- Allen Hoey
Allen Hoey (born
October 21 1952 inKingston, New York ) is an Americanpoet ,novelist , andliterary critic .Life
Allen Hoey was born in
Kingston, New York , and raised in the mid-Hudson River Valley. He moved to northernNew York to do his undergraduate work, then relocated toSyracuse, New York to complete his graduate work atSyracuse University where he studied withHayden Carruth . He received both a Masters (1980) and a Doctor of Arts (1984) in English (Creative Writing). In 1985 he took a teaching position atIthaca College and moved toIthaca, New York in 1986. In 1990 he took a teaching position atBucks County Community College where he teaches writing, literature, and Buddhism. In 1994 he received the precepts and formalized his commitment to RinzaiZen Buddhist practice. Hoey has two sons by his first marriage, Owen (1980) and Stephen (1984). He currently lives with his wife, Debra, outside ofNew Hope, Pennsylvania . [Contemporary Authors. Gale Online, 2008. PEN (Permanent Entry Number): 0000176580]Works
Hoey has authored five full-length collections of poetry and two novels. His first collection, "A Fire in the Cold House of Being", was selected by
Galway Kinnell as winner of the 1985 Camden Poetry Award. This book was published in 1987 and was followed by "What Persists" in 1992 and two collections in 2005, "Provençal Light" and "The Precincts of Paradise". In 2006 he published a novel, "Chasing the Dragon". He has received a Pennsylvania Council of the Arts literature fellowship and has placed poetry and criticism in many prominent literary journals, including "The American Poetry Review", "The Hudson Review", "Poetry", and "The Southern Review". His poem "A Thousand Prostrations" was included in "Essential Zen", and another poem, "Essay on Snow," was included in "The Best American Spiritual Writing of 2004." Hoey's second novel, "Voices Beyond the Dead", a more politically oriented book, was released in the summer of 2007, and his fifth collection of poems, "Country Music", was published in spring 2008. [Interview with subject, October 2006]Hoey's subjects include nature, his children, love, jazz, and spirituality. Regardless of the subject, his poems come from what Hoey has described as an "erotics of loss," exploring the evanescent and fleeting quality of life. [Interview with subject, October 2006.]
Of his first collection, "A Fire in the Cold House of Being", Hayden Carruth noted: "The directness of Allen Hoey’s poems amounts at times almost to a kind of existential obduracy, the smack of a fist in the palm that means no more bravery, the job is being. Being in the world. When you put this together with Hoey’s marvelous vocabulary and his exacting rhythmic and tonal demands on our language, you get what no academic poetry can ever attain, real pertinence. Nowadays, all of us are reading for our lives, I think. These poems are what we need." Similar praise came from Robert McDowell in a review published in "The Hudson Review": "Allen Hoey’s first full-length collection...contains more compassion, diversity, and skill than the fifth book or the tenth book by most older poets. Ranging from free verse to formal structures but never straying far from an anchoring pentameter or tetrameter line, Hoey’s subtle lyricism sounds most like the speech of the straightforward, wry upstate New York and New England folks he prefers to write about…. Hoey seems to know that at the core of the storyteller’s gift is the ability to subordinate one’s ego for the sake of hearing the stories of others. Not an easy thing to do, but the memorable story in poetry always begins there."
Poet David Dooley remarked about his second collection of poems, "What Persists": "Allen Hoey's What Persists takes a leap beyond his own fine first book. Already in A Fire in the Cold House of Being Hoey demonstrated intelligence, skill with both meter and free verse, a sure sense of poetic shape, and a talent for natural description. Perhaps the two areas in which Hoey has grown the most are technical virtuosity and emotional depth. Not many poets can claim either attribute; fewer still can manage both, so that the technical skill serves as a tool for the exploration of emotion.... Poets who can adroitly handle the stanza form of Yeats' "The Wild Swans at Coole" (as in "Coole Park," the final poem in What Persists) usually please us by their finesse, not their power. What Persists offers both finesse and power. With this outstanding second book, Allen Hoey belongs on anyone's short list of the best American poets under the age of sixty."
Currently at work on a series of detective novels featuring the character Dan Flannigan and his friend Otis Beaudrieux, Hoey cites his primary influences as writers in the hard-boiled school, particularly
Raymond Chandler andJames Crumley . The novels are largely set in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, with some taking place in Central and Northern New York.2During the 1980s, Hoey worked as publisher, editor, and printer for Tamarack Editions, a small press that specialized in fine, handset limited editions. Among the works published by Tamarack were
Hayden Carruth 's "The Mythology of Dark and Light" and "Mother", as well as "Kochan" byJack Gilbert .Among his more recent influences he includes
Jim Harrison ,Kenneth Rexroth , Hayden Carruth, and Jack Gilbert.Bibliography
"Country Music" (poems, 2008) (nominated for thePulitzer Prize ) "Voices Beyond the Dead" (novel, 2007)
"Chasing the Dragon: A Novel about Jazz" (2006)
"The Precincts of Paradise" (poems, 2005)
"Provençal Light & Other Poems" (2005)
"What Persists" (poems, 1992)
"A Fire in the Cold House of Being" (poems, 1987)References
1Contemporary Authors. Gale Online, 2008. PEN (Permanent Entry Number): 0000176580
2Interview with subject, October 2006
3Interview with subject, October 2006External links
* [http://www.allenhoey.com Hoey's website]
* [http://allenhoey.blogspot.com/ Hoey's blog]
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