Lisa Olstein
Lisa Olstein is an American poet born in 1972. She grew up near Boston, Massachusetts. She received a BA from Barnard College and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
She is an author of four books.Her first book of poems, Radio Crackling, Radio Gone. She won the Hayden Carruth Award. Her second collection, Lost Alphabet was named one of the best poetry books of the year by Library Journal. Shane McCrae selected her chapbook The Resemblance of the Enzymes of Grasses to Those of Whales Is a Family Resemblance for an Essay Press Chapbook Prize. Her most recent book of poetry, Late Empire she explores the complexities - beautiful and brutal - of our present moment. Pain Studies, a book of creative non-fiction is forthcoming from Bellevue Literary Press in 2020.
Her poems have appeared in The Nation, Iowa Review, Denver Quarterly, LIT, and other journals. She has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize, a Lannan Writing Residency, and poetry fellowships from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and the Sustainable Arts Foundation.
Olstein has also worked with singer-songwriter Jeffrey Foucault in the band Cold Satellite.
Lisa Olstein currently teaches in the New Writers Project and the Michener Center for Writers at the University of Texas, Austin, and undertook additional studies at Harvard Divinity School and also directed the Juniper Initiative for literary arts in Amherst, Massachusetts.Poetry
- Late Empire
- The Resemblance of the Enzymes of Grasses to Those of Whales Is a Family Resemblance http://www.essaypress.org/ep-72/
- Little Stranger
- Lost Alphabet
- Radio Crackling, Radio Gone