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Clifton, Lucille, 1936-2010

LC control no.n 79089567
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPS3553.L45
Personal name headingClifton, Lucille, 1936-2010
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Variant(s)Sayles, Lucille, 1936-2010
Sayles, Thelma Lucille, 1936-2010
Associated countryUnited States
Birth date1936-06-27
Death date2010-02-13
Place of birthDepew (N.Y.)
Place of deathBaltimore (Md.)
AffiliationColumbia University Coppin State College
Fredonia State Teachers College
Profession or occupationPoets Illustrators Educators Authors
Found inHer Good times ... 1969.
Next, c1987: t.p. (Lucille Clifton) about the author (b. in Depew, N.Y.; educated at State Univ. of New York at Fredonia and at Howard Univ.; teaches at Univ. of California at Santa Cruz; poetry and fiction writer)
Lucille Clifton, 2006: t.p. (Lucille Clifton) chapter 1 (b. Thelma Lucille Sayles in Depew, New York on June 27, 1936)
Buffalo news WWW site, Feb. 16, 2010 (in obituary published Feb. 13: Lucille Clifton; b. Lucille Sayles, June 27, 1936, Depew; m. Fred Clifton (d. 1984); d. Saturday morning [Feb. 13, 2010], Baltimore, aged 73; honored poet from Buffalo; former poet laureate of Maryland)
Black Women in America, Second Edition; accessed December 12 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Clifton, Lucille; poet, children's book writer / illustrator, autobiographer / memoirist, educator; born 27 June 1936 in Depew, New York, United States; attended Fredonia State Teachers College in New York; met Ishmael Reed in a writers' group, and he showed her poems to Langston Hughes, who included a few pieces in his anthology Poetry of the Negro; was the recipient of the Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Association (YM-YWHA) Poetry Center (New York City) Discovery Award (1969); won the first of her several National Endowment for the Arts grants (also 1970 and 1972); her first book of poems, Good Times(1969); was published by Random House and chosen by the New York Times as one of the ten best books of the year; was a visiting writer at Columbia University School of the Arts, a poet-in-residence at Coppin State College in Baltimore (1972-1976), poet laureate of the state of Maryland (1979-1982), and a visiting writer at George Washington University (1982-1983); was a Pulitzer Prize nominee for her poetry collection Two-Headed Woman, and won the Juniper Prize (1980); died 13 February 2010 in Baltimore, Maryland, United States)