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==Works==
==Works==
* [http://bostonreview.net/BR24.1/levine.html ''Counting the Forests'', Boston Review]
* [http://bostonreview.net/BR24.1/levine.html ''Counting the Forests'', Boston Review]
* [http://www.cstone.net/~poems/willolev.htm ''Willow'', Poetry Daily]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090707142527/http://www.cstone.net/~poems/willolev.htm ''Willow'', Poetry Daily]


===Books===
===Books===
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* [http://nonfiction.gmu.edu/Visiting%20Writers/MLinterview.html ''Interview with Mark Levine'', J. Michael Martinez, GMU Non fiction Writing Program]
* [http://nonfiction.gmu.edu/Visiting%20Writers/MLinterview.html ''Interview with Mark Levine'', J. Michael Martinez, GMU Non fiction Writing Program]
* [http://poems.com/special_features/prose/essay_levine.php ''Interview with Mark Levine'', Srikanth Reddy, jubilat, number thirteen]
* [http://poems.com/special_features/prose/essay_levine.php ''Interview with Mark Levine'', Srikanth Reddy, jubilat, number thirteen]
* [http://itdp.providence.edu/Faculty/Stumpf/p_Johnson.htm ''Contemporary Poetry: a web symposium'', Spring 2006, Providence College, Stumpf]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110720030520/http://itdp.providence.edu/Faculty/Stumpf/p_Johnson.htm ''Contemporary Poetry: a web symposium'', Spring 2006, Providence College, Stumpf]


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{{Authority control}}

Revision as of 10:56, 3 June 2017

Mark Levine (born 1965, New York) is an American poet and non-fiction writer.

He grew up in Toronto, attended Brown University, and the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

He taught at the University of Montana, and at the University of Iowa. His books of poetry include Capital, Debt, Enola Gay, The Wilds, and Travels with Marco. His book of non-fiction is titled F5. "Debt" was a selection in the National Poetry Series, and he has been the recipient of a Whiting Award and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). He has also written journalism for The New Yorker, the New York Times Magazine and numerous other publications.

Works

Books

Ploughshares [dead link]

Reviews

Publisher's Weekly (April 2000):

The book as a whole is a kind of triumph, one which perhaps does for poetry what David Foster Wallace has done for prose fiction.[1]

Salon:

There is a gravity to Mark Levine's second book, "Enola Gay," the first of three volumes in a promising new poetry series from the University of California Press. The poems in it bear a sense of having struggled up from beneath great pressure to reach the page.[2]

References