Doug Anderson (poet)

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Doug Anderson
Born 1943
Nationality American
Genre Poetry, Nonfiction
Notable works The Moon Reflected Fire

Doug Anderson (born 1943) is an American poet, fiction writer, and memoirist.[1] His most recent book is a memoir, Keep Your Head Down: Vietnam, the Sixties, and a Journey of Self-Discovery (W.W. Norton, 2009). His honors include grants and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Massachusetts Artists Foundation, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, Poets & Writers, and the MacDowell Colony.[2] His work has appeared in Ploughshares,[3] the Connecticut Review, The Massachusetts Review, Virginia Quarterly, The Southern Review, Field,[4] and The Autumn House Anthology of American Poetry, as well as this year’s Contemporary American War Poetry. He also published a play, Short Timers, which was produced in New York in 1981.[4]

He served in Vietnam as a corpsman with a Marine infantry battalion in 1967. He graduated from the University of Arizona. He worked in the theater, as an actor. He then settled in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he began to write plays and poems in a workshop with Jack Gilbert, and Linda Gregg. Anderson taught at the University of Connecticut, Eastern Connecticut State University, the William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Its Social Consequences, Mount Wachusett Community College and at a Massachusetts state prison. He is completing a book called Loose Cantos.[3] In 2010 he began teaching in the Pacific University of Oregon MFA Program. He is currently a lecturer in the Institute of Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies at Emerson College, Boston.

Honors and awards

Published works

Full-length poetry collections

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Chapbooks

  • Cry Wolf (Azul Editions)[5]

Anthology publications

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Memoir Keep Your Head Down: Vietnam, The Sixties, and a Journey of Self-Discovery

Reviews

Joyce Peseroff writes that The Moon Reflected Fire is “not just about Vietnam but resonant with the history of warriors from the backyard to the Iliad to the Bible.

Blues for Unemployed Secret Police, was praised by Booklist for its “powerful, funny-horrific, brutal-tender poems.”

References

External links