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Jana Harris

Biography

Jana Harris

A poet, novelist, short story writer, and essayist, Jana Harris’s award-winning books include MANHATTAN AS A SECOND LANGUAGEPoems ( Harper & Row) and OH HOW CAN I KEEP ON SINGING? Voices of Pioneer Women, Poems (Ontario Press, Princeton), both Pulitzer Prize nominees. OH HOW CAN I KEEP ON SINGING? was a Washington State Governor’s Writers Award winner, a PEN West Center Award finalist, and has been adapted for educational television, as well as for the stage. Her novel ALASKA was a Book-of-the-Month Club alternate selection. Born in San Francisco and raised in the Pacific Northwest, she worked for six years as director of Writers in Performance at the Manhattan Theatre Club in New York.  She now lives with her husband in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains, where they raise horses. Ms. Harris teaches creative writing at the University of Washington where she is editor and founder of Switched-on Gutenberg, one of the first electronic poetry journals of the English-speaking world. Her seventh book of poems, THE DUST OF EVERYDAY LIFE, an epic concerning the lives of forgotten Northwest pioneers, (Sasquatch) won the 1998 Andres Berger Award. Her second novel, THE PEARL OF RUBY CITY was released from St. Martin’s Press.  In 2001 she won a Pushcart Prize for poetry. Jana is a member of the National Book Critics Circle, PEN, Poetry Society of America, and AWP. Recently she has been writer-in-residence at the University of Wyoming, St. Catherine’s College (St. Paul, MN), and Washington State University.  Her eighth collection of poetry WE NEVER SPEAK OF IT, Idaho-Wyoming Poems, 1889 (Ontario) was published in 2003 and nominated for the Kingsley Tufts Award. She won a Reader’s Choice Award in poetry from Prairie Schooner in 2004.

Jana Harris

Books by Jana Harris

by Jana Harris

When Jana Harris moved to Washington State with her husband and fulfilled her dream of having a horse farm, she never expected to encounter True Colors –-- a beautiful, traumatized mare who arrived terrified and damaged, and soon became the heart and soul of the farm.