Alice Friman is author of eight collections of poetry, most recently The Book of the Rotten Daughter and Zoo, winner of the Ezra Pound Poetry Award from Truman State University and the Sheila Margaret Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club. Her poems appear in Poetry, The Georgia Review, Boulevard, The Southern Review, The Gettysburg Review, and Shenandoah, which awarded Friman the 2002 James Boatwright III Prize for Poetry. She's received fellowships from the Indiana Arts Commission and the Arts Council of Indianapolis and has been awarded residencies at many colonies including MacDowell and Yaddo. She was named Writer in Residence at Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest in 2003-04. Friman is the winner of three prizes from Poetry Society of America and in 2001-02 was named to the Georgia Poetry Circuit. Professor Emerita at the University of Indianapolis, she now lives in Milledgeville, GA where she is Poet-in-Residence at Georgia College & State University.Friman read in Cornell's Goldwin Smith Hall on April 12, 2007. This interview took place earlier the same day.
2 comments:
what a incredible experience you lived, know someone like Alice, is like when I meet Generic Viagra, I can't describe my jealousy feelings, the good part about this, is that you share you experience.
Excellent interview but something I didn't understand is that some people say that she told something about xl pharmacy, I'd like to know what it was.
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