Mark Wunderlich
Mark Wunderlich (/ˈwʌndərlɪk/ WUN-dər-lik;[1] born 1968), is an American poet. He was born in Winona, Minnesota, and grew up in a rural setting near the town of Fountain City, Wisconsin. He attended Concordia College's Institute for German Studies before transferring to the University of Wisconsin, where he studied English and German literature. After moving to New York City he attended Columbia University, where he received an MFA (Master of Fine Arts) degree. Wunderlich has published four collections of poetry, most recently God of Nothingness (Graywolf Press, 2021). He worked on his first book, The Anchorage, (University of Massachusetts Press, 1999) as his MFA thesis at Columbia University and finished it while living in Provincetown, Massachusetts.[2] There he was friends with the poet Stanley Kunitz (1905–2006).[3] A second book of poems, Voluntary Servitude, was published by Graywolf Press in 2004. LifeWunderlich has published individual poems, essays, reviews and interviews in the Paris Review, Yale Review, Slate, Fence,[4] Boston Review, Chicago Review, and AGNI.[5] Wunderlich has taught at Stanford, San Francisco State University, Ohio University, Barnard College, and Columbia University. Since 2004, he has been a member of the literature faculty at Bennington College in Vermont,[4] where he is also Director of the Graduate Writing Seminars.[6] He lives in New York's Hudson River Valley near the town of Catskill. BibliographyPoetry
Honors and awards
ReviewsPoetry magazine wrote,
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External links
Poems in Periodicals
Criticism
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