Two poets, including a UGA professor who has gained international acclaim translating the works of a Persian mystic, will be inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame in March.
Coleman Barks, who taught poetry and creative writing at UGA for more than 30 years, and Georgia poet laureate David Bottoms, whose honors include the Walt Whitman Award, will be inducted along with two posthumous honorees: Raymond Andrews and Robert Burch.
The celebration will begin with an author’s discussion March 23 at 4 p.m. in the Reading Room of the Miller Learning Center. The induction ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m. March 24 in the Frank Daniel Foley Jr. Rotunda on the fourth floor of the Miller Learning Center. Both events are open free to the public.
The UGA Libraries established the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame to recognize Georgia writers, past and present, whose work reflects the character of the state, its land and its people. A board of judges selects two or more writers for induction each year based on an open nomination process.
Barks has published six collections of his own poetry, numerous poetry translations, and his work has appeared in a wide array of anthologies, textbooks and journals.
“Considerable whimsy, a common feature in Barks’ poetry, occurs alongside a tendency toward the meditative, an appreciation of the natural world and an interest in people and relationships,” according to the New Georgia Encyclopedia. “Barks is especially effective in longer narrative poems, which he typically begins by focusing on a specific subject or theme that he then extends into wider speculations. The influence of Rumi and other mystic poets Barks has translated is evident in the longer poems,” it reports.
Barks began translating the 13th century Sufi mystic Jelaluddin Rumi following a conversation with bestselling author Robert Bly. He has published nearly two dozen volumes of Rumi translations. Barks has been interviewed by Bill Moyers as part of two Public Broadcasting Service television series on poetry, and his translations of Rumi appear in the Norton Anthology of World Masterpieces. The Essential Rumi has appeared on nonfiction best-seller lists around the U.S.
Bottoms’ first book, Shooting Rats at the Bibb County Dump, was chosen by Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and poet Robert Penn Warren from more than 1,300 submissions as winner of the 1979 Walt Whitman Award of the Academy of American Poets. In 1982, Bottoms began teaching at Georgia State University and co-founded the Five Points literary magazine.
Over the years Bottoms has received many awards for his work, including the Levinson Prize from Poetry magazine, an Ingram Merrill Award, fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, and an award in literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. He has been published widely in such publications as the Atlantic, the New Yorker, Harper’s, Poetry and the Paris Review, as well as in some two dozen anthologies and textbooks.
Bottoms was appointed by former Gov. Roy Barnes as Georgia’s poet laureate in 2000.
Andrews was born to a sharecropper’s family in Morgan County and left at 15 to work and attend school in Atlanta at the only public night high school for black students in Georgia. After serving in the military, Andrews settled in New York City before returning to Georgia in 1980. He passed away in 1991.
“Raymond Andrews’ cycle of three novels about the fictional Muskhogean County, Ga., represent a benchmark of literary, cultural and social history,” according to a 1998 article in the Southern Literacy Journal. The first of these novels, Appalachee Red won the James Baldwin Prize for Fiction in 1978. His last fictional publication, Jessie and Jesus and Cousin Claire, won the 1992 American Book Award.
Burch, author of 19 books, is a Fayette County native. Best known for his children’s books, including Queenie Peavy and Ida Early Comes Over the Mountain, Burch was honored with four Georgia Children’s Book Awards. Burch’s stories frequently focus on rural life during the Great Depression. He died in 2007.