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===Career outside writing=== | ===Career outside writing=== | ||
Over his lifetime, Stevens has had many jobs: as a Professor at The ] (who retired from the University to write and lecture), farmer, deliveryman, selectman, and assistant manager at Carvel Hall, an ] landmark.<ref>, ''Sun Journal'', October 21, 2989</ref> Stevens lived overseas for five years, two of those in the Netherlands, moving approximately every six months to countries including Ireland, England, Portugal, and ].<ref name="waterborolibrary1"/> |
Over his lifetime, Stevens has had many jobs: as a Professor at The ] (who retired from the University to write and lecture), farmer, deliveryman, selectman, and assistant manager at Carvel Hall, an ] landmark.<ref>, ''Sun Journal'', October 21, 2989</ref> Stevens lived overseas for five years, two of those in the Netherlands, moving approximately every six months to countries including Ireland, England, Portugal, and ].<ref name="waterborolibrary1"/> | ||
He has always liked images, and this pushed him to be a poet and a writer. His love of images led to a second career in painting; and along with his writing, he is working on a photographer's portfolio. His biographies and other non-fiction are unusual, in that in all cases he has either had access to the subject himself or to someone intimate with the subject–a wife, friend, lover, or mother. | He has always liked images, and this pushed him to be a poet and a writer. His love of images led to a second career in painting; and along with his writing, he is working on a photographer's portfolio. His biographies and other non-fiction are unusual, in that in all cases he has either had access to the subject himself or to someone intimate with the subject–a wife, friend, lover, or mother. | ||
In addition, Stevens has lectured extensively. He has lived in ], in ], and in South Carolina with his Dutch wife Stella.<ref name="google2198"/><ref></ref><ref>, ''Sun Journal'', September 7, 1995</ref><ref name="google1"/> | In addition, Stevens has lectured extensively. He has lived in ], in ], in ], and in South Carolina with his Dutch wife Stella Rachel (née Taschlisky) Stevens, whom he married on June 13, 1954.<ref name="google2198"/><ref></ref><ref>, ''Sun Journal'', September 7, 1995</ref><ref name="google1"/> | ||
==Works== | ==Works== |
Revision as of 19:46, 10 July 2010
Clysle Julius (C.J.) Stevens | |
---|---|
Pen name | John Stevens Wade |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | American |
Genre | Poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and biography |
Spouse | Stella Stevens |
Website | |
http://www.johnwade.com |
Clysle Julius (C.J.) Stevens (born in Smithfield, Maine, on December 8, 1927) is a writer. He has published 19 books, including poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and biography, been published in hundreds of magazines, and the United States Library of Congress contains a special collection of his works.
In 1998, the Portland Press Herald described him as "versatile and charismatic". Stevens has translated from other languages as well, including Dutch and Flemish.
Biography
Early life
Stevens, the son of Earl Wade and Leonora May (Witham) Stevens, had his first poem published at age 13 in the Waterville Morning Sentinel, a Maine newspaper. As a young man he signed up for the U.S. Army immediately after Pearl Harbor. Afterward, he earned a B.S in 1953 from Connecticut State Teachers College (now Central Connecticut State College).
Writing career
Stevens has published 19 books, including poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and biography. By 1990, his poems and stories had also been published in 400 magazines, and more than 50 anthologies and texts. In addition, the United States Library of Congress contains a special collection of his works.
He and his wife began prospecting in about 1970, and found gold in more than 30 rivers. When his book The Next Bend in the River: Gold Mining in Maine was published in 1989, many readers of his book were amazed to learn that gold nuggets can be found by panning certain rivers. He also wrote the related 2005 book, Memoirs of a Maine Gold Hunter.
The Supernatural Side of Maine. He is writing a combination of biography and novel.
Career outside writing
Over his lifetime, Stevens has had many jobs: as a Professor at The University of Wisconsin (who retired from the University to write and lecture), farmer, deliveryman, selectman, and assistant manager at Carvel Hall, an Annapolis landmark. Stevens lived overseas for five years, two of those in the Netherlands, moving approximately every six months to countries including Ireland, England, Portugal, and Malta.
He has always liked images, and this pushed him to be a poet and a writer. His love of images led to a second career in painting; and along with his writing, he is working on a photographer's portfolio. His biographies and other non-fiction are unusual, in that in all cases he has either had access to the subject himself or to someone intimate with the subject–a wife, friend, lover, or mother.
In addition, Stevens has lectured extensively. He has lived in Phillips, Maine, in Weld, Maine, in Temple, Maine, and in South Carolina with his Dutch wife Stella Rachel (née Taschlisky) Stevens, whom he married on June 13, 1954.
