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Naomi Shihab