Talk:Jeffrey Skinner

Vote for Deletion
This article survived a Vote for Deletion. The discussion can be found here. -Splash 00:52, 24 August 2005 (UTC)

External links modified
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Help?
I'm Jeffrey Skinner. My Wikipedia page was created around twenty or more years ago; I don't know who created it. But it is now very out of date, and I've been trying to follow the directions for revising it. I'm finding them confusing and labyrinthine. If someone who is familiar with the editing system can help me I'd much appreciated it. I'll put my updated bio here. It's not "sourced," but each item in it is (I think) easily verifiable. Thanks in advance to anyone who can help me out.

bio 			           Jeffrey Skinner			  	poet/playwright

Poet, playwright, and essayist Jeffrey Skinner has been awarded a 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry. Skinner’s Guggenheim project involves a conflation of contemporary physics, poetry, and theology. He served as the June, 2015 Artist in Residence at the CERN particle accelerator in Geneva, Switzerland. In 2015 he was awarded one of eight American Academy of Arts & Letters Awards, for exceptional accomplishment in writing. His most recent prose book, The 6.5 Practices of Moderately Successful Poets, was published to wide attention and acclaim, including a full page positive review in the Sunday New York Times Book Review. His most recent collection of poems, Chance Divine, won the Field Poetry Award, and was published in February, 2017. His previous book of poems, Glaciology, was chosen in 2012 as winner in the Crab Orchard Open Poetry Competition, and published by Southern Illinois University press in Fall, 2013. Salmon Poetry, a literary press out of Ireland, will bring out his I Offer This Container: New & Selected Poems, also in 2017. Skinner has published five other collections: Late Stars (Wesleyan University Press), A Guide to Forgetting (a winner in the 1987 National Poetry series, chosen by Tess Gallagher, published by Graywolf Press), The Company of Heaven (Pitt Poetry Series), Gender Studies, (Miami University Press), and Salt Water Amnesia (Ausable Press). He has edited two anthologies, Last Call: Poems of Alcoholism, Addiction, and Deliverance; and Passing the Word: Poets and Their Mentors. His numerous chapbooks include White Boys from Hell, C & R Press, 2018, and Salt Mother, Animal Dad, which was chosen by C.K. Williams for the New York City Center for Book Arts Poetry Competition in 2005. Over the years Skinner’s poems have appeared in most of the country’s premier literary magazines, including The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Nation, The American Poetry Review, Poetry, FENCE, Bomb, DoubleTake, and The Georgia, Iowa, and Paris Reviews. Also a playwright, Skinner’s play Down Range had a successful runs in New York City, Chicago, and Harrisburg PA. His play Dream On had its premier production in February of 2007, by the Cardboard Box Collaborative Theatre in Philadelphia. Other of Skinner’s plays have been finalists in the Eugene O’Neill Theater Conference competition, and winners in various play contests. Skinner’s writing has gathered grants, fellowships, and awards from such sources as the National Endowment for the Arts (1986, & 2006), the Ingram Merrill Foundation, the Howard Foundation, and the state arts agencies of Connecticut, Delaware, and Kentucky. He has been awarded residencies at Yaddo, McDowell, Vermont Studios, and the Fine Arts Center in Provincetown. His work has been featured numerous times on National Public Radio. Skinner served as Poet-in-Residence at the James Merrill House in Stonington, Connecticut, at the Frost House in Franconia, New Hampshire, and for the Arts Festival in Kildare County, Ireland. He is President of the Board of Directors, and Editorial Consultant, for Sarabande Books, a literary publishing house he cofounded with his wife, poet Sarah Gorham. He teaches creative writing and English at The University of Louisville. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.28.166.178 (talk) 13:53, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
 * Hello, Jeffrey Skinner.I see you edited at the teahosue using the account . At least I presume that this is the same person editing here.
 * I see that you want this article updated and accurate, and so do we. But Wikipedia articles need to be verifiable which generally means that [they must cite some reliable; sources as a basis for their content. Could you please:
 * Break up the issues where an update is needed into several specific items where the article is now out of date, in each case indicating the specific changes need; and,
 * for each such change, supply one or more reliable sources that support it? If the sources are online that will make things easier and faster, but that is not required. DES (talk)DESiegel Contribs 22:05, 6 July 2020 (UTC)