Washington Writers' Publishing House

Washington Writers’ Publishing House is the longest, continuously-operating cooperative nonprofit literary small press in the United States

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Elizabeth Knapp

Dorian Elizabeth Knapp is the author of three poetry collections: Causa Sui (forthcoming 2025), winner of the 8th Annual Three Mile Harbor Book Award; Requiem with an Amulet in Its Beak, winner of the 2019 Jean Feldman Poetry Prize; and The Spite House, winner of the 2010 De Novo Poetry Prize. She is the founding director of the Low-Residency MFA at Hood College and lives in Frederick, Maryland with her family.

2019 Jean Feldman Poetry Prize

Testimonials

  • Requiem with an Amulet in Its Beak is a collection that simultaneously sings and jolts with poems that lithely move from the exterior to the interior life of middle-class America. On these pages, we meet the best and worst America offers—its traditions, its heroes, and its enemies—and we are charged with understanding each in a more complex light. As in the ending of Camus’s The Myth of Sisyphus in which one must imagine Sisyphus happy, this work masterfully finds hope in whatever dark beauty American culture offers.

    Airea D. Matthews
  • From Koko the Gorilla to the ghosts of Kurt Cobain, David Bowie, and the ghosted culture left by Monica Lewinsky’s blue dress and Hillary Clinton’s woods, Elizabeth Knapp astounds us with her tonal range and tribal-American fluency. She is a high stylist and formal master, convincing us not so much of Baudrillard’s notion that more and more information leads to less and less meaning, but that more information forces us to excavate newer meanings: we are living in the desert of the real, / where signs metastasize like cancer cells… Her poems clatter, clang, and hurt—fiercely memorable in the shopping cart of our minds.

    Mark Irwin
  • In Requiem with an Amulet in Its Beak, Elizabeth Knapp grapples with the ache of being alive, the cleaving of new selfhood, and the strangeness of our intimacies—between husband and wife, mother and child, the self and the I with which it speaks. Her series of self-portraits—as Kurt Cobain in drag, as Cindy Sherman’s Instagram account—speaks to the slipperiness of the self, and to its multiplicity. This is a book of yearning and questioning, and that is poetry.

    Maggie Smith