A finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, Dorianne
Laux's fourth book of poems, Facts about
the Moon (W.W. Norton), is the recipient of the Oregon Book Award,
chosen by Ai. It was also short-listed for the 2006 Lenore Marshall
Poetry Prize for the most outstanding book of poems published in the
United States in the previous year and chosen by the Kansas City Star as one of the ten best
books of poetry published in 2005. Laux is also author of three collections
of poetry from BOA Editions, Awake
(1990) introduced by Philip Levine, reprinted this year by Eastern
Washington University Press, What We
Carry (1994) and Smoke
(2000). Red Dragonfly Press will release Superman: The Chapbook, later this year. Co-author of
The Poet's Companion, she’s
the recipient of two Best American Poetry Prizes, a Best American Erotic
Poems Prize, a Pushcart Prize, two fellowships from The National Endowment
for the Arts and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Her work has appeared in
the Best of the American Poetry
Review, The Norton Anthology of
Contemporary Poetry, and she’s a frequent contributor to
Orion and Ms. Magazine. Laux has waited tables and written poems in San Diego, Los Angeles, Berkeley, Petaluma, California and Juneau, Alaska. In 1994 she moved to Eugene where she’s now a Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Oregon. She lives with her husband, the poet Joseph Millar.






