Starbuck had five children: Margaret, Stephen, John, Anthony, and Joshua.[8] His papers are held at the University of Alabama library.[9]
Starbuck's work is marked by clever rhymes, witty asides, and the fusing of Romantic themes with cynicism about modern life. For example, his book Bone Thoughts was published with half its pages blank, and he called his style of formalism "SLABS" (Standard Length And Breadth Sonnets). He was not widely appreciated in the mainstream culture during his lifetime, but two collections of his poems published in the early 2000s, The Works: Poems Selected from Five Decades and Visible Ink, helped win him a wider audience. Julie Larios writes of Starbuck, "Often wrongly pigeonholed as a light verse poet, he was a technical master and superb ironist."[10]
Starbuck's best-known poems include "Tuolumne," "On an Urban Battlefield," and "Sonnet With a Different Letter At the End of Every Line."
The Works: Poems Selected from Five Decades, University of Alabama Press, 2003
Translations from the English, University of Alabama Press, 2003
Visible Ink, University of Alabama Press, 2002
Space Saver Sonnets, Bits Press, 1986
Richard the Third in a Fourth of a Second, Bits Press, 1986
The Argot Merchant Disaster: Poems New and Selected, Little, Brown & Co., 1982
Talkin' B.A. Blues, Pym-Randall Press, 1980
Desperate Measures, D. R. Godine, August 1978
Elegy in a Country Churchyard, Pym-Randall Press, September 1975
White Paper, Little, Brown & Co., 1966
Bone Thoughts, Yale University Press, 1960
Anthologies
Lorrie Goldensohn, ed. (2006). "Of Late". American War Poetry: An Anthology. Columbia University Press. ISBN978-0-231-13310-4.
References
^Jillian Frakes 2012 OR POL Champion. "Poetry Out Loud". Poetry Out Loud. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2012-11-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)