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Seth Abramson


Announcements

8.02.08: The second edition of The Creative Writing MFA Handbook is now available for pre-order.


8.01.08: A complete bibliography is now available in the "Publications in Other Periodicals" section, below.




Biography

Seth Abramson is the author of The Suburban Ecstasies (Ghost Road Press, 2009), and a contributing author to The Creative Writing MFA Handbook (Continuum, 2008). Recent poems have appeared in Poetry, Boston Review, jubilat, and LIT, and are forthcoming in Best New Poets 2008, New American Writing, Salmagundi, Pleiades, Subtropics, and elsewhere. A student at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Seth is a former public defender and a graduate of Dartmouth and Harvard Law School.


Links

(Opens in new window.)

The Suburban Ecstasies (Author)

The Creative Writing MFA Blog (Contributor)

The New Hampshire Review (Co-Founder and Poetry Editor)

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=512268

http://www.linkedin.com/profile?viewProfile=&key=22770922&trk=tab_pro

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seth_Abramson

http://www.pw.org/speakeasy/gforum.cgi?username=umass76;


Poems/Articles/Artwork in NYQ

Please note that these links go to the issue's page not the work itself.
If the work is available to read online (Read Online) will appear and link to the work itself.

SHAKE OUR HAND (poem, p. 162, Issue 65) 

Publications Elsewhere

(Please note that these links go to an external site and may or may not link to the work itself.)

"A Brief History for Ventriloquists"Indiana ReviewFall 2002 (Vol. 24, No. 2)
"A Brief History for Ventriloquists"Legal Studies Forum2006 (Vol. 30, No. 1/2)
"A Death Beyond Means"Notre Dame ReviewSummer 2001 (No. 12)
"A Lie in Earnest"The William and Mary Review2004 (Vol. 42)

Complete List

Books in Print

The Creative Writing MFA Handbook

Continuum Publishing, 2008
240 Pages   


The Suburban Ecstasies

Ghost Road Press, 2009
100 Pages   




Printed from http://www.nyqpoets.net/poet/sethabramson on September 09, 2010 at 16:52:16 pm
"A Man and Boy Or Two Boys Or a Horseman"The Georgetown ReviewForthcoming