Pitt Poetry Series
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Series Editors: Terrance Hayes, New York University; Nancy Krygowski, Carnegie Mellon University; Jeffrey McDaniel, Sarah Lawrence College

Since its inception in 1967, the Pitt Poetry Series has been a vehicle for America’s finest contemporary poets. The series list includes Inaugural Poet Richard Blanco, Poet Laureate Billy Collins, Toi Derricotte, Denise Duhamel, Lynn Emanuel, Ross Gay, Etheridge Knight, Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winner Ted Kooser, Larry Levis, Sharon Olds, Alicia Suskin Ostriker, Afaa Michael Weaver, David Wojahn, Dean Young, and many others. Throughout its history, the Pitt Poetry Series has provided a voice for the diversity that is American poetry, representing poets from many backgrounds without allegiance to any one school or style.

Children Of Paradise Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822955023
Pub Date: 19 Apr 1994
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
A book of poems about “children” in the widest sense--from children of the Nazi-torn Warsaw ghettos to the American poor, as well as poems of domesticity, love, and daily life.
New World, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9780822955160
Pub Date: 08 Feb 1994
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
“A great poem of this end of our century. It is masterfully structured in recurring themes and voices which build on and off each other. Gardinier is above all a poet whose language and images are completely integrated so that in Keats's words, every rift is laden with ore.
Flying Garcias, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822954996
Pub Date: 15 Jun 1993
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
\u201cI am reminded of the Argentinean writers Julio Cort\u00e1zar and Jorge Luis Borges, but with sunglasses and in California. The Flying Garcias is a sure voice and a fine book.\u201d—Alberto R\u00edos
Red Line, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954828
Pub Date: 19 Nov 1992
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Winner of the 1991 Associated Writing Programs' Award Series in Poetry
Sleeping Preacher Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954804
Pub Date: 19 Nov 1992
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Winner of the 1991 Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize.The poems in this book deal with life in a Pennsylvania Mennonite community and the tensions and conflicts that exist for the speaker as she tries to be true to two worlds, the other being New York City.
Space Filled with Moving, A Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954675
Pub Date: 01 Jun 1992
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Previous Praise for Maggie Anderson's Cold Comfort "We are struck by the generosity of a voice that manages to bridge the gap between a personal and a world view, a balance that reveals a narrator who is of the world yet not overwhelmed by it." —Prairie Schooner
South America Mi Hija Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 312
ISBN: 9780822954507
Pub Date: 16 Apr 1992
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
When Shawn Doubiago graduated from high school, she and her mother Sharon, embarked on a journey through Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. In Cuzco, Peru, standing before an alter where the Incas had sacrifced their female virgins, the daughter asked, \u201cAre there any good men?\u201d South American Mi Hija is Sharon Doubiago\u2019s reply.
Liquid Paper Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 120
ISBN: 9780822954552
Pub Date: 17 Dec 1991
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Peter Meinke was a master of traditional poetic forms long before the current interest in “the new formalism.” His work is, in turn, witty, comic, sane, deeply moving, and always readable. Liquid Paper collects the best of his previously published poems from the late 1960s on with a generous selection of new work.
Widening Spell of the Leaves, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822954545
Pub Date: 17 Sep 1991
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
The result is a book of discursive meditations that will amply reward the reader. Part travelogue, part pilgrimage in which the shrines remain hidden until they are recognized later, Larry Levis’s startling and complex fifth book of poems is about the enslavement to desire for personal freedom, and the awareness of its price.
The Makings of Happiness Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954484
Pub Date: 15 Jun 1991
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Wallace’s poems cover the range of human experience: music, religion, sex, art, childhood, adolescence, nuclear war, illness, and death. But it’s in his wit and good humor, against undercurrents of sorrow and grief that best characterize his poetry: part Emily Dickinson, and part Harpo Marx; part Woody Allen, and part Robert Frost.
Refuge Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822954415
Pub Date: 20 Nov 1990
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Winner of the 1989 Associated Writing Programs' Award Series in Poetry“Waring's poems forcibly avoid the workshop warp. From the opening, her language lashes. .
Giacometti's Dog Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954286
Pub Date: 10 Apr 1990
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Celebratory or eligiac, these poems record the author’s “two-headed journey” to root herself - geographically and emotionally - in the world. Becker’s poems are from remote and familiar outposts: the watery evanescence of Venice contrasts with the desert of the American Southwest; we lean with her over the rim of a canyon or stand back to study a Giacometti sculpture. From such settings arise poems on the death of a sibling, the consoling power of painting and sculpture; others celebrate the erotic and the capacity of the female body for pleasure and pain.
Captivity Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822954224
Pub Date: 19 Dec 1989
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
What are the forces that cause us to strike out and harm each other? Captivity explores the way in which the individual is held hostage by society; how the forces of racism, sexism, and classism frequently express themselves as violence within the family. The book also explores a deeper captivity, like the Jews in Egypt yearning for the Promised Land, the soul trapped in exile from God.
Green Age Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 72
ISBN: 9780822954217
Pub Date: 25 Aug 1989
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Alicia Suskin Ostriker is that rare combination, a writer equally admired as poet and critic. The variety of subjects in Green Age is characteristic of her writing: from the opening poem, "Fifty," funny, courageous, and defiant, to a set of birthday poems for a grown daughter; from emulations of the Persian mystic Rumi, to the provactive "Meditation in Seven Days," whose central assumption is that we may find in the Bible traces of a Canaanite goddess whose worship was forbidden with the advent of patriarchal monotheism. But if her subjects may seem formidable, her poems are not.
Six O'Clock Mine Report Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9780822954156
Pub Date: 15 Apr 1989
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
The speaker in Irene McKinney’s poems is most often alone, sitting at the side of a stream, or standing at her own chosen gravesite in the Appalachian mountains, and the meditations spoken out of this essential solitude are powerfully clear, witty, and wide-ranging in content and tone. The center sequence of poems in the Emily Dickinson persona explores and magnifies that great and enigmatic figure. The poems are firmly grounded in concern for the ways in which the elemental powers are at work in the earth and in us: on the surface of our lives, and deeper in the underworld of the coalmines.
Niobe Poems, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954118
Pub Date: 04 Nov 1988
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Description:
Kate Daniels’s central myth is that of Niobe, the mother in Greek mythology whose children were killed by the gods because of her great pride in them. She taps the lasting power of the ancient story in poems about personal loss and political insanity. Though the subjects are frequently grim, the final effect of the book is not, since Daniels’s central theme is endurance, the discovery of what we need to survive.