- Jean Garrigue
Jean Garrigue was an American poet (1914 - 1972) born in
Evansville, Indiana and wrote as an expatriate from Europe in 1953, 1957, and 1962. She eventually settled inNew England . "The Ego and the Centaur" (1947) was Garrigue’s first full-length publication. She was a professor atQueens College , andSmith College . She was awarded aGuggenheim fellowship in 1960-61, and nominated for aNational Book Award for "Country Without Maps". The critic and poetStanley Kunitz , called Garrigue "a wildly gifted poet…whose art took the road of excess that leads to the palace of wisdom." (1) Garrigue was also romantically involved withJosephine Herbst . [http://www.michenermuseum.org/bucksartists/artist.php?artist=119%E2%84%91=984](1) Upton, Lee. Jean Garrigue, A Poetics of Plentitude. London: Associated UP, 1991.
Bibliography
* "
Thirty-six Poems and a Few Songs " in Five Young American Poets (1944)
* "The Ego and the Centaur " (1947)
* "The Monument Rose " (1953)
* "A Water Walk by Villa d’Este " (1959)
* "Country Without Maps " (1964)
* "Marianne Moore " (1965)
* "The Animal Hotel " (1966)
* "New and Selected Poems " (1967)
* "Chartres & Prose Poems " (1970)
* "Studies for an actress and other poems " (1973)
* "Selected Poems " (1992)
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