|
Jane Shore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|
Jane Shore (poet) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jane Shore is an American poet. She graduated from Goddard College, and moved from Vermont to the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She graduated from Radcliffe College in 1972, where she was a student of Eliz...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Shore_(poet) |
||
|
Go to this site providing a short biography of Jane Shore. Fast facts and interesting information about Jane Shore.Learn about the history of Jane Shore of England. ... Short Biography profile and facts about the life of Jane Shore...
|
||
|
Encyclopedia article about Shore, Jane. Information about Shore, Jane in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... Shore, Jane; Shore, Peter David; Shore-Based Acceptance Checkout Equipment; Shore-based Aviation Consolidated Allowance List; Shore-based Consolidated Allowance List;
|
||
|
Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Shore, Jane. Shore, Jane. Information about Shore, Jane in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Shore, Jane (died c. 1527)
|
||
|
Biography of Jane Shore, mistress of King Edward IV of England. ... The Penance of Jane Shore in St Paul's Church, c1793. JANE SHORE, (Elizabeth Shore), mistress of the English King Edward IV, is said to have been the daughter of Thomas Wainstead, a prosperous London mercer.
|
||
|
Excerpt from King Richard IIII by Sir Thomas More: A King's Mistress -- the story of Jane Shore. ... ; William Blake. The Penance of Jane Shore in St Paul's Church, c1793. from by; Sir Thomas More...
|
||
|
In "Happy Family", Jane Shore presents the desperate, comical, elusive, simple and complicated kinds of happiness found in her 1950s New Jersey neighborhood. In poems at once universal and intensely personal, Shore composes uncanny duets for past and present, childhood and adulthood, daughter and mother.
|
||
|
Jane Shore teaches at George Washington University and lives in Washington, DC and Vermont with her husband, the novelist Howard Norman, and their daughter, Emma. Her first book of poems, Eye Level, won the 1977 Juniper Prize;
|