Rebecca Gayle Howell (born August 10, 1975, in Lexington, Kentucky)[1] is an American writer, literary translator, and editor.[2] In 2019 she was named a United States Artists Fellow.[3]
Her first book Render / An Apocalypse was selected by Nick Flynn for the Cleveland State University Poetry Center's First Book Prize (2013). Render / An Apocalypse also received a cover review in The Los Angeles Times[4], The Nautilus Award,[5] and a finalist shortlist for Foreword Review's INDIES Book of the Year.[6] In 2016, Burnaway: Art of the South named it a Best Book of the Year. In 2020 literary critic Jennifer Ashton featured Render / An Apocalypse in her chapter "Ecology, Ethics, and the Apocalyptic Lyric in Recent American Poetry" for Apocalypse in American Literature and Culture (Cambridge University Press).[7]
American Purgatory, her second book, was selected by Don Share for The Sexton Prize[8] and was published in both Great Britain and the United States in 2017. American Purgatory was also a finalist for Foreword Review's INDIES Book of the Year.[9] The book was named a must read by The Courier-Journal, The Millions[10] and Poetry London. Other reviewers included ArtsATL, Nashville Review,The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, and The Rumpus.
In March 2023, Howell released What Things Cost: an anthology for the people, which she co-edited with Ashley M. Jones and associate editor Emily Jalloul (University Press of Kentucky).[11] The collection received a starred review from Publishers Weekly[12], a notable anthology for 2023 by Poetry & Writers[13], a best poetry book of 2023 by Ms. Magazine[14], a best Southern book of 2023 by Southern Review of Books[15], and the 2023 INDIES GOLD Best Anthology of the Year by Foreword Reviews.[16]What Things Cost is called by the publisher, "the first major anthology of labor writing in nearly a century," and all proceeds go to benefit The Poor People's Campaign.[citation needed]
Translation
Howell is the English-language translator of Amal al-Jubouri's verse memoir of the Iraq War, Hagar Before the Occupation / Hagar After the Occupation (Alice James Books, 2011). This translation, carried out in collaboration with Husam Qaisi and al-Jubouri, was a finalist for the 2012 Best Translated Book Award[17] and the U.K.'s Banipal Prize for Arabic Literary Translation.[18] International reviewers included The Wall Street Journal'sMint[19] and Asymptote.[20]Hagar received a Best Book of Poetry for 2011 from Library Journal and a Best Book by an Arab Woman from Book Riot in 2017.[21]
Howell's El interior de la ballena / The belly of the whale is the bilingual edition of Claudia Prado's award-winning collection of Patagonian agrarian poetry, released in spring 2024 by Texas Tech University Press.[22] Howell's and Prado's versions have appeared in The Sewanee Review, The Common,The Southern Review, and elsewhere.
Librettos
In 2019, she began a collaboration with classical composer Reena Esmail. A Winter Breviary, their solstice carol cycle, was published by Oxford University Press in 2022.[23] The third of these carols, "The Unexpected Early Hour," was premiered at the Los Angeles Master Chorale Festival of Carols, December 4, 2021,[24] then recorded and broadcast by the BBC on December 24, 2021. In 2022, The Gesualdo Six recorded the entire cycle for Choral Music from Oxford with the Gesualdo Six[25], and in 2023 St. Martin's Choir recorded the cycle as the title tracks for A Winter Breviary: Choral Works for Christmas (Resonus Classics).[26] The work has been performed and toured by choirs like The Gesualdo Six, The Sixteen, The Yale Ensemble, and Voces8. In 2023 "The Unexpected Early Hour" was also collected in Carols for Choirs 6 (Oxford University Press).[27]
Howell is also an assistant editor and letterpress printer for Q Avenue Books and a contributing editor for Pushcart Press. In 2015 she began freelance editing place-based poetry collections, including Crystal Wilkinson's Perfect Black (University Press of Kentucky, 2021); Julia Bouwsma's Work By Bloodlight (Cider Press, 2017); Nomi Stone's Kill Class (Tupelo Press, 2019); and Savannah Sipple's WWJD And Other Poems (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2019). In 2017, she founded Fireside Industries, an imprint of the University Press of Kentucky. Among the titles Howell published with Fireside are first books by Tanya Berry and Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle.
Awards
2019 United States Artists Fellow.
2017 Foreword Reviews Indies Award. Finalist. For American Purgatory (Black Springs Press Group, 2017).[42]
2016 The Sexton Prize. Selected by Don Share. For American Purgatory (Black Springs Press Group, 2017).[43]
2013 Nautilus Book Award, Silver. For Render /An Apocalypse (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2013)[47]
2013 Foreword Reviews Indies Award. Finalist. For Render /An Apocalypse (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2013) [48]
2012 Cleveland State University Poetry Center First Book Prize. Selected by Nick Flynn. For Render /An Apocalypse (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2013).[49]
2012 Best Translated Book Award.Three Percent. Finalist. For Hagar Before the Occupation / Hagar After the Occupation (Alice James Books, 2011).[50]
El interior de la ballena / The belly of the whale, poems by Claudia Prado and translated by Rebecca Gayle Howell (Texas Tech University Press, 2024).
What Things Cost: an anthology for the people, co-edited by Rebecca Gayle Howell & Ashley M. Jones. Associate Editor, Emily Jalloul. (University Press of Kentucky, 2023).
A Winter Breviary, written by Rebecca Gayle Howell, composed by Reena Esmail. (Oxford University Press, 2022).
Say Your Name, written by Rebecca Gayle Howell, composed by Reena Esmail. (A Piece of Sky Music, 2022).
American Purgatory, poems by Rebecca Gayle Howell. (Black Spring Press Group, 2017).
Render / An Apocalypse, poems by Rebecca Gayle Howell. (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2013).
Hagar Before the Occupation / Hagar After the Occupation, poems by Amal al-Jubouri and translated by Rebecca Gayle Howell with Husam Qaisi. (Alice James Books, 2011).