- Source: Elisa Gabbert
Elisa Gabbert (born 1979) is an American writer, poet and essayist. She is the author of numerous books and is currently a New York Times poetry columnist.
Biography
Gabbert attended Rice University where she studied linguistics and cognitive science. She also earned an MFA in creative writing from Emerson College. Since March 2020, Gabbert has been The New York Times poetry columnist, succeeding David Orr.
During her career, she was based in Denver, Colorado and now lives in Providence, Rhode Island, with her husband, the writer John Cotter.
Work and publications
Currently, Gabbert is the author of six books, including two essay collections and four poetry collections.
= Essays
=As of 2021, Gabbert has published 2 collections of essays: The Word Pretty in 2018, and The Unreality of Memory in 2020.
Her debut essay collection The Word Pretty was followed by the much acclaimed collection The Unreality of Memory (2020), which engages the history of catastrophes to consider how people perceive themselves.
= Poetry
=Gabbert is the author of four poetry collections, including The French Exit (2011) and L'Heure Bleue, or the Judy Poems (2016); the latter imagines the perspective of Judy, one of the characters in Wallace Shawn’s play The Designated Mourner.
Gabbert’s book The Self Unstable (2013) is a hybrid collection of prose and poetry. In The New Yorker’s year-end review, Teju Cole named The Self Unstable one of the best books of 2013.
Gabbert’s book of poetry, Normal Distance, was published by Soft Skull Press in 2022.
References
External links
Excerpt from The Self Unstable in Boston Review, April 30, 2013
Excerpt from L'Heure Bleue, or the Judy Poems in Pank Magazine, March/April 2015
Excerpt from L'Heure Bleue, or the Judy Poems in the Harvard Review, October 29, 2015