Location: Marquand Chapel
409 Prospect St.
New Haven, CT 06511
Admission: Free
Open to: General Public
Description: Readings followed by a book-signing and reception. Presented in collaboration with Yale Divinity Student Book Supply
Andrew Hudgins attracted the attention of the Pulitzer Prize Committee with his first volume. He writes in a more traditional mode than the open-form, free-verse style of many contemporary poets, and he reflects in his work a sensitivity to and identification with the Deep South. In the case of Hudgins’s Saints and Strangers (1985) and After the Lost War (1988), the almost unanimous reaction of critics and readers is that Hudgins speaks with an original voice that expresses his southern identity and fundamentally American persona. His verse will have an impact on the way modern poetry is conceived and on the role modern poetry plays in contemporary letters.