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Alice Notley

Alice Elizabeth Notley was an American poet. Notley came to prominence as a member of the second generation of the New York School of poetry. Notley's early work laid both formal and theoretical groundwork for several generations of poets and topics like motherhood and domestic life. The Paris Review described her as having been "one of America's greatest living poets".

Early life
Notley was born on November 8, 1945, in Bisbee, Arizona, and grew up in Needles, California. Notley wrote extensively of her childhood and early life in her book Tell Me Again (Am here, 1982). Notley left Needles for New York City to attend Barnard College in 1963, desiring an escape from the isolation of her hometown. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Barnard College in spring 1967 and left New York City that fall for the fiction program at the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa. After Notley's graduation, she and Berrigan spent periods of time in New York City and Buffalo. During the winter of 1970–71, Notley and Berrigan lived on Long Island, where Notley wrote her first book, 165 Meeting House Lane (Twenty-Four Sonnets). The book took its title from the address of their home on Long Island. In the dedication, Notley thanked Tom Clark who would go on to re-publish the sonnet cycle in his anthology All Stars. Notley and Berrigan spent the several months between Long Island and Chicago in Bolinas, California; Berrigan's C Press published 165 Meeting House Lane in Bolinas. Notley's second book, Phoebe Light, was published in 1973 by Bill Berkson's Bolinas-based press Big Sky. ==1972–75: Chicago and Essex==
1972–75: Chicago and Essex
In 1972, Notley and Ted Berrigan married and moved to Chicago where Berrigan had been appointed to Ed Dorn's newly vacated teaching position at Northeastern Illinois University. While in Chicago, Notley started publishing her magazine Chicago, a legal-sized mimeograph publication. Notley began the magazine to connect with preexisting poet friends and meet new writers on both coasts while living in the midwest. The magazine ran for eight issues, three of which were published while Notley and Berrigan lived in England. Notley edited seven of the issues with Berrigan taking over one while Notley was pregnant with their first son. The artist George Schneeman, famous for his artworks that appeared on the covers of dozens of books of poetry, did all of the covers for the magazine. In 1974, Berrigan was hired as a visiting poet at University of Essex, so Notley and Berrigan relocated to Brightlingsea in Essex. While in England, Notley would write her second sonnet cycle Great Interiors, Wines and Spirits of the World, which was published in a Notley-themed issue of the Chicago magazine Out There. From February through June 1974 in Wivenhoe, Essex, Notley wrote her book Songs for the Unborn Second Baby (United Artists, 1979). While Notley had written on motherhood prior to Songs, this book was her first to focus fully on the matter and is the first full-length book of a New York School-affiliated poet to address sexism in poetry, and the pressures and setbacks of motherhood in both personal and creative life. The book was reissued in 2021 by the London-based small press Distance No Object. Notley gave birth to her and Berrigan's second child, Edmund Berrigan, at Colchester Hospital in 1974. The couple returned to Chicago for a brief period after their year in England before moving to New York City in 1976. ==1976–1992: New York City==
1976–1992: New York City
Notley and Berrigan moved their family to New York City's Lower East Side, where they live together until Berrigan's death in 1983. Their apartment at 101 St. Mark's Place was a hub for young writers and Berrigan and Notley's contemporaries. Notley remained fairly prolific during this era, writing and publishing several full-length collections. Perpetually strapped for cash, the two took on whatever small jobs they could to support the family. Notley and Berrigan were frequent instructors at Naropa University's summer writing program. Some of Notley's most famous engagements with the poetry community while in New York City were her workshops at the Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church in the Bowery, which were attended by dozens of young poets including