We are pleased to report that the Poetry Foundation announced today that Ange Mlinko, a poet and frequent contributor to the literary pages of The Nation, is the recipient of the Randall Jarrell Award in Poetry Criticism. The foundation praised Mlinko for criticism that "is eclectic and astringent yet always lucid and generous. We are pleased to recognize a young critic whose distinctive sharp wit and formidable power have helped revitalize the art of writing about poetry." We couldn't agree more.
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Laurels for Ange Mlinko
John Palattella: Poet and Nation contributor Ange Mlinko has won the Randall Jarrell Award in Poetry Criticism for work that is "eclectic and astringent yet always lucid and generous."
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Bad Paper
John Palattella: Does the author of They Knew They Were Right really think he has done nothing wrong?
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Hello Cruel World
John Palattella: The narrative journalism of David Samuels finds conversation, color and conflict in the vortex of American life.
Mlinko was born in Philadelphia and educated at St. John's College and Brown University. She is the author of two volumes of poetry, Matinees (1999) and Starred Wire (2005), which was a National Poetry Series winner in 2004 and a finalist for the James Laughlin Award the following year. Congratulations, Ange.
Criticism by Ange Mlinko:
Helen Adam: A Nurse of Enchantment
A Nameless Vocation: On Fanny Howe
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