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An Evening with Dana Gioia — Join us January 21st at 8 PM

Poetry Night via ZOOM! Join us at 8 PM on Thursday, January 21st, 2021.

Dear Friends of Poetry,

After watching Amanda Gorman’s amazing inaugural poem performance yesterday, many Americans have become enthused with poetry. I hope you can join us tonight for a performance and conversation that can help to sustain your own interest in the arts.

On Thursday, January 21st, at 8 PM Poetry Night via Zoom will feature a reading and conversation with former California Poet Laureate, Dana Gioia. To attend and participate, visit https://ucdavisdss.zoom.us/my/andyojones at 8 PM, or a few minutes before if you wish to chat with the host and the other attendees.

This event will feature a reading by Dana Gioia, a conversation about his new book, Studying with Miss Bishop: Memoirs from a Young Writer’s Life, and some time to ask Dana Gioia some questions. Your host will be Dr. Andy Jones, the poet laureate emeritus of Davis, California. Dana and Dr. Andy have been friends for 25 years.  

Dana Gioia

Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed poet and writer. Former California Poet laureate and Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, Gioia was born in Los Angeles of Italian and Mexican descent. The first person in his family to attend college, Gioia earned a B.A. and M.B.A. from Stanford and an M.A. from Harvard in Comparative Literature. For fifteen years he worked as a businessman before quitting at forty-one to become a full-time writer.

Gioia has published five full-length collections of poetry, most recently 99 Poems: New & Selected (2016), which won the Poets’ Prize as the best new book of the year. His third collection, Interrogations at Noon (2001), was awarded the American Book Award. Gioia is best known as a central figure in the revival of rhyme, meter, and narrative in contemporary poetry. Critic William Oxley has called Gioia “probably the most exquisite poet writing in English today.”  

An influential critic, Gioia has published four books of essays. His controversial volume, Can Poetry Matter? (1992), was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award. The book is credited with helping to revive the role of poetry in American public culture. His essays and memoirs have appeared in The New Yorker, Atlantic, Washington PostNew York Times, Hudson Review, and BBC Radio.

In his most recent collection of essays, Studying with Miss Bishop, Dana Gioia tells about six people who helped him become a writer and understand what it meant to dedicate his life to literature. 

Gioia has been an important advocate for the arts and arts education. From 2003 to 2009 Gioia served as the Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts where he helped create and launch the largest programs in the agency’s history, including Poetry Out Loud, The Big Read, and Shakespeare in American Communities.

Gioia also served as the California State Poet Laureate from 2015 to 2019. During his tenure, he became the first laureate to visit all 58 counties of California. His statewide tour became the subject of a BBC Radio documentary.

In addition to the American Book Award and Poets’ Prize, Gioia has won many awards, including the Laetare Medal from Notre Dame, Presidential Citizen’s Medal, Aiken Taylor Award in Modern Poetry, and Walt Whitman Champion of Literacy prize. He has been awarded ten honorary doctorates.

The Poetry Night Reading Series, taking place on the first and third Thursdays of the month, is generously supported by the people and poets of the Sacramento Valley. Please add your name to the Poetry in Davis mailing list at https://www.poetryindavis.com

Please join us on Thursday, January 21st, at 8 PM via ZOOM!

Dr. Andy 

Find the Facebook Event Page for an Evening with Dana Gioia Here: https://www.facebook.com/events/1373317273014249

“Love the art. Immerse yourself in it. Read as much as possible. Memorize poems that move or delight you. Search out friendships with other writers. Create your own community of writers. It doesn’t have to be large—two or three people will sustain you. Write or revise every day, even if only for an hour. Don’t postpone writing until some mythical moment arrives. Poetry begins in your real life or not at all. Poetry is not a career. It is a vocation, a dedication. It will transform your life, if you let it.” Dana Gioia

This is one of hundreds of examples of writing advice that will appear in the book The Determined Writer: Quotable Advice from Notable Authors, edited and introduced by Dr. Andy Jones, and due to be published in late 2021.