Philip Baruth

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Philip Baruth
Member of the Vermont Senate
from the Chittenden district
Assumed office
January 2011
Personal details
Born (1962-02-10) February 10, 1962 (age 62)
State of New York, US
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Annika Ljung-Baruth
Residence Burlington, Vermont, US
Alma mater Brown University,
University of California, Irvine
Profession Professor of English

Philip ("Phil") E. Baruth (born February 10, 1962) is an American politician, creative writer, professor and former radio commentator from Vermont. Baruth is the Democratic Party Majority Leader of the Vermont Senate. He represents Chittenden County.[1]

Education and Teaching Career

Baruth earned a B.A. in English from Brown University in 1984 and a Ph.D. from the University of California, Irvine in 1993. He is Professor of English at the University of Vermont, where he has served on the faculty since 1993. His teaching is primarily in the areas of creative writing and eighteenth-century British literature.[2] He is married to Annika Ljung-Baruth, a professor of Women's Studies at UVM.[3]

Political career

First elected to the Vermont Senate in 2010, Baruth was re-elected in 2012 and in 2014. He was elected Majority Leader of the Vermont Senate in 2013. He has served on the Agriculture, Economic Development, and Education Committees.[4]

Baruth began his public service career as a member of the Burlington Board of School Commissioners. First elected in 2003, he served two non-consecutive two-year terms in Ward 4.[5]

In the fall of 2005, Baruth launched a political blog, “The Vermont Daily Briefing.” The blog was voted “Best Vermont Blog of 2006” for its first year of political coverage in the Seven Days "Best of Vermont" poll. It won “Best Political Blog” again in 2007, 2008, and 2010. The blog included daily political posts, in-depth interviews, humor, and satire. The blog continued until 2012.

Baruth's career in the State Senate is most noted for his advocacy of gun control. He first proposed an assault weapons ban in 2013 as Majority Leader[6] and later supported a comprehensive background check bill in 2015.[7][8]

Writing

Philip Baruth is the author of four novels and more than a dozen published short stories, as well as screenplays, radio commentaries, and works of scholarship. His most recent novel, The Brothers Boswell, was included on the Washington Post list of "Best Books of 2009." It was also an Indie Next List Notable Book. His novel The X President was a New York Times Notable Book of 2003. It is a time-travel narrative focused on the presidency of Bill Clinton (although the novel refers to the character always as BC). In 1994 Baruth won the Black Warrior Review Annual Fiction Prize for his short story "Peaheart." Other stories have appeared in New England Review, Denver Quarterly, Carolina Quarterly, and TriQuarterly.

For a number of summers Baruth has led intensive writing workshops in his role as Visiting Writer at the Breadloaf New England Young Writers’ Conference (1995-1997, 2000-2001, 2005–2006, 2010). He has also led workshops as a Visiting Writer at the Champlain College Vermont Young Writers’ Conference since 2001.

Radio and Television Work

From 1998 to 2009, Philip Baruth was a regular commentator for Vermont Public Radio. His series, “Notes from the New Vermont,” focused on both national and Vermont issues. He won the 2009 Public Radio News Directors Award: First Place for “Birth Rate Blues,” a satirical take on Vermont’s low fertility statistics, in the nationwide Public Radio Commentary category. He also shared the 2009 Edward R. Murrow Award in the Overall Excellence category, for “Birth Rate Blues.” In the 2003 Vermont Associated Press Awards, Baruth shared First Place in Radio and Television Commentary as part of Vermont Public Radio’s “Great Thoughts” Series, celebrating Vermont ideas; and Third Place for “Howard Dean — Babe, If I May,” a political satire on Dean’s Presidential campaign. In 2002 he won Second Place in the nationwide Public Radio Commentary category of the Public Radio News Directors Awards for “Lonesome Jim,” a satire on Jim Jeffords’ April 2001 defection from the Republican Party. In the same year, he shared First Place in Radio and Television Commentary in the Vermont Associated Press Broadcast Awards as part of Vermont Public Radio’s coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and Second Place for “Lonesome Jim.”

Baruth's other radio work has included host and scriptwriter for Camel’s Hump Radio (2000-2003), a half-hour radio program produced by Vermont Public Radio and featuring interviews and narrated segments from classic and award-winning adventure stories. From 2006 to 2012 he provided weekly commentary on national and state politics for Air America (in Brattleboro)/WKVT-FM “Live & Local.”

Several of his radio commentaries appear in the book he edited with Joe Citro, Vermont Air: The Best of the Vermont Public Radio Commentary Series (2002). He wrote the Introduction to And Now, Michiana Chronicles (South Bend IN: Wolfson Press, 2008), a collection of selected commentaries aired by WVPE (88.1 FM) in the Michigan/Indiana region.

From 2006 to 2009 Philip Baruth appeared among the regular rotating panel of journalists and publishers on “Vermont This Week,” a half-hour Sunday news show produced by Vermont Public Television. It is their signature public affairs segment analyzing the week’s top political stories statewide.

Bibliography

Novels

Story collections

Academic and non-fiction books

Anthologies

  • The Storyteller Speaks: Rare and Different Fictions of the Grateful Dead, Gary McKinney and Robert G. Weiner, eds. (Kearney Street Books 2010)
  • The WRUV Reader: An Anthology of Vermont Writers, Chris Evans, ed. (2012), pp. 2–7.

References

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External links