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  1. Biography. Stanley Kunitz [1905-2006] is a towering figure in American poetry, not just by dint of his longevity, but for the fact that he was still producing some of his finest work well into his nineties. His vitality and continuing relevance was recognised when he was made the US Poet Laureate at the age of 95.

  2. Stanley Kunitz passed away at his home in New York City at the age of 100. Cynthia Haven looks back on the former poet laureate's life and work, and finds a man constantly defying expectations. A student in the 1960s once asked W.H. Auden why Stanley Kunitz did not have the following he deserved. Auden replied, “It’s strange, but give him time.

  3. Stanley Kunitz was one of America’s most durable and respected poets. Over his seven decades of writing, Kunitz developed poetry marked by it’s clarity, courage, and attention to the natural world and personal history. He won the Pulitzer prize, the National Book Award, and was twice named the poet laureate of the United States. Kunitz was ...

  4. Stanley Kunitz became the tenth Poet Laureate of the United States in the autumn of 2000. Kunitz was ninety-five years old at the time, still actively publishing and promoting poetry to new generations of readers.

  5. 16 de mai. de 2006 · Stanley Jasspon Kunitz was born on July 29, 1905, in Worcester, Mass., the third child and first son of the deceased Solomon Z. Kunitz, a dress manufacturer whose business had been failing, and ...

  6. Stanley Kunitz. , The Art of Poetry No. 29. Interviewed by Chris Busa. Issue 83, Spring 1982. This interview took place during the winter of 1977 in Stanley Kunitz' brownstone in New York City's Greenwich Village. The apartment's ceilings are high. A number of modern paintings cover the height of the walls, fitted together in a great mosaic.

  7. Remembering Stanley Kunitz. By Gregory Orr. I met him in the fall of 1969, when I became his student at Columbia University; I’ve known him these almost forty years as mentor and friend and fellow practitioner. I can’t reminisce about Stanley Kunitz the person as presence—I have too many memories there and not enough eloquence of anecdote.