Los Angeles Times

Poet meditated on nature

JANE MEAD, 1958 - 2019

- By Dorany Pineda

Jane Mead, an American poet whose work was largely inspired by her love of nature and the interconne­ctions between organisms and their environmen­ts, has died.

Mead died of endometria­l cancer Sept. 8 in her home in Napa, said her friend Kathleen Finneran. She was 61.

In a literary career that spanned more than 20 years, Mead wrote five poetry collection­s and her work was regularly published in anthologie­s and journals.

She was a Griffin Poetry Prize and Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist for her 2016 book “World of Made and Unmade,” about her mother’s death. It also was long-listed for the National Book Award. Former Times poetry contributo­r Carol Muske-Dukes wrote in 2017 that “Mead’s poems reveal a compassion­ate aesthetic imaginatio­n.”

In an excerpt from the book, Mead writes:

The third time my mother fell she stopped saying she wanted to die.

Saying you want to die is one thing, she pointed out but dying is quite another. And then she went to bed. Her previous book “Money Money Money Water Water Water,” a work of ecopoetry, explores the widespread destructio­n of the natural world.

In a 2014 interview with the now-defunct literary blog Bookslut, Mead talks about the relationsh­ip between poetry and nature: “Given the nearly complete destructio­n of an entire planet, the overpoweri­ng by greed of any sense of the basic logic of survival, or valuation of beauty — it would be odd if the urgency of this situation were not reflected in our poetry.”

She spoke also about the influence poetry can have in preserving nature: “But poetry has the potential to move people, which is where the potential for growth and change of a certain kind enters the picture.”

Remembered as gentle and intelligen­t, she was admired for her compassion.

“She was a poet who had a very singular voice,” said Anne Marie Macari, a poet and friend. “That’s one of the ways you know someone is a good poet. They are who they are…. She was authentic and tender and even though she was brilliant, that wasn’t the most important part of her work…. It was the compassion she felt for other creatures … the way she was grounded by the natural world.”

Mead’s work earned her grants from the Lannan Foundation, a Whiting Writers’ Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship.

Jane Whitaker Mead was born Aug. 13, 1958, in Baltimore, Md. Her father, Giles, was a Harvard professor of ichthyolog­y and former director of the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History. Her mother, Nancy, owned a pecan farm in New Mexico.

Mead earned her bachelor’s degree from Vassar College, a master’s from Syracuse University and an MFA from the University of Iowa, where she studied in the prestigiou­s Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She held many teaching positions and was a poet-in-residence at Wake Forest University in North Carolina.

While living in Iowa, she co-owned an independen­t bookstore with a fellow poet. When her father died in 2003, Mead left her residency at Wake Forest and moved west to manage her family’s vineyard in Napa. She lived out her days on the land, growing closer to it.

She is survived by siblings Parry, Giles, Richie and Gale.

 ?? Mary Shea ?? A ‘SINGULAR VOICE’ Mead’s work drew on her ecological concerns.
Mary Shea A ‘SINGULAR VOICE’ Mead’s work drew on her ecological concerns.

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