Adrien Stoutenburg (December 1, 1916 – April 14, 1982) was an American poet and a prolific writer of juvenile literature.[1] Her poetry collection Heroes, Advise Us was the 1964 Lamont Poetry Selection.
She then worked as a librarian and in other capacities near Richfield, Minnesota.[3] In 1943, she published her first book of children's fiction, The Model Airplane Mystery. Stoutenburg later wrote, "After publishing in many magazines, I seriously settled down to writing books in 1951.[2] She had published four books of children's fiction by 1956, when she moved to California to become an editor at Parnassus Press, a publisher of children's literature. She held the position at Parnassus Press until 1958. Over her career, Stoutenburg published about forty books of juvenile fiction and non-fiction. Several of the works were co-authored with Laura Nelson Baker, with whom Stoutenburg lived, in Lagunitas, California.[4][5][6][2][7] Stoutenburg also published under the pseudonyms Barbie Arden, Lace Kendall, and Nelson Minier (the latter jointly with Baker, e.g. The Lady in the jungle).[1][8] At least five of Stoutenburg's books were Junior Literary Guild selections.[2] Only one of her works, American Tall Tales, is currently in print; upon its publication in 1966, the New York Times included it on a listing of recommended volumes for children, summarizing it as "Eight tales, tough, sentimental, and bold, about American's folk heroes ...".[9]
Stoutenburg's first volume of poetry, Heroes, Advise Us, was the 1964 Lamont Poetry Selection of the Academy of American Poets; each year, this award honored and supported one poet's first published book. Her second collection, A Short History of the Fur Trade, won a California Book Award (silver) for 1969,[10] and was a close competitor for the Pulitzer Prize.[7] Her third collection, Greenwich Mean Time, was published in 1979. James Dickey has written of her poetry, "If I were to characterize the tone of voice, I would call it that of sensitive outrage, quivering, powerful, and delicate. Delicate: therefore powerful..."[11]
Stoutenburg died of cancer in 1982 in Santa Barbara, California.[1] At Stoutenburg's request, David R. Slavitt subsequently edited and published a selection of her poetry. The volume, Land of Superior Mirages, includes a number of poems that had been unpublished at her death.[7] In his review, Robert von Hallberg wrote, "Adrien Stoutenburg's poems deserve much more attention than they have received."[12] Some of Stoutenburg's papers, and also those of Laura Nelson Baker, are archived at the University of Minnesota Children's Literature Research Collection.[13][14] Papers relating to Stoutenburg's career as a poet are housed at The Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley.[15]
I lay with my heart under me,
under the white sun,
face down to fields
and a life that gleamed
under my palms like an emerald hinge.
I sheltered him where we lay alive
under the body of the sun.
Trees there dropped their shadows
like black fruit,
and the thin-necked sparrows came
crying through the light.
...
— Adrien Stoutenburg
Poetry collections
1964 "The Things That Are". Reilly & Lee, (Chicago). (Illustrated by Robert Lostutter)
1964 Heroes, Advise Us. Scribner (New York, NY).
1969 A Short History of the Fur Trade. Houghton (Boston, MA).
1979 Greenwich Mean Time. University of Utah Press (Salt Lake City, UT). ISBN978-0-87480-164-4.
1986 Land of Superior Mirages: New and Selected Poems. David R. Slavitt, editor; James Dickey, introduction. Johns Hopkins University Press (Baltimore, MD). ISBN978-0-8018-3335-9.
^ abcDana Gioia; Chryss Yost; Jack Hicks (2003). "Adrien Stoutenberg". California poetry. Heyday Books. pp. 105–107. ISBN978-1-890771-72-0. Includes "Cicada" and "Before We Drown".
^Stoutenburg, Adrien; Dickey, James (1986). Slavitt, David R. (ed.). Land of Superior Mirages: New and Selected Poems. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN0-8018-3335-3.
^Eyer, Jim. "Adrien Stoutenburg Papers". University of Minnesota Children's Literature Research Collections. Archived from the original on 1 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
^Larsen, Nancy. "Laura Nelson Baker Papers". University of Minnesota Children's Literature Research Collections. Archived from the original on 2 June 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-02.
^"Adrien Stoutenburg papers, 1934-1987". The Bancroft Library. Retrieved 2011-07-18. (Stoutenburg) first began to write poetry at the University of California, Berkeley, under the direction of Laurence Hart, and it was for this reason that she chose to deposit her poetry manuscripts and related correspondence in the Library of the University of California at Berkeley.
^Robert Hedin (2007). "Adrien Stoutenburg". Where one voice ends another begins. Minnesota Historical Society. pp. 49–53. ISBN978-0-87351-584-9. "Cicada", "Mote", and "Interior Decoration".
^Irwin, John T.; Hecht, Anthony (2004). "Adrien Stoutenburg". Words Brushed by Music. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN9780801880285. "Mote", "Tree Service", "Message", "Self Portrait", and "Drumcliffe: Passing By".
^Stoutenburg, Adrien (August 3, 1957). "Cidada". The New Yorker. p. 24.
^Eiseman, Alberta (June 19, 1960). "The Minds of Maids; Good-Bye Cinderella". The New York Times.
^Kahn, Stephen (May 2, 1971). "Out There; by Adrien Stoutenburg". The New York Times. But a sympathetic novel about ecology, directed to the generation which must restore the environment, should be given the benefit of every doubt. And Miss Stoutenburg's well-intentioned benefits outweigh this reviewer's doubts.
^Carlsen, G. Robert (March 1958). "Junior Books: In This Corner". The English Journal. 47 (3). With a delightful sense of humor, Stoutenburg weaves together a story of politics and sports in a Minneapolis suburban community.
^Caraher, Michele (September 18, 1965). "Rain Boat". The New York Times.
^Gipson, Fred (May 5, 1968). "American Tall Tale Animals". The New York Times. By combing through old newspapers, old periodicals, and out-of-print books, she has come up with some of the most delightful spoofery that early American frontiersman ever produced. And Glen Rounds' casual illustrations don't hurt things a bit.
^O'Reilley, Jane (December 5, 1971). "For Young Readers: 'Tis the Season". The New York Times. There is suspense and feeling and a finely wrought moral, all also infinitely more gracefully expressed than in this review. Someone cared about producing this book as excellently as possible, and the reader cannot help appreciating it.
^Massey, Jeanne (September 7, 1958). "Mammals and Others". The New York Times.
^Allen, Gay Wilson (June 23, 1968). "For Young Readers". The New York Times. The early part of Walt Whitman's life, on Long Island, in Brooklyn, and in New York City is a story that children can enjoy and understand, and it can give them a feeling of what life was like in this region a century ago. Adrien Stoutenburg and Laura Nelson Baker have told this story vividly and well in Listen America: A Life of Walt Whitman.
External links
"Adrien Stoutenburg". The Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2011-07-18. Biography of Stoutenburg, and links to some of her poems and other writings.