Lew Sarett

Born: 05/16/1888   Chicago
Died: 08/17/1954
Parents: Rudolph Sarett, Jeanette Sarett
Spouse: Nargaret (1st), Juliet (2nd), Alma (3rd)
Children: Lewis, Helen Stockdale

Writings

Image Title Genre Audience Publisher Date
Covenant with earth; a selection from the poetry of Lew Sarett, including six poems not previously published. With a foreword by Carl Sandburg
- Selected and arranged by Alma Johnson Sarett.
Poetry Adult Gainesville, University of Florida Press 1956
Speech: a High School Course
- With James H. McBurney (Publication Years: 1943, 1947, 1951, 1956)
Non Fiction Teen Houghton Mifflin 1943
Collected Poems Poetry Adult Holt 1941
Modern Speeches on Basic Issues Non Fiction Adult Houghton Mifflin 1939
Basic Principles of Speech
- With W. T. Foster (Publication Years: 1936, 1946, 1958, 1966)
Non Fiction Adult Houghton Mifflin 1936
Personal power through speech
- Co-author: William T. Foster
Non Fiction Adult Houghton Mifflin company 1936
Wings Against the Moon Poetry Adult Holt 1931
Slow Smoke Poetry Adult Holt 1925
The Box of God Poetry Adult Holt 1922
Many many moons; a book of wilderness poems, by Lew Sarett; with an introduction by Carl Sandburg. Poetry Adult Holt 1920
What is the aim or goal of your writing: " At an early age, he moved to Marquette, Michigan where he learned a good deal about the woods." At 12, he and his mother moved back to Chicago, where he supported her and himself by a variety of menial jobs. This time of frustration heightened his feeling for poetry and nature. During high school in Benton Harbor, he spent all his free time in the woods. 2nd ed. says, "A few of us set out to devote our lives to re-creating for others the beauty of wild Amerca; to writing much and to speaking much of American backwoods and frontiers, of wolves and deer and bear, of loggers and voyageurs and Indians. I have written about these simplefolk of earth because I have lived with them, I know, I find pleasure in their companionship, and my spirit belongs to them. If these poems, therefore, convey to others a slight measure of the wild beauty of America, of her mountain ways and forest life, and if in some degree it gives others pleasure, I shall be glad. If it does not thus succeed--it was Walter Savage Landor who said, "There is delight in singing, though none hear beside the singer.'" Said about him "even though Lew was born in Chicago and lived most of his life in Illinois, he thought of Michigan as his home state."

May inquiries be sent to you about doing workshops, readings: No

Donated books to the Authors & Illustrators database project: No

Skills:
Author
Poet

Education:

Degree Institution Location Date
Ottawa,Ontario,Canada

Career:

Position Organization Location Date
Visiting Professor University of Florida Gainesville 1951 -1954
Professor Northwestern University Evanston 1920 -1953
Professor University of Illinois Chicago 1914 -1920
Forest ranger, woodsman, wilderness guide
Poet, writer, lecturer

Other Resources:

Last Modified On: 1/28/2015 12:00:00 AM