Tony Tost
Tony Tost (born 1975) is an American poet, critic and screenwriter. His first poetry book Invisible Bride won the 2003 Walt Whitman Award judged by C.D. Wright.[1]
Tost was born in Springfield, Missouri, and raised in Enumclaw, Washington. He is a graduate of both Green River Community College in Auburn, Washington and College of the Ozarks in Point Lookout, Missouri. Tost graduated with a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Arkansas.[2] He also holds a Ph.D. in English from Duke University.[3]
He is the founding editor of the online poetry magazine Fascicle and previously a co-editor and co-founder, with Zachary Schomburg, of Octopus Magazine. His poems and essays have appeared in the literary journals Fence, Hambone, Talisman, Mandorla, No: a journal of the arts, Denver Quarterly, Typo, American Literature, Jacket, Verse, Open Letter and elsewhere.[4]
In 2011, Tost's book on Johnny Cash's American Recordings was published by Continuum Books in their 33 1/3 series on classic albums. Critic Joshua Scheiderman wrote that Tost's book "ultimately belongs in the long, rich tradition of texts like Constance Rourke’s American Humor: A Study of the National Character (1931) and Greil Marcus’s The Old, Weird America: The World of Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes (1997), ostensibly academic studies of American culture but also works of mythopoesis in their own right."[5]
Tost writes for the A&E television series Longmire.[6] He currently lives in Los Angeles, California.
Bibliography
- Invisible Bride (2004)
- World Jelly (2005)
- Complex Sleep (2007)
- Johnny Cash's American Recordings (criticism, 2011)
Notes
- ↑ Walt Whitman Award Web page from the Academy of American Poets Web site
- ↑ Academy of American Poets Web site: Tony Tost Exhibit/author page, accessed November 17, 2006
- ↑ Interview with Lisa Horan at Creative Screenwriting
- ↑ Author bio at Brown University
- ↑ A Review of Johnny Cash's American Recordings by Tony Tost at Neo-Americanist: an inter-disciplinary online journal for the study of America
- ↑ Tony Tost at IMDB