Caption: Hilda Raz
Hilda Raz 

Hilda Raz

Series: New Letters on the Air
From: New Letters on the Air
Length: 00:29:00

Poet and editor of PRAIRIE SCHOONER literary magazine Hilda Raz discusses the dual acts of writing and editing. Raz also talks about coming to terms with her child’s transexuality, and how it has shaped her own work. She reads from WHAT HAPPENS, ALL ODD AND SPLENDID, and TRANS. Read the full description.

Raz_hilda_small A literary editor since she graduated from college, Hilda Raz became a public poet after she was sent by Prairie Schooner to the Bread Loaf writing conference to represent the magazine, and there, found her own poetic voice as well.  Raz talks about balancing the roles of editing, teaching and writing, and her books that record her experiences with motherhood, surviving breast cancer and coming to terms with her child's transexuality. She reads from her books,  All Odd and Splendid, What Happens, and  Trans.

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

Also in the New Letters on the Air series

Caption: Sherwin Bitsui

American Book Award-winning Navajo poet Sherwin Bitsui (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

Sherwin Bitsui reads from FLOOD SONG, his poetry collection that won the 2010 American Book Award and the PEN Open Book Award. Raised in a border town on the Fort Defiance ...
Caption: Anne Enright

Man Booker Prize-winning author Anne Enright (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

At the Kansas City Public Library, Irish author Anne Enright discusses her dark but humorous approach to writing about love, desire, death and family, and explains how having ...
Caption: Luis Alberto Urrea

American Book Award-winner Luis Alberto Urrea (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

Known for his book THE DEVIL'S HIGHWAY, a Pulitzer Prize finalist for nonfiction, and his American Book Award-winning memoir, NOBODY'S SON, Luis Alberto Urrea is also the ...
Piece image

Missouri Poets of the Midwest Poets Series (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

Discover the poetic variety of Missouri in this National Poetry Month special featuring readings from the Midwest Poets Series by three very different Missouri poets: Walter ...
Caption: Sonia Sanchez

Renowned poet, playwright, and activist Sonia Sanchez (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

One of the most important writers of the Black Arts Movement, Sonia Sanchez, reads from her 2010 books, a collection of poetry called MORNING HAIKU, and I'M BLACK WHEN I'M ...
Piece image

Women Writers and Community (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

In this special anthology, we explore how women writers foster community across boundaries. Novelist Lisa See shares stories about Chinese women writers of the 19th century; ...
Caption: Debra Brenegan

Novelist Debra Brenegan (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

Debra Brenegan's debut novel, SHAME THE DEVIL, explores the fascinating true story of Sara Payson Willis, who wrote under the pseudonym "Fanny Fern" during the 1800s. ...
Caption: Jeanne Marie Beaumont

Poet Jeanne Marie Beaumont (00:29:01)
From: New Letters on the Air

Poet Jeanne Marie Beaumont's books include CURIOUS CONDUCT and PLACEBO EFFECTS, and her 2010 collection, BURNING OF THE THREE FIRES. She assembles everyday objects, fairy ...
Caption: James Richardson

Poet and aphorist James Richardson (00:29:00)
From: New Letters on the Air

Poet James Richardson has called himself an "accidental aphorist," but his well-crafted works are no accident. He reads from his 2010 book, BY THE NUMBERS: POEMS AND ...
Caption: Peggy Shumaker

Alaska's State Writer Laureate, 2010-2012, Peggy Shumaker (00:29:00)
From: New Letters on the Air

Peggy Shumaker, Alaska's State Writer Laureate, 2010-2012, is adept at capturing the beauty of landscapes, both internal and external. She reads from her poetry collection ...

Piece Description

A literary editor since she graduated from college, Hilda Raz became a public poet after she was sent by Prairie Schooner to the Bread Loaf writing conference to represent the magazine, and there, found her own poetic voice as well.  Raz talks about balancing the roles of editing, teaching and writing, and her books that record her experiences with motherhood, surviving breast cancer and coming to terms with her child's transexuality. She reads from her books,  All Odd and Splendid, What Happens, and  Trans.

1 Comment Atom Feed

User image

All Odd and Splendid

For decades Hilda Raz has been Editor-in-Chief of what is perhaps the most venerable literary quarterly in the Midwest, “Prairie Schooner.” More than 40 years ago when Raz’s predecessor, Bernice Slote, first accepted one of my poems for “Prairie Schooner,” I treated myself to a schooner of beer. I won’t mention how I uproariously celebrated my second acceptance from Slote.

Raz joins the ranks of topnotch writers interviewed in “New Letters on the Air.” It’s good to hear her cheery voice chirp about a somber subject, her daughter Sarah’s becoming a transsexual, changing her name to Aaron and becoming a scientist, not a poet like Raz. It’s also bracing to hear Raz speak about her son John’s heart condition, a hole in his heart, in the same spot as Raz’s breast cancer.

The sangfroid of a woman who has survived what could be catastrophes—and, in D.H. Lawrence’s words, has “come through”—emerges here. Raz has continued to be drawn as a writer to poetry. In some of the simplest, most effective words I’ve heard she expresses her passion for poems: “I love the line break. I love the push of an extended syntax from one long sentence through several, many many lines to see how long I can sustain it. I love the kind of toolkit that poets have to. . .shape their thoughts.”

Best of all, she reads a few of her own poems. My favorite, “Dishes,” describes an episode when she was pregnant. After a dinner of fresh lobster salad, she and a woman friend do the dishes, then go skinny-dipping, “Calling across a widening surface of silver water, calling and whispering and calling, ‘Sister, sister.’”

Broadcast History

This program originally uplinked to PRSS' Content Depot on August 28, 2009 for delivery to member stations.

Timing and Cues

INCUE: (music) "I'm a writer, so from the very first minute..."
OUTCUE: "...Thanks for listening to New Letters on the Air."

Additional Credits

New Letters on the Air is a production of the quarterly literary magazine, New Letters, and the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Partial financial support comes from the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Related Website

www.newletters.org/radio