Anne Pitkinanne pitkin grew up in the South, Clarksville, TN, when it was still a small town. She attended Vanderbilt University when the Civil Rights Movement was getting underway. She graduated just after Bloody Sunday, the march across the Edmund Pettus Bride. Some of the poems in this collection are about growing up as a privileged white child in the segregated South.Anne moved to Bellingham, WA when she married and subsequently to Seattle, where she has lived ever since.She has two grown children and two grandchildren. Their mother, her eldest, died three years ago. Many of the poems here address that loss.Anne is a retired community college English instructor. She went back to school and became a psychotherapist, sometimes practicing while still teaching. She is retired from both now. She plays jazz piano with her friends, pandemic permitting. She currently lives with her two dogs, Riley, an oversized Pomeranian and Klaus, a mini dachshund.This is her third full length collection, preceded by YELLOW and WINTER ARGUMENTS, and a chapbook NOTES FOR CONTINUING THE PERFORMANCE. Her poems have appeared in Poetry Chicago, Prairie Schooner, Alaska Quarterly Review, One, New Orleans Review, New England Review, Rattle and many others. Read More Read Less
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