| Karen Chase lives in
The Berkshire Hills of Western Massachusetts.
Her poems, stories and essays have appeared in
many magazines, including The Gettysburg
Review, The New Yorker, The New Republic and Southwest
Review. Her book of poems, Kazimierz
Square, was short-listed by Foreword
Magazine as "Best Indie Poetry Book of
2000." Land of Stone, her non-fiction
book about her work as Poet-in-Residence at a
psychiatric hospital came out in 2007, and was named a Best Book of 2007 by Chronogram.
Her work has been widely
anthologized, including poems in The Norton
Introduction To Poetry, The Norton Introduction
To Literature, Poetry 180: A Turning Back To
Poetry edited by Billy Collins, Yellow
Silk: Erotic Arts and Letters, The Second Set:
The Jazz Poetry Anthology edited by Yusef
Komunyakaa and Sascha Feinstein, and Thus
Spake The Corpse: An Exquisite Corpse Reader,
1988-1998 Volume 1 edited by Andrei Codrescu.
Her story The Resurrections of Isaac Bashevis
Singer received a citation as one of the
"100 Distinguished Stories of 1993" in Best
American Short Stories. Her essay Learning
to Shoot received a citation in Best
American Essays 2006.
Among her honors, she has been a
Fellow at The MacDowell Colony, The Sanskriti
Foundation, and at The Rockefeller Foundation's
Bellagio Center. She has been the recipient of
numerous grants, including several from the
Witter Bynner Foundation for Poetry and The
Rockefeller Foundation. For over a decade, Chase
was the Poet-in-Residence at New York
Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, teaching poetry
writing to severely disturbed psychiatric
patients and doing research. From 1991 until
2004, she ran the Camel River Writing Center and
has served on the resident faculty of The Robert
Frost Place in Franconia, New Hampshire. She now
serves as a trustee of The Amy Clampitt Fund,
whose mission is to benefit poetry and the
literary arts.
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