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C. J. Stevens

American author (1927–2021) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Clysle Julius (C.J.) Stevens (8 December 1927 – 9 December 2021[5]) was a writer.[2][1] He published over 30 books (including poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and biography), and was published in hundreds of magazines. The United States Library of Congress contains a special collection of his works.[3]

Quick Facts Clysle Julius (C.J.) Stevens, Born ...
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In 1998, the Portland Press Herald described him as "versatile and charismatic".[6] Stevens also translated others' works into English from other languages, including Dutch and Flemish.[3][7]

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Biography

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Early life

Stevens was born in Smithfield, Maine, the son of Earl Wade and Leonora May (Witham) Stevens.[8] He had his first poem published at age 13 in the Waterville Morning Sentinel, a Maine newspaper.[8]

As a young man he enlisted in the U.S. Army in February 1946 for the duration of the war, plus six months.[9] Afterward, he earned a B.S. in 1953 from Teachers College of Connecticut (now known as Central Connecticut State University).[2]

Writing career

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C. J. Stevens, Author

The United States Library of Congress contains a special collection of Stevens' works.[3] He published over 30 books, including poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and biography.[3] He said he submitted his poems "haphazardly" over the years to publishers, being a contributor to The Nation, Prairie Schooner, Literary Review, Modern Age, The Post-Crescent, and other publications.[10][11][12][13] By 1990, his poems and stories had also been published in 400 magazines, and more than 50 anthologies and texts.[3]

Poetry

Stevens wrote nearly 20 books of poetry. His first book of published poetry, and his only book published under the name "Clysle Stevens", was Loose Stones: First Poems, published by Hitchcock Press in 1954.[2] He published his next 13 books of poetry under the pen name "John Stevens Wade".

These were

  • Climbs of Uncertainty (New Athenaeum Press, 1961),[2]
  • Northeast (Hammond Press, 1963),
  • Two from Where it Snows, with John Judson (Northeast Chapbook Series, 1964),[2]
  • Drowning in The Dark (The Group, 1965),[2]
  • Small World (The Group, 1965),
  • Gallery: Drawings by Tom Ricciardi (Poet & Printer, 1969),[2]
  • The Backhouse (Funch Press, 1971),
  • The Cats in the Colosseum (Crossing Press, 1972, ISBN 0-912278-23-4),[2]
  • Well Water and Daisies (Northeast/Juniper Books, 1974, ISBN 1-55780-012-X),[2][14]
  • Each to His Own Ground (Juniper Press, 1976, ISBN 1-55780-053-7),[2]
  • Some of My Best Friends Are Trees (Sparrow Press, 1978)[2]
  • Homecoming (Icarus Press, 1979),[2] and
  • Up North (Juniper Press, 1980, ISBN 1-55780-061-8)[2]

He then began publishing under the name "C.J. Stevens", and produced

His poetry also appeared in the works of other people. For example, his poetry appeared, under the name John Stevens Wade, in

His poetry also appeared under "C. J. Stevens" in

Short stories

Stevens wrote two collections of short stories, both under the name C. J. Stevens. They are The Folks from Greeley's Mill and other Maine Stories ( J. Wade, 1992, ISBN 0-9623934-8-7), and Confessions: New and Selected Stories (John Wade, 1998, ISBN 1-882425-10-3).

Non-fiction

Stevens and his wife began prospecting in about 1970, and found gold in more than 30 rivers.[3] When his book The Next Bend in the River: Gold Mining in Maine (John Wade, 1989, ISBN 0-9623934-0-1) about discovering gold in Maine was published, many readers were amazed to learn that gold nuggets can be found by panning certain rivers.[2][15][16][17][18]

He also wrote the related book, Memoirs of a Maine Gold Hunter (John Wade, 2005, ISBN 1-882425-22-7), about panning for gold and searching for treasure.[19]

He wrote additional non-fiction including:

In his book about the supernatural in Maine, he d out-of-body experiences, witches, haunted houses, alien abductions, and people from Maine who faced the supernatural.[2] in 2002.[20]

Biographies

Stevens wrote a series of biographies starting in the late 1980s. Two were biographies connected to a period in D. H. Lawrence's life in Cornwall

In 2000 Stevens published a biography of the American writer Erskine Caldwell,

in 2004 a biography of English primitive artist Bryan Pearce.

Translations

Stevens also had a career as a translator, translating a number of books to English from Dutch and Flemish. Under the name John Stevens Wade he translated Terrena Troubahi, by Paul De Vree (Ganglia Press) in 1960, Poems from the Lowlands (Small Pond) from the Dutch and Flemish in 1967,[2][21] Thirty-One New Poets (Schreiber (editor), Hill & Wang Pub, 1968, ISBN 0-8090-0090-3), Waterland: A Gathering from Holland (Holmgangers Press, 1977, translator from the Dutch),[2] and From the Flemish of Gaston Burssens (Arts End Books, 1982, ISBN 0-933292-11-2)[2] Subsequently, translating under the name C. J. Stevens, he translated One Score-And-Two Years of Uncommon Fanfare (John Edward Westburg (editor), Westburg Asso Pub, 1986, ISBN 0-87423-040-3), and collected and translated Poems from Holland and Belgium (John Wade, 1999, ISBN 1-882425-13-8).

Career outside writing

Over his lifetime, Stevens had many jobs: as a farmer, deliveryman, selectman, and assistant manager at Carvel Hall, an Annapolis landmark.[22] 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.[2][23]

His interest in images led him to become a poet and a writer. It also led to a second career in painting, and along with his writing, he compiles a photographer's portfolio.[24] Photographs of his paintings may be seen at this photography site. His biographies and other non-fiction are unusual, in that in all cases he had access to either the subject or to someone intimate with the subject–a wife, friend, lover, or mother.[24]

Stevens also lectured and traveled extensively, living in Phillips, Maine, in Weld, Maine, in Temple, Maine, and in South Carolina with his Dutch wife Stella Rachel (née Taschlicky) Stevens, whom he married on June 13, 1954.[1][3][4][8][25][26]

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References

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