Cape Breton Post

Tony Hoagland, witty, prize winning poet, dead at 64

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Tony Hoagland, a prizewinni­ng poet admired for his candour and sharp, off-beat humour, has died at age 64.

Jeff Shotts, executive editor of Graywolf Press, told The Associated Press that Hoagland died Tuesday at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The cause was pancreatic cancer.

A native of Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Hoagland published several works of poetry and essays about poetry. The titles helped sum up his take on life: “Unincorpor­ated Persons in the Late Honda Dynasty,’’ ‘’Applicatio­n for Release from the Dream” and ‘’Priest Turned Therapist Treats Fear of God,” which came out in June. Three of his books had been released since 2015.

“It was a long battle with cancer, and he cheated it a couple of times,’’ Shotts said. “He was very productive near the end and I think the work helped keep him alive.’’

His style could be off-hand and unpredicta­ble. In the poem “A Color in the Sky,’’ his thoughts wander from love and sex to a dogwood tree between a police station and liquor store that is “losing its mind.’’

Hoagland was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award for his 2003 collection “What Narcissism Means to Me,’’ and his other honours included the Jackson Prize, given to poets of “exceptiona­l talent’’ who deserve greater attention. Prize judges called him a “poet of risk.’’

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