| Billy
Collins is an American phenomenon. No poet since Robert Frost
has managed to combine high critical acclaim with such broad
popular appeal. His work has appeared in a variety of periodicals
including The New Yorker, The Paris Review, and
The American Scholar, he is a Guggenheim fellow and a
New York Public Library “Literary Lion.” His last
three collections of poems have broken sales records for poetry.
His readings are usually standing room only, and his audience
– enhanced tremendously by his appearances on National
Public Radio – includes people of all backgrounds and
age groups. The poems themselves best explain this phenomenon.
The typical Collins poem opens on a clear and hospitable note
but soon takes an unexpected turn; poems that begin in irony
may end in a moment of lyric surprise. No wonder Collins sees
his poetry as “a form of travel writing” and considers
humor “a door into the serious.” It is a door that
many thousands of readers have opened with amazement and delight.
Billy Collins has published
eight collections of poetry, including Questions
About Angels, The
Art of Drowning, Picnic,
Lightning, Taking
Off Emily Dickinson’s Clothes, Sailing
Alone Around the Room: New & Selected Poems, Nine
Horses, and The
Trouble With Poetry and Other Poems. A collection of his
haiku, titled She
Was Just Seventeen, was published by Modern Haiku Press
in fall 2006. He also edited two anthologies of contemporary
poetry: Poetry
180: A Turning Back to Poetry and
180 More: Extraordinary Poems for Every Day, and
was the guest editor of The
Best American Poetry 2006. His next poetry collection is
titled Ballistics
and will be published in 2008.
Included among the honors
Billy Collins has received are fellowships from the New York
Foundation for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts,
and the Guggenheim Foundation. He has also been awarded the
Oscar Blumenthal Prize, the Bess Hokin Prize, the Frederick
Bock Prize, and the Levinson Prize — all awarded by Poetry
magazine. In October 2004, Collins was selected as the inaugural
recipient of the Poetry Foundation’s Mark Twain Award
for humorous poetry.
In June 2001, Billy Collins was appointed United States Poet
Laureate 2001-2003. In January 2004, he was named New York State
Poet Laureate 2004-06. Billy Collins is a professor of English
at Lehman College of the City University of New York.
•••
“Billy Collins
writes lovely poems...Limpid, gently and consistently startling,
more serious than they seem, they describe all the worlds that
are and were and some others besides.”
John Updike
“Luring his readers
into the poem with humor, Mr. Collins leads them unwittingly
into deeper, more serious places, a kind of journey from the
familiar to quirky to unexpected territory, sometimes tender,
often profound.”
The New York Times |