Philip Schultz

Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Philip Schultz has been teaching creative writing for almost five decades. He founded The Writers Studio in 1987 after spending four years as the director of New York University’s graduate creative writing program, which he also founded. Schultz has taught undergraduate and graduate fiction, poetry, literature and craft classes at a variety of universities including Tufts, the University of Massachusetts at Boston and Columbia. He won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Failure (Harcourt 2007). His most recent book, The Wherewithal, a novel in verse, was released in 2014 by W.W. Norton, which will publish his new collection, Luxury, in January 2018. He is also the author of the influential memoir My Dyslexia (Norton 2011). His six other poetry collections are The God Of Loneliness (Harcourt 2010), Living in the Past (Harcourt 2004), The Holy Worm of Praise (Harcourt 2002), the chapbook My Guardian Angel Stein (1986), Deep Within the Ravine (Viking 1984, recipient of The Academy of American Poets’ Lamont Prize) and Like Wings (Viking 1978, winner of an American Academy & Institute of Arts and Letters Award as well as a National Book Award nominee). His work has been published in The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Five Points, The Gettysburg Review, The Paris Review and Slate, among other magazines, and he is the recipient of a 2005 Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry. He has also received awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Academy of American Poets, as well as the Levinson Prize from Poetry magazine.

Prize anthology mentions

Pushcart (Poetry) 2011

Pushcart (Poetry) 2013*

Best American Poetry 2019

* indicates notable/special mention

Send questions, comments and corrections to info@creativewritingmfa.info.

Disclaimer: No endorsement of these ratings should be implied by the writers and writing programs listed on this site, or by the editors and publishers of Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, Best American Poetry, The O. Henry Prize Stories and The Pushcart Prize Anthology.