Works
Poetry
- Loose Stones: First Poems, Hitchcock Press, 1954, under the name Clysle Stevens
- Climbs of Uncertainty, New Athenaeum Press, 1961, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Northeast, Hammond Press, 1963, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Two from Where it Snows, Northeast Chapbook Series, 1964, with John Judson, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Drowning in The Dark, 1965
- Small World, The Group, 1965, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Gallery: Drawings by Tom Ricciardi, Poet & Printer, 1969, under the name John Stevens Wade
- The Backhouse, Funch Press, 1971, under the name John Stevens Wade
- The Cats in the Colosseum, Crossing Press, 1972, ISBN 0912278234, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Well Water and Daisies, Northeast/Juniper Books, 1974, ISBN 155780012X, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Each to His Own Ground, Juniper Press, 1976, ISBN 1557800537, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Some of My Best Friends Are Trees, Sparrow Press, 1978, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Homecoming, Icarus Press, 1979, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Up North, Juniper Press, 1980, ISBN 1557800618 under the name John Stevens Wade
- The Uncertain Cartographer: selected poems of CJ Stevens, Oracle Press, 1981
- Borderland Traveller: Poems, Oracle Press, 1985, ISBN 0881270385
- Beginnings and Other Poems, J. Wade, 1989, ISBN 0962393436
- Circling at the Chain's Length, J. Wade, 1991, ISBN 0962393444
- Hang-Ups: poems J. Wade, 1993, ISBN 1882425014
- Selected Poems, J. Wade, 1995, ISBN 1882425049
- Shepherd without Sheep, John Wade, 2001, ISBN 1882425154
- Collected Poems, John Wade, 2002, ISBN 1882425197
Stories
- The Folks from Greeley's Mill and other Maine Stories, J. Wade, 1992, ISBN 0962393487
- Confessions: New and Selected Stories, John Wade, 1998, ISBN 1882425103
Biographies
- The Cornish Nightmare (D. H. Lawrence in Cornwall), Whitston Pub. Co., 1988, ISBN 0878753486, D.H. Lawrence and the war years
- Lawrence at Tregerthen (D. H. Lawrence), Whitston Pub. Co., 1988, ISBN 0878753486
- Storyteller: A Life of Erskine Caldwell, John Wade, 2000, ISBN 1882425111
- The Miracle of Bryan Pearce, John Wade, 2004, ISBN 1882425200, brain-damaged boy who became nationally acclaimed artist
Other non-fiction
- The Next Bend in the River: Gold Mining in Maine, John Wade, 1989, ISBN 0962393401, about gold in Maine
- One Day with a Goat Herd, J. Wade, 1992, ISBN 0962393460, about goat herding
- Maine Mining Adventures, John Wade, 1994, ISBN 1882425030
- The Buried Treasures of Maine, J. Wade, 1997, ISBN 188242509X
- The Supernatural Side of Maine, John Wade Pub, 2002, ISBN 1882425162, out-of-body experiences, witches, haunted houses, alien abductions, and people from Maine who faced the supernatural
- Memoirs of a Maine Gold Hunter, John Wade, 2005, ISBN 1882425227, panning for gold and searching for treasure
Translations
- Poems from the Lowlands, 1967, translator from the Dutch and Flemish, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Waterland: A Gathering from Holland, Holmgangers Press, 1977, translator from the Dutch under the name John Stevens Wade
- From the Flemish of Gaston Burssens, Arts End Books, 1982, ISBN 0933292112, translator under the name John Stevens Wade
- Poems from Holland and Belgium, John Wade, 1999, ISBN 1882425138, collected and translated by Stevens
In others' works
Poetry
- 28 Poems, Sumac Press, 1966, under the name John Stevens Wade
- Flowering after Frost: the anthology of contemporary New England poetry", Michael McMahon (editor), Branden Books, 1975, ISBN 0828315477, under the name John Stevens Wade
- So many heads, so many wits, Janet Sobieski, Wolfgang Mieder (editors), Dept. of German and Russian, University of Vermont, 2005, ISBN 0977073106, under the name John Stevens Wade
- The Art of Bicycling: A Treasury of Poems, Justin Daniel Belmont (editor), Breakaway Books, 2005, ISBN 1891369563
References
- ^ Waterboro Public Library. Waterborolibrary.org. Retrieved on 2010-07-10.
- ^ "Thrill of Gold Mining is in the Hunt, says Author", Sun Journal, June 4, 1990. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- ^ The Art of Bicycling: A Treasury of Poems. Justin Daniel Belmont (editor). Breakaway Books, 2005, ISBN 1891369563. Retrieved on July 10, 2010.
- "C.J. Stevens'`Buried Treasures'; Mines Fertile Fields in Maine". Portland Press Herald. February 15, 1998. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- "C.J. Stevens' New Book on Nearly Two Centuries of Maine Mining a Real Gem". Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel. September 25, 1994. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- "Nugget of truth in 'them thar Maine hills'; Persistence can pay off when panning for golf in the Swift River valley". Bangor Daily News. September 2, 1995. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- "Farmington, Maine; Bustling retreat nestled in forest". Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN). December 22, 1996. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- "TV Show to Focus on Hedgehog Hill", Sun Journal, October 27, 1989, accessed July 10, 2010
- "Of Treasure & Trash". The New York Sun. July 14, 2006. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- Dana Wilde (January 20, 2003). "Weird facts of Maine cataloged". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
- "Retired Professor Pans for Gold in Maine", Sun Journal, October 21, 2989
- "Author to Talk on Gold Mining", Sun Journal, May 28, 1990, accessed July 10, 2010
- Lisa Price, "Voices for Blind Focuses on Maine Authors", Sun Journal, September 7, 1995