Jason Shinder (1955–2008) was an American poet who authored three books and founded the YMCA National Writer's Voice. His last book, Stupid Hope (Graywolf Press, 2009), was released posthumously.
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He was born in Brooklyn New York in 1955,[1] and published his first literary work in 1993, with the release of Every Room We Ever Slept In, which became a New York Public Library Notable Book.[1] He went on to author Among Women and Uncertain Hours, he also edited numerous anthologies, including The Poem That Changed America: "Howl" Fifty Years Later and The Poem I Turn To: Actors and Directors Present Poetry That Inspires Them.[1] In addition to founding and directing the National Writer's Voice, Shinder also served as director of the Sundance Institute Writing Program, as a teacher in the graduate writing program at Bennington College, as a graduate teacher at New School University, and was a Poet Laureate of Provincetown.[1] Shinder also earned a Literature Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2007.[1]
Shinder died in April 2008. He had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and leukemia. "Cancer is a tremendous opportunity," he said, philosophically, "to have your face pressed right up against the glass of your mortality." In his brief poem "Company," he writes:
I've been avoiding my illness
because I'm afraid
I will die and when I do,
I'll end up alone again.[1]
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