Philip Booth (poet)


Philip Edmund Booth was an American poet and educator; he has been called "Maine's clearest poetic voice."

Life

Booth was born in 1925 in Hanover, New Hampshire. Booth served in the United States Air Force in the Second World War. He then attended Dartmouth College, where he studied with Robert Frost; he received his B.A. in 1947. He subsequently received an M.A. from Columbia University. Booth married Margaret Tillman in 1946; they had three daughters. He spent much of his time living in Castine, Maine in a house that has been handed down through his family for five generations.
Booth was an instructor and professor of English and of creative writing at Dartmouth College, Bowdoin College, Wellesley College, and at Syracuse University. Booth was one of the founders of the Creative Writing program at Syracuse. One of his students, the poet Stephen Dunn, has written of his 1969-70 experience at Syracuse that, "We had come to study with Philip Booth, Donald Justice, W.D. Snodgrass, George P. Elliott, arguably the best group of writer-teachers that existed at the time."

Poetry

Booth's poetry was published in many periodical events including The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, The American Poetry Review, Poetry, and Denver Quarterly. He published 10 poetry collections and one book about writing poetry. A much later poem, "Places without Names," has a more public concern:
A major essay regarding Booth's poetry was published by Guy Rotella in 1983.

Awards

Bess Hok in Prize. Lamont Poetry Prize for Letter from a Distant Land. Saturday Review Poetry Award. Emily Clark Balch Prize of the Virginia Quarterly Review. Theodore Roethke Prize for a poem in Poetry Northwest. Syracuse University Chancellor's Citation. Fellowships from the Academy of American Poets, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Rockefeller Foundation. Maurice English Poetry Award for Relations. Poem selected for The Best American Poetry 1999. Poets' Prize for Lifelines.

Poetry collections