Kaveh Akbar Popular Books

Kaveh Akbar Biography & Facts

Kaveh Akbar (کاوه اکبر) is an Iranian-American writer. Early life and education Akbar was born in Tehran, Iran, in 1989. He moved to the United States when he was two years old, and grew up across the United States including New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Indiana. Akbar received his bachelor's degree from Purdue, his MFA from Butler University, and his PhD in creative writing from Florida State University. Works Akbar is a faculty member at University of Iowa and formerly Purdue University. He also teaches in the low-residency fine art programs at Randolph College and Warren Wilson College. He is the author of the chapbook Portrait of the Alcoholic, published by Sibling Rivalry Press, Calling a Wolf a Wolf, published by Alice James Books in the US and Penguin Books in the UK, and Pilgrim Bell published by Graywolf Press. Of Portrait of the Alcoholic, American poet Patricia Smith said: "Kaveh Akbar has written one of the best books of poetry I've ever read." In 2014, he founded the poetry interview website Divedapper. He uses the website to give contemporary poets a space to share their stories and their writing. In 2018, NPR called Akbar "poetry's biggest cheerleader". In 2020, he was named Poetry Editor of The Nation, a position previously held by Langston Hughes, Anne Sexton, and William Butler Yeats. Akbar's poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Poetry Magazine, Best American Poetry, The New Republic, Paris Review, PBS NewsHour, Tin House, and elsewhere. With Ocean Vuong, he wrote poems for the 2018 film The Kindergarten Teacher, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal. In 2019, The New Yorker published an online feature around Akbar's long poem "The Palace", and announced that his second full-length poetry collection, Pilgrim Bell, would be published in 2021 by Graywolf Press. In 2022, Penguin Classics published The Penguin Book of Spiritual Verse: 110 Poets on the Divine, edited by Kaveh Akbar. His novel, Martyr!, was published in 2024. Personal life Akbar is in recovery and writes openly about his struggles with addiction. In an interview with the Paris Review, he cites poetry as helping with his sobriety, saying, "Early in recovery, it was as if I'd wake up and ask, How do I not accidentally kill myself for the next hour? And poetry, more often than not, was the answer to that." In 2018, he married the American poet Paige Lewis. Awards and honors Pilgrim Bell a best book of the year NPR, Time, The Guardian Winner of a 2017 and 2018 Pushcart Prize Levis Reading Prize John C. Zacharis First Book Award Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowship Winner of a Lucille Medwick Memorial Award for a poem on a humanitarian theme Bibliography Fiction Martyr!. Knopf. 2024. ISBN 9780593537619. Poetry Collections Pilgrim Bell. Graywolf Press. 2021. ISBN 978-1-64445-059-8. Calling a Wolf a Wolf. Alice James Books. 2017. ISBN 978-1938584671. Portrait of the Alcoholic. Sibling Rivalry Press. 2017. ISBN 978-1943977277. Anthologies edited The Penguin Book of Spiritual Verse: 110 Poets on the Divine. Penguin Classics. 2023. ISBN 9780241391587. Another Last Call: Poems on Addiction and Deliverance. Sarabande. 2023. ISBN 9780241391587. List of poems "The Palace", The New Yorker, April 2019 "Being in This World Makes Me Feel Like a Time Traveler", The New York Times, October 2017 "What Use is Knowing Anything if No One is Around", The New Yorker, June 2017 "Despite My Efforts Even My Prayers Have Turned into Threats", Poetry, November 2016 "Portrait of the Alcoholic Floating in Space with Severed Umbilicus", Poetry, October 2016 "Palmyra", PBS NewsHour, December 2015 References External links Personal Webpage Divedapper Kaveh Akbar: Profile and Poems at Poets.org. Discover the Kaveh Akbar popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Kaveh Akbar books.

Best Seller Kaveh Akbar Books of 2024

  • The Palace of Forty Pillars synopsis, comments

    The Palace of Forty Pillars

    Armen Davoudian

    A San Francisco Chronicle and LitHub Best Book of SpringA Most Anticipated Book of the Season at The Rumpus, Publishers Weekly, and Autostraddle“Brilliant and deft and heartfelt."R...

  • Yesterday i was the moon synopsis, comments

    Yesterday i was the moon

    Noor Unnahar

    Noor Unnahar is a young female voice with power and depth. The Pakistani poet's moving, personal work collects and makes sense of the phases of collapsing and rebuilding one's self...