This article will address the topic of Edwin Honig, which has generated great interest and debate in different areas. Edwin Honig is a topic that has captured the attention of experts and the general public, due to its relevance in the current context. Over time, Edwin Honig has been the subject of study, analysis and divergent opinions, which has enriched the discussion around this topic. In these lines, we aim to offer a panoramic and detailed view of Edwin Honig, with the aim of providing a broader and deeper understanding of its importance, implications and possible solutions.
Edwin Honig (September 3, 1919 – May 25, 2011) was an American poet, playwright, and translator.
Life
Honig was born in Brooklyn, New York. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1941 and, after Army service in Europe during World War II, a master’s in English from Wisconsin.
He published ten books of poetry, eight books of translation, five books of criticism and fiction, three books of plays.
He taught at Harvard University and Brown University, where he started the Graduate Writing Program, and was Emeritus Professor. He was on the Advisory Board of the Christopher Isherwood Foundation.
His work appeared in AGNI and Nedge magazines.
Professor Honig’s first wife, Charlotte, died in the early 1960s. His second marriage, to Margot Dennes, ended in divorce in the early 1980s.
Following an illness, cited by a family friend as complications from Alzheimer's disease, Honig died on May 25, 2011. Professor Honig's survivors include his sister, Lila Putnam, and his two adopted sons from his marriage to Ms. Dennes, Daniel (born 1965) and Jeremy (born 1967).
In 2012, filmmaker Alan Berliner completed a documentary feature film about Honig and Honig's loss of memory due to Alzheimer's titled, First Cousin Once Removed. Berliner's mother was Honig's first cousin. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival on October 9.
The Imminence of Love: Poems 1962-1992. 1993: Texas Center for Writers. September 1992. ISBN978-0-916092-16-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
Time and Again: Poems, 1940-1997. Philadelphia, PA: Xlibris. 2000. ISBN978-0-7388-9520-8.
Plays
The Widow (verse play), first produced in San Francisco, CA, 1953.
Calisto and Melibea (libretto; first produced in Davis, CA, 1979), Hellcoal Press (Providence, RI), 1972.
Ends of the World and Other Plays. Providence, RI: Copper Beech Press. 1983. ISBN0-914278-36-3.
Translations
Miguel de Cervantes (1960). The Cave of Salamanca. Crysalis.
Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Four Plays. Hill & Wang. 1961.
Miguel de Cervantes, Eight Interludes. New York, NY: New American Library. 1964. ISBN0-460-87751-8.