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Alumni GazetteThe ‘Maine’ PoetAn alumna is named Maine’s new poet laureate.Betsy Sholl ’69 (MA) remembers the day in a Rochester classroom when the then graduate student talked about her plans to be a poet. “Everyone laughed uproariously,” says the now well-established poet, who in April was named the poet laureate of Maine. At the Public Market Sholl laughs herself as she tells the story, but the anecdote is more than just a tale of “look how far she’s come.” It’s also a small example of the ways that attitudes toward poetry have changed over the past 35 years, both within academia and outside it, she says. Then, you either planned to be a scholar—preferably one with a faculty position at a university or college—or you were devoted wholeheartedly to your art and remained something of an outsider. “Now people feel that they can do it all,” Sholl says. Sholl, who has been on the poetry faculty at the University of Southern Maine for more than 20 years and who teaches in the master of fine arts program at Vermont College, has successfully dovetailed her careers as a creative artist and as a teacher. The award-winning author of six collections of poetry, she is a founding member of Alice James Books, a poetry-publishing house located at the University of Maine at Farmington. Last fall, Puddinghouse Press published a chapbook of her work titled Besty Sholl: Greatest Hits. As poet laureate, Sholl will be, as her predecessor Baron Wormser called the position, “the public face of poetry” in the state. Laureates are appointed for five-year terms. This spring, she was still outlining her plans for that role but says she’s hopeful about the interest in poetry, especially among young people. As people try to decipher the barrage of messages they receive in a culture inundated with commercial messages, spin control, and political propaganda, poetry offers language that’s both visceral and reflective, she says. “People look to the verbal arts as a way of using language without ulterior motives,” Sholl says. —Scott Hauser |
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