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For as subjective as poetry can be, there is little ambiguity is being named a finalist for a National Book Award in poetry.
That’s what Danez Smith earned with the 2017 poetry collection Don’t Call Us Dead. Hear from Danez in today’s episode of my Writing Process Podcast.
Danez, who uses they/them/their pronouns, was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, where they were first introduced to editing. First in high school as a poetry performer, Danez was accustomed to writing by “adding words and reading them faster.” Then in college, the idea of creating for hours to find just that “little bit of language” that is worth sustaining.
This became a dominant part of the conversation I had. Here are a few takeaways that I took:
Danez was fun and bright and oh so patient with early technical challenges.
By The Writing Process podcast – Christopher Wink5
22 ratings
For as subjective as poetry can be, there is little ambiguity is being named a finalist for a National Book Award in poetry.
That’s what Danez Smith earned with the 2017 poetry collection Don’t Call Us Dead. Hear from Danez in today’s episode of my Writing Process Podcast.
Danez, who uses they/them/their pronouns, was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, where they were first introduced to editing. First in high school as a poetry performer, Danez was accustomed to writing by “adding words and reading them faster.” Then in college, the idea of creating for hours to find just that “little bit of language” that is worth sustaining.
This became a dominant part of the conversation I had. Here are a few takeaways that I took:
Danez was fun and bright and oh so patient with early technical challenges.