * 2011, Charles B. Wheeler Prize
 * 2011, Best New Poets selection (ed. D. A. Powell)
 * 2010, Jay C. and Ruth Hall Poetry Fellowship, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Books
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 * Gloss (University of Wisconsin Press, 2019)
 * Vow (Cleveland State University Press, 2013)
 * Bad Star (YesYes Books, 2013)
 * No Girls No Telephones with Brittany Cavallaro (Black Lawrence Press, 2013)
 * Fair Copy (Ohio State University Press, 2012)

Essays

 * "Thirteen Ways of Looking at Genealogy, Ancestry, and the (Re)making of Selves," Michigan Quarterly Review (2012)
 * "On Lily Brown's Rust or Go Missing," Barn Owl Review (2011)
 * "On Simone Muench's Orange Crush," Devil's Lake (2010)

Selected Poems

 * "You Are the Penultimate Love of My Life," Vow (2013)
 * "It's Springtime, Elise, and You're Missing All of It," Gettysburg Review (August 15, 2012)
 * "Elise Qua Elise," Everyday Genius (August 3, 2012)
 * "Gold Empire," Boston Review (May 1, 2012)
 * "Do Not Want," Sixth Finch (April 15, 2012)
 * "Revision: Elise"; two others, PANK Magazine (March 7, 2012)
 * "Three Poems", "CONJUNCTIONS: A Web Exclusive
 * "Book of Desire"; "Book of Excess," Anti- (February 5, 2012)
 * "Actual Animals," Verse Daily (January 8, 2012)
 * "You Make Me Touch Your Hands for Stupid Reasons," Ink Node (November 7, 2011)
 * "Questions About the Wife," Verse Daily (September 23, 2011) -->