Phillip Provance

Woodstock, IL 60098
Phone: 
262-498-4539

Author's Bio

Phill Provance formerly served as Executive Editor at MediaTier Ltd. and is Editor at Large for Poets at Work and honorary Associate Editor for Danse Macabre online literary journal, as well as author of the comic strip "The Adventures of Ace Hoyle" (MediaTier Ltd. 2008-2010). His journalism, poetry and prose have appeared in or are forthcoming from The Baltimore Sun, InQuest Gamer magazine, Wizard World Online, The Crab Creek Review, Third Wednesday, Orbis, Word Riot, decomP, and many others. In 2017 alone, his poem "The Stenographers Union" was selected by Diane Seuss as one of two finalists for the Crab Creek Review Prize, his "Of Beauty & Things" was selected by Bill Brown as one of three Honorable Mention finalists for the Ron Rash Award, his "Hours," "My Old Man" and "Given the Day" were awarded the Sheila-na-gig Quarterly Prize, his "Why the Coyote Doesn't Just Order Chinese" placed in the Shadow Award, and his "Triangle" was shortlisted for the Fortnight Prize. More recently, his "Triangle" was selected by Maurice Manning as a Finalist for the 2018 Ron Rash Award, and his "Gen Y Love Poem" was selected as a Finalist by Arisa White for the 2018 Jane Underwood Prize. His first poetry chapbook, "The Day the Sun Rolled Out of the Sky," was published by Cy Gist Press in December 2010 and received three Pushcart nominations and one nomination each for the Best of the Web and Best of the Net for its contents from the magazines in which these poems previously appeared, and several of his poems have also been translated into Vietnamese by Vietnamese New Formalist Khe Iem. He is also a regular presenter at academic conferences on the topics of Appalachian Literature and Formalism, and his critical essay "Warring with Whitmania: 'Second Wave New Formalism' as a Theoretically and Practically Coherent Curative to Free Verse Absolutism" was anthologized in The Poetic Legacy of Whitman, Williams, and Ginsberg (PCCC 2018). His first full-length non-fiction work, A Brief History of Woodbridge, New Jersey, is forthcoming from The History Press in April 2019. He previously studied English literature at Oxford University and Bethany College and journalism at NYU and holds an MFA in Poetry and Fiction from WV Wesleyan College. A native Appalachian born and raised in Fayette Co., Pennsylvania, he now lives near Chicago, Illinois, and, when not writing, enjoys spending time with his son, Ledger.

Publications and Prizes

Prizes Won: 
"Gen Y Love Poem" (Third Wednesday 2019) selected by Arisa White as a Finalist for the Writing Salon's 2018 Jane Underwood Prize (2019) and selected by Atrocious Poets as a finalist for the OCOP 2019 Gwendolyn Brooks Prize; "Triangle" selected by Maurice Manning as a Finalist for the Broad River Review's 2018 Rash Award (2019); "Given the Day" nominated by Sheila-na-Gig for the 2018 Best of the Net Award (2018); "Of Beauty & Things" selected by Bill Brown as a an Honorable Mention Finalist for the Broad River Review's 2017 Rash Award (2018); "The Stenographers Union" selected as a finalist by Diane Seuss for the Crab Creek Review's Crab Creek Review Prize (2017); "Why the Coyote Doesn't Just Order Chinese" placed in the top 10 of Molotov Cocktail's Shadow Award (2017); "Triangle" shortlisted for the fourth Fortnight Prize by Eyewear Publishing (2017); "Hours," "My Old Man" and "Given the Day" awarded the Sheila-na-gig Online Quarterly Prize (2017); Pushcart nomination by Asian Cha for "St. Petersburg Has Many Churches" (2011); Pushcart nomination by Cy Gist Press for "Sir Roger Penrose Finds God" (2011); Pushcart nomination by Flamma Bombo for "I Have Been an Empty Church" (2011); Best of the Web nomination by Asian Cha for "St. Petersburg Has Many Churches" (2011); Best of the Net nomination by Asian Cha for "St. Petersburg Has Many Churches" (2011)

Personal Favorites

What I'm Reading Now: 
Selected Poems by John Ashbery
,
Satan Says by Sharon Olds
,
Olives by A.E. Stallings
,
Gitanjali by Rabindranath Tagore
,
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
Favorite Books: 
Love is a Dog from Hell by Charles Bukowski, Crow by Ted Hughes, The Night Abraham Called to the Stars by Robert Bly, Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda, Sonnets to Orpheus by Rainer Maria Rilke, Ariel by Sylvia Plath, Another Time by W.H. Auden, Geography III by Elizabeth Bishop, Return to the City of White Donkeys by James Tate, and The World Doesn't End by Charles Simic
Favorite Authors: 
Bukowski, Bly, Hughes, Neruda, Auden, Rilke, Plath, Bishop, Roethke, Tate, Simic, Follain

More Information

Listed as: 
Creative Nonfiction Writer, Poet
Gives readings: 
Yes
Travels for readings: 
Yes
Identifies as: 
Appalachian, British, Caucasian, Celtic American, Christian, Disabled, English American, European American, French, Irish American, Italian American, Scotch-Irish American
Prefers to work with: 
Adults, At Risk Youth, Children, Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender, Homeless people, Hospital patients, Mentally Ill, Naturalists/Environmentalists, People with Disabilities, Seniors, Teachers, Teenagers, Veterans
Fluent in: 
English
Born in: 
Mt. Pleasant
Raised in: 
Connellsville, PA
work_excerpt: 
"The Coyote, in fact, is not a Coyote but a man, and all the Acme shit and the Road Runner himself are just figments of his imagination. Really, his name is Bob. He’s the lone survivor of a nuclear war. He whips his body wildly at an imagined bird, imagining himself an equally small canine. It’s ridiculous, he knows. But what else is there to do when you are a meter underground and the last of your kind? You might as well dream big or go home." (from "Why the Coyote Doesn't Just Order Chinese," The Molotov Cocktail, 2017)
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Last updated: Mar 28, 2019