Discipline: Literature – poetry

Philip Booth

Discipline: Literature – poetry
Region: Castine, ME
MacDowell Fellowships: 1988
Philip Edmund Booth (1925 –2007) was an American poet and educator. He has been called "Maine's clearest poetic voice." Born in Hanover, New Hampshire he spent much of his childhood in Castine, Maine, in a house that had been in his mother’s family for generations. This biographical detail proves strikingly relevant to Booth’s poetry, which constructs the consciousness and day-to-day life of New Englanders. Moreover, the landscape of New England, particularly the coast of Maine, often occupies a place of primary importance in Booth’s poems - serving as a metaphor for the poet’s emotional or psychological state. After returning from service in World War II, Booth studied with Robert Frost as a freshman at Dartmouth College and, upon obtaining his M.A. in English from Columbia University, returned to Dartmouth to teach English. After a year at Dartmouth, Booth left his hometown to join the faculty at Wellesley College and, eventually, left New England for Syracuse University, where he was one of the founders of the graduate program in creative writing. His first book of poems, Letters from a Distant Land (1957), was the 1956 Lamont Poetry Selection of the Academy of American Poets, judged by Louise Bogan, John Holmes, Rolfe Humphries, May Sarton, and Richard Wilbur “for the discovery and encouragement of new poetic genius.” Over the course of his career, he published nine other collections of poetry, including Lifelines: Selected Poems, 1950-1999 (Viking Press, 1999), which received the 2001 Poets’ Prize, Pairs (1994), Relations: Selected Poems 1950-1985 (1986), Available Light (1976), and Weathers and Edges (1966). Booth’s honors include Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, and the Theodore Roethke Prize. In 1983 he was elected a Fellow of The Academy of American Poets.

Studios

Heyward

Philip Booth worked in the Heyward studio.

The Lodge Annex, a wing on the west side of the men’s dormitory (The Lodge), was completed in 1926. Initially intended as an apartment for a caretaker, the space was soon repurposed as a live-in studio for writers. In recognition of a major endowment gift from the DuBose and Dorothy Heyward Foundation, Lodge Annex was…

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