Stephen
Elliot Dunn (June
24, 1939 – June 24, 2021) was an American poet and educator who
authored twenty-one collections of poetry. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for his
2001 collection, Different Hours, and received an Academy
Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He
also won three National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing
Fellowships, Guggenheim Fellowship, and Rockefeller
Foundations Fellowship. Dunn was born in Forest Hills, Queens, New York on
June 24, 1939. His parents were Ellen (Fleishman) and Charles Dunn. He
attended Forest Hills High School,
where he played basketball. After graduating in 1957, he studied history
at Hofstra University. He played guard for its basketball team and
was part of the squad that had a 23–1 record during the 1959–60 season.[7] He
was nicknamed "Radar" for his ability to make jump shots. Dunn
graduated from Hofstra University in 1962 and went on to
play one season for the Williamsport Billies of the Eastern Basketball Association.
He then worked in advertising until he was 26, when he traveled to Spain to pen
a novel, which he ended up discarding. He subsequently undertook postgraduate studies at Syracuse University, obtaining a master's
degree in creative
writing in 1970. Dunn began teaching at Stockton University in 1974 and published
his first full-length collection entitled Looking for Holes in the
Ceiling that same year.[7] He
continued working at Stockton for approximately three decades, and also taught
at Wichita State University, University of Washington, Columbia University, University of Michigan, and Princeton University. A
collection of essays about Dunn's poetry was published in 2013. He finished his
last book, The Not Yet Fallen World, shortly before his death. It
is scheduled to be published in May 2022, and was viewed by Dunn as the
best work he had written.