Bob Holman, Patricia Spears Jones, Steve Carey, and Susie Timmons. Eileen Myles wrote of their experience in Notley's workshops in their books Chelsea Girls (Black Sparrow Press, 2004; Ecco, 2015) and Inferno (O/R Books, 2010). Of her 1983 workshop, Notley wrote: In 1986, Notley led a workshop where participants were required to write an entire book during the course of their meetings. After the workshop ended, Notley teamed up with students to print copies of their works on the mimeograph machine in the St. Mark's basement. The books were published under the imprint Unimproved Editions and Notley made cover art for the majority of the titles. Her own book, entitled Parts of a Wedding, was published first in a small edition by Unimproved Editions then later as a section of the O Books anthology O One. Berrigan's death in 1983 struck the poetry community exceptionally hard and over the next decade, Notley would suffer the loss of many others who were close to her. Notley's 1985 play "Anne's White Glove," commissioned by Ada Katz's Eye and Ear Theater navigated the pain of Berrigan's death, and her collections Margaret & Dusty (Coffee House, 1985), Parts of a Wedding (Unimproved Editions, 1986), and At Night the States (The Yellow Press, 1987) contain material written during a period of mourning. Notley's elegiac work during this era, including her poems "Beginning With a Stain" and "At Night the States," is some of her most widely celebrated. ==1992–2025: Paris==
1992–2025: Paris
In 1992, Notley moved to Paris with her second husband, the British poet and novelist Douglas Oliver (1937–2000), whom she had met while living in England in 1974, and had married in 1988. Several poems from her 2007 collection In the Pines were set to music by the Canadian indie pop band AroarA for their 2014 Polaris Music Prize-nominated 2013 EP In the Pines and in August 2014, a conference celebrating Notley's work was held by the Bay Area Public School system in Oakland, California. Over two nights, November 14 and 15, 2016, Notley read The Descent of Alette in its entirety at The Lab in San Francisco. Notley died from a stroke at a Paris hospital, on May 19, 2025, at the age of 79. At the time of her death, she also had ovarian cancer. Her memorial was held at the Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery on Nov. 19, 2025. ==Timeline==
Timeline
;1970s • Poems & stories (thesis, unpublished) (University of Iowa, 1970) • 165 Meeting House Lane (C Press, 1971) • Phoebe Light (Big Sky, 1973) • Incidentals in the Day World (Angel Hair, 1973) • ''For Frank O'Hara's Birthday'' (Reality Street, 1976) • Alice Ordered Me to Be Made (The Yellow Press, 1976) • A Diamond Necklace (Frontward Books, 1977) • Songs for the Unborn Second Baby (United Artists, 1979; reprint Distance No Object, 2021) ;1980s • ''Dr. Williams' Heiresses'' (Tuumba, 1980) • When I Was Alive (Vehicle Editions, 1980) • How Spring Comes (Toothpaste Press, 1980) • Waltzing Matilda (Kulchur Press, 1981; reprint Faux Press, 2002) • Tell Me Again (Am Here/Immediate Editions, 1982) • Sorrento (Sherwood Press, 1984) • • Parts of a Wedding (Unimproved Editions, 1986) • At Night the States (The Yellow Press, 1988) • From a Work in Progress (Dia Foundation, 1988) ;1990s • ''Homer's Art'' (Institute of Further Studies, 1990) • The Scarlet Cabinet (with Douglas Oliver) (Scarlet Editions, 1992) • Selected Poems of Alice Notley (Talisman House, 1993) • To Say You (Pyramid Atlantic, 1994) • Close to Me and Closer...(The Language of Heaven) and Desamere (O Books, 1995) • • • Byzantine Parables (Cambridge, 1998) ;2000s • • Iphigenia (Belladonna, 2002) • From the Beginning (The Owl Press, 2005) • City of (Rain Taxi, 2005) • • • • • Above the Leaders (Veer Books, 2008) ;2010s • • • • Secret ID (The Catenary Press, 2012) • ''Negativity's Kiss'' (Presses universitaires de Rouen et du Havre, 2013) • Manhattan Luck (Heart's Desire, 2014) • • Certain Magical Acts (Penguin Poets, 2016) • Eurynome's Sandals (Presses universitaires de Rouen et du Havre, 2019) ;2020s • For the Ride (Penguin Poets, 2020) • • Get the Money!: Collected Prose (1961-1983) (City Lights Books, 09/13/2022) Get the Money! • Telling the Truth as It Comes Up: Selected Talks & Essays 1991-2018 (Song Cave, 11/15/2023) • Being Reflected Upon (Penguin Poets, 2024) ==References==
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