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Exuberant, generous, and expansive, the poems of Barbara Ras are
lyrical snapshots of the small daily joys and sorrows that make up a
life. Acutely observed, precisely rendered, and deeply felt, her poems
capture life’s complexities with affection and energy. Booklist praises
her “penetrating imagination, which turns even the simplest things
iridescent with myriad shades of meaning . . . Wherever she places her
poetic persona, she navigates life with her senses on full alert.”
In 1997, Ras’s first book, Bite Every Sorrow, received the Walt
Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets. In the award citation, judge
C.K. Williams wrote of her work, “Ras structures poems with a zaniness
and an unpredictable cunning, and her verbal expertise and lucidity are as bright
and surprising as her knowledge of the world is profound.” Deborah Diggs
notes her “terrific range” in poems that are “by turn visionary,
imaginative, strangely pure, at their bedrock genuine.” Ras’s evocative
poems are rich hymns offered in praise of the everyday.
Named the 1999 Georgia Poet of the Year for Bite Every Sorrow, Ras’ work
has appeared in many magazines and anthologies, including Boulevard, Massachusetts
Review, Prairie Schooner, and American Scholar. She has also received
honors from the National Writers Union, Spoon River Poetry Review, and
the San Jose Poetry Center, among others. Her second collection is due out from
Penguin in 2006. An award-winning editor who has worked at North Point Press,
Sierra Club Books, and the University of Georgia Press, Ras lives in San Antonio,
Texas, where she directs the Trinity University Press.
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