Mark Turpin (poet)
Mark Turpin is an American poet.
Life
He is the son of a Presbyterian minister. He has spent 25 years working construction and building houses. He graduated from Boston University at age 47, with a master's degree.
He lives and works in Berkeley, California.
His work has appeared in The Paris Review,[1] The Threepenny Review,[2] Ploughshares,[3] and Slate.
Awards
- 1997 Whiting Award
- 2004 Ploughshares John C. Zacharis First Book Award for Hammer
Works
- "Jobsite Wind", Slate
- "Waiting for Lumber", Slate, July 16, 2002
- "The Furrow", Tarpaulin Sky, Winter 2002
- "The Box"; "Pickwork"; "Shithouse"; "In Winter"; "Will Turpin b. 1987"; "Photograph From Antietam", Boston Review, 19.1
- "The Box", Online News Hour, September 2, 2002
- Hammer. Sarabande Books. 2003. ISBN 978-1-889330-86-0.
- Susan Aizenberg, Mark Turpin, Suzanne Qualls (1997). Take three 2. Graywolf Press. ISBN 978-1-55597-254-7.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Ploughshares [dead link]
- "Before Groundbreak". Ploughshares. Winter 1992–1993. Archived from the original on November 4, 2007.
- "Photograph From Antietam". Ploughshares. Winter 1992–1993. Archived from the original on November 4, 2007.
Reviews
"Dear god / one needs to be an expert now," according to one in "A Carpenter's Body" from Mark Turpin's debut collection, Hammer. That explicit need—for intuitive expertise, for intimate knowledge, for skill which ennobles human activity—is central to the author's poetics, and appears to be his answer to Stevens' charge that the modern poem find what will suffice; this is an engaging, lucid and textured book, and one whose novelty (Turpin himself is a carpenter by trade) is far outweighed by its ambition.[4]
References
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-07-08. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ http://www.threepennyreview.com/tocs/88_w02.html
- ^ http://www.pshares.org/authors/author-detail.cfm?authorID=1558
- ^ "Hammer Mark Turpin reviewed by John Casteen", Electronic Poetry Review, September 2003[permanent dead link]