- Molly Fisk
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Molly Fisk (born Mary Elizabeth Fisk, July 16, 1955) is an American poet and radio commentator. She has been teaching writing since 1994 and running the on-line workshop Poetry Boot Camp since 2001. Her most recent book is The More Difficult Beauty.
Contents
Biography
Originally from San Francisco, Fisk earned her B.A. cum laude from Radcliffe College/ Harvard University, her M.B.A. with honors from Simmons College Graduate School of Management, and after working as a sweater designer/manufacturer (Northern Lights) and a Fortune-1000 lender (First National Bank of Chicago) began writing at the age of 35. Her previous work is Listening to Winter (Roundhouse Press/Heyday Books, 2000), Terrain (with Dan Bellm and Forrest Hamer, Hip Pocket Press, 1998), the letterpress chapbook Salt Water Poems (Jungle Garden Press, 1994) and two CDs of radio commentary: Blow-Drying a Chicken, and Using Your Turn Signal Promotes World Peace.
Fisk has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, and the Marin Arts Council. Her prizes include the Dogwood Prize, the Robinson Jeffers Tor House Prize in Poetry,[2] the National Writer's Union Prize, and a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. She serves as Poet Laureate of radio station KVMR-FM, Nevada City and has appeared at TEDxSanFrancisco[3] and TEDxGrassValley.
Fisk has taught Writing to Heal, a technique that boosts the immune system, to cancer patients at Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital since 2000 and cardiac patients since 2011. She taught creative writing at U.C. Davis Extension from 1997-2003, and edited The Healing Woman, a newsletter for childhood sexual abuse survivors, from 1997 to 2000. She taught with California Poets in the Schools from 1993-2006, editing three of their statewide anthologies.[4]
Fisk is the niece by marriage of the American novelist John Updike John Updike. Her mother Antoinette Pennington Fisk (1932-2000) was the sister of Updike's first wife, Mary Pennington Updike Weatherall. She is the daughter of Irving Lester Fisk, II and the granddaughter of ornithologist Erma Johnson Fisk, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce (1957-1961) Bradley Fisk, Unitarian minister Leslie Talbot Pennington[5] and Elizabeth Daniels Pennington.
Awards and honors
2010, Corporation for Public Broadcasting Grant, KVMR-FM 2007, Dogwood Prize (for “Washington Square — New York, 1941”) 2005, Robinson Jeffers Tor House Prize (for “Little Songs for Antoinette”) 1999, Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts 1997, Artists Fellowship in Poetry from the California Arts Council 1996, Billee Murray Denny Prize (for “The Dry Tortugas”) 1995, Individual Artists Grant in Poetry from the Marin Arts Council 1992, National Writers Union, Santa Cruz/Monterey Local 7 Prize (for “Veterans”)
Works
- Poetry
The More Difficult Beauty (Hip Pocket Press, 2010) Listening to Winter, #4 in the California Poetry Series (Roundhouse/Heyday Press, 2000) Terrain, a collaborative chapbook with Dan Bellm and Forrest Hamer (Hip Pocket Press,1998) Salt Water Poems (Jungle Garden Press, 1994) Surrender (audio-tape, 1994)
- Commentary
Blow-Drying a Chicken (CD-KVMR, 2008) Using Your Turn Signal Promotes World Peace (CD-KVMR, 2005)
- Editor
2007, Open to All, Nevada County Library, with Steve Sanfield and Steve Fjeldsted[6] 2001, California Poets in the Schools Statewide Anthology: Heart Flip 2000, California Poets in the Schools Statewide Anthology: 100 Parades 1997, California Poets in the Schools Statewide Anthology: Belonging to California
- IN OTHER MEDIA
Fisk appeared in the award-winning PBS documentary The Loss of Nameless Things in 2005.[7]
References
[1] http://www.mollyfisk.com/bookscds [2] http://www.torhouse.org/prize2005.htm [3] http://tedxsf.org/event-the-edge-of-what-we-know/ [4] http://cpits.org/anth/anth.htm [5] http://www25.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/lesliepennington.html [6] http://mynevadacounty.com/opentoall/index.cfm [7] http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/lossofnamelessthings/index.html
External links
Categories:- 1955 births
- Living people
- People from San Francisco, California
- American poets
- American women writers
- Writers from California
- Harvard University alumni
- Radcliffe College people
- Simmons College Graduate School of Management alumni
- National Endowment for the Arts fellows
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