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For Immediate Release

Contact:

Leslie Weddell
(719) 389-6038
Leslie.Weddell@ColoradoCollege.edu

COLORADO COLLEGE ENGLISH PROFESSOR DAVID MASON
TO BE NAMED NEXT POET LAUREATE

Author of award-winning ‘Ludlow’ named to post

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – June 29, 2010 – Colorado College Professor of English David Mason will become Colorado's next poet laureate. Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter will name and introduce the post at a ceremony at the state capitol on July 1.

Mason co-directs CC's creative writing program. His poetry books include "The Buried Houses," winner of the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize; "The Country I Remember," winner of the Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award; and "Arrivals." Mason's verse novel, "Ludlow," won the Colorado Book Award and was featured on the PBS News Hour. The Contemporary Poetry Review and the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum named "Ludlow" the best poetry book of 2007.

Author of a collection of essays, "The Poetry of Life and the Life of Poetry," Mason also has co-edited several textbooks and anthologies, including "Western Wind: An Introduction to Poetry"; "Rebel Angels: 25 Poets of the New Formalism"; "Twentieth Century American Poetry"; and "Twentieth Century American Poetics: Poets on the Art of Poetry." His next collection of essays, "Two Minds of a Western Poet," will be published in 2011.

Mason will serve as an advocate for poetry, literacy and literature at 10-12 events each year, including presenting the opening poem for the legislative session, visiting local schools, participating in Arts & Humanities Month and reading at literary festivals.

Colorado was the second state in the nation to appoint a poet laureate. Alice Polk Hill was appointed in 1919 and served until she died in 1921. Nellie Burget Miller served 1923-1952; Margaret Clyde Robertson served 1952-1954; Milford E. Shields served 1954-1975; and Thomas Hornsby Ferril served 1979-1988. Mary Crow has served 14 years, from 1996-2010.

About Colorado College
Colorado College is a nationally prominent, four-year liberal arts college that was founded in Colorado Springs in 1874. The college operates on the innovative Block Plan, in which its 1,975 undergraduate students study one course at a time in intensive 3½-week blocks. The college also offers a master of arts in teaching degree. For more information, visit www.ColoradoCollege.edu <http://www.ColoradoCollege.edu>.