|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Bankhead Visiting Writers Series
at The University of Alabama will feature poet Eliot Weinberger
reading from his latest work in Room 200 of the Bryant Conference
Center at 7:30 p.m. on April 7.
According to Multicultural Review, Weinberger “has
read, read about, or seen firsthand practically everything on planet
earth.” From this comes the one criterion he said his essays
must always fulfill. “I never make things up,” said
Weinberger, referring to the verifiability of all the details that
make up his work.
His books of literary essays include “Works on Paper,” “Outside
Stories,” “Written Reaction,” and “Karmic
Traces.” His articles are collected in “9/12” and
the forthcoming “What Happened Here: Bush Chronicles.” His
work regularly appears in translation, often before publication
in the United States, and has been published in over 20 languages.
Since 1970 Weinberger has translated numerous authors from Spanish,
including Octavio Paz, Jorge Luis Borges, and Vincente Huidobro
and Chinese poet, Bei Dao. For the support he has given to Hispanic
literature in the United States, Weinberger was the first to receive
the PEN/Kolovakos Award in 1992. In 2000, he was the first U.S.
writer to be honored with the “Order of the Aztec Eagle” from
the Mexican government. He is prominently featured in the “Visitor’s
Key to Iceland.”
Weinberger was born in 1949 in New York City, where he still
lives.
The Bankhead Visiting Writers Series is made possible by an endowment
from the Bankhead Foundation, UA’s creative writing program,
the department of English and the College of Arts and Sciences.
For more information, visit www.bama.ua.edu/~writing or
contact the creative writing program at 205/348-0766.
|