William Charles "Bill" Kloefkorn (August 12, 1932 – May 19, 2011),[1][2] was a Nebraskapoet and educator based in Lincoln, Nebraska. He was the author of twelve collections of poetry, two short story collections, a collection of children's Christmas stories, and four memoirs. Kloefkorn was professor of English from 1962 [3] to his retirement in 1997 to professor emeritus of English at Nebraska Wesleyan University.
In addition to his literary honors, Kloefkorn boasted that he won first place in the 1978 Nebraska Hog-Calling Championship.[1]
An elementary school in Lincoln is named after Kloefkorn.[2]
Selected publications
Poetry
Alvin Turner As Farmer (Windflower Press, 1972) - reissued by Logan House Press in 2005
Uncertain the Final Run to Winter (Windflower Press, 1974)
Loony (Issued as: APPLE: NO. 10/11, 1975)
Not Such a Bad Place to Be (Copper Canyon Press, 1980)
Platte Valley Homestead (Platte Valley Press, 1981)
Collecting for the Wichita Beacon (Platte Valley Press, 1984); OCLC13189843
Drinking the Tin Cup Dry (White Pine Press, 1989)
Where the Visible Sun Is (Spoon River Poetry Press, 1989)
Going Out, Coming Back (White Pine Press, 1995)
Welcome to Carlos (Spoon River Poetry Press, 2000)
Loup River Psalter (Spoon River Poetry Press, 2001)
Sergeant Patrick Gass, Chief Carpenter (Spoon River Poetry Press, 2002) Verse written by Kloefkorn in the voice of Sergeant Patrick Gass, chief carpenter on the Lewis and Clark Expedition based on research into the expedition and the journal kept by Sergeant Gass himself
I Screwed A Pig and It Liked It (The Backwaters Press, 2007)