Andrew Glaze: Difference between revisions

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Glaze then came home to [[Birmingham]] and reported from the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] for the ''Post-Herald'' for nine years that included the beginnings of the [[Civil Rights Movement]]. In [[1949]] he married [[Dorothy Elliott]], an actress and the daughter of poet [[William Young Elliott]]. He testified against a Deputy Sheriff accused of wrongdoing with respect to two black men in [[1957]]. Fearing for his life, he moved to New York City, where he became a press officer for the British Tourist Authority. He lived in Greenwich Village and fathered a son with Dorothy, but divorced her in [[1959]]. He later married dancer Adriana Keathley. He has written three unpublished novels and several plays that were produced in New York and other cities. He was also a prolific translator of poems from French, Russian and Spanish. The couple relocated to Miami for many years before moving to Birmingham in the late 2000s.
Glaze then came home to [[Birmingham]] and reported from the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] for the ''Post-Herald'' for nine years that included the beginnings of the [[Civil Rights Movement]]. In [[1949]] he married [[Dorothy Elliott]], an actress and the daughter of poet [[William Young Elliott]]. He testified against a Deputy Sheriff accused of wrongdoing with respect to two black men in [[1957]]. Fearing for his life, he moved to New York City, where he became a press officer for the British Tourist Authority. He lived in Greenwich Village and fathered a son with Dorothy, but divorced her in [[1959]]. He later married dancer Adriana Keathley. He has written three unpublished novels and several plays that were produced in New York and other cities. He was also a prolific translator of poems from French, Russian and Spanish. The couple relocated to Miami for many years before moving to Birmingham in the late 2000s.


Glaze's first book of poems, ''[[Damned Ugly Children]]'', was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in [[1966]]. He was given the Eunice Tietjens Award by ''Poetry'' magazine and his [[1981]] book ''I Am The Jefferson County Courthouse & Other Poems'' was selected as one of the best small press titles of the year by the ''Library Journal''. Another book, ''Someone Will Go On Owing: Selected Poems: 1966-1992'' was named best book of the year by the Southeastern Booksellers Association in [[1998]]. In [[2012]] Glaze was named Alabama's Poet Laureate by the [[Alabama Writers' Conclave]].  
Glaze's first book of poems, ''[[Damned Ugly Children]]'', was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in [[1966]]. He was given the Eunice Tietjens Award by ''Poetry'' magazine and his [[1981]] book ''I Am The Jefferson County Courthouse & Other Poems'' was selected as one of the best small press titles of the year by the ''Library Journal''. Another book, ''Someone Will Go On Owing: Selected Poems: 1966-1992'' was named best book of the year by the Southeastern Booksellers Association in [[1998]]. In [[2012]] Glaze was named Alabama's Poet Laureate by the [[Alabama Writers' Conclave]]. He was inducted into the inaugural class of the [[Alabama Writers Hall of Fame]] in [[2014]].


==Books==
==Books==
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[[Category:Birmingham Post-Herald]]
[[Category:Birmingham Post-Herald]]
[[Category:Poets]]
[[Category:Poets]]
[[Category:Alabama Writers Hall of Fame]]

Revision as of 17:32, 10 December 2014

Andrew Louis Glaze III (born April 21, 1920 in Nashville, Tennessee) is a poet, playwright and former Birmingham Post-Herald reporter.

Glaze was one of three children born to physician Andrew Glaze II and his wife, Mildred Ezell. The family moved to Birmingham when he was a child, and he attended Lakeview School and Ramsay High School in Birmingham. He later prepped at the Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tennessee and eventually graduated from Harvard University in 1942. He enlisted in the Air Force for World War II and was given a lieutenant's commission. He sailed for France aboard the Queen Mary and served until the war's end. Before returning to the United States, Glaze attended classes at the University of Grenoble. In 1946 he enrolled in a creative writing program at Stanford University an earned a fellowship to the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, where he befriended Robert Frost.

Glaze then came home to Birmingham and reported from the Jefferson County Courthouse for the Post-Herald for nine years that included the beginnings of the Civil Rights Movement. In 1949 he married Dorothy Elliott, an actress and the daughter of poet William Young Elliott. He testified against a Deputy Sheriff accused of wrongdoing with respect to two black men in 1957. Fearing for his life, he moved to New York City, where he became a press officer for the British Tourist Authority. He lived in Greenwich Village and fathered a son with Dorothy, but divorced her in 1959. He later married dancer Adriana Keathley. He has written three unpublished novels and several plays that were produced in New York and other cities. He was also a prolific translator of poems from French, Russian and Spanish. The couple relocated to Miami for many years before moving to Birmingham in the late 2000s.

Glaze's first book of poems, Damned Ugly Children, was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1966. He was given the Eunice Tietjens Award by Poetry magazine and his 1981 book I Am The Jefferson County Courthouse & Other Poems was selected as one of the best small press titles of the year by the Library Journal. Another book, Someone Will Go On Owing: Selected Poems: 1966-1992 was named best book of the year by the Southeastern Booksellers Association in 1998. In 2012 Glaze was named Alabama's Poet Laureate by the Alabama Writers' Conclave. He was inducted into the inaugural class of the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2014.

Books

  • Glaze, Andrew & Umaña (1964) Lines: Poems & Lithographs. Editions Heraclita
  • Glaze, Andrew (1966) Damned Ugly Children Trident Press/Simon & Schuster
  • Glaze, Andrew (1974) A Masque of Surgery: Poems and Translations. Menard Press ISBN 090340012X
  • Glaze, Andrew (1978) The Trash Dragon of Shensi Copper Beach Press
  • Glaze, Andrew (1981) I Am The Jefferson County Courthouse & Other Poems. Thunder City Press ISBN ISBN 0918644119
  • Glaze, Andrew (1991) Reality Street. St Andrews Press ISBN 0932662978
  • Glaze, Andrew (1998) Someone Will Go On Owing: Selected Poems: 1966-1992. Blackbelt Press ISBN 188132091X
  • Glaze, Andrew (2002) Remembering Thunder. NewSouth Books ISBN 1588380777
  • Glaze, Andrew (2005) Pudding House Publications. ISBN 1589983246

References

  • Doreski, William, ed. (1985) In Earth That Sings: On the Poetry of Andrew Glaze. Houston: Ford-Brown & Co. ISBN 091864416X
  • Haddin, Theodore (October 5, 2009) "Andrew Glaze". Encyclopedia of Alabama
  • "Andrew Glaze" (July 24, 2012) Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia - accessed July 24, 2012
  • Gray, Andrew (July 24, 2012) "Former reporter, Pulitzer runner-up named poet Alabama laureate." The Birmingham News

External links