Larry Levis was a native of California and
was educated at California State University at Fresno, Syracuse
University, and the University of Iowa. During his life, he published
five collections of poems, the most recent of which was The
Widening Spell of the Leaves (1991), and a posthumous collection
of poems, Elegy (1997), as well as a book of short stories, Black
Freckles (1992). In 2000, the University of Pittsburgh Press
published The Selected Levis: Poems 1972-1992; and in 2001,
the University of Michigan Press's Poets on Poetry Series issued The
Gazer Within, edited by Randy Marshall, Andrew Miller, and
John Venable. At the time of his death in 1996, Levis was professor
of English at Virginia Commonwealth University. He had taught previously
at the University of Missouri, the University of Utah, and the
University of Iowa, as well as in the Warren Wilson Creative Writing
Program. His awards include the U.S. Award of the International
Poetry Forum, a Lamont Prize, and selection for the National Poetry
Series. Levis received fellowships from the National Endowment
for the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
and an individual artist's grant from the Virginia Commission for
the Arts. In 1989, he was a senior Fulbright fellow in Yugoslavia.
His work appeared in American Poetry Review, The Southern
Review, Field, and The New Yorker, as well as
in other magazines.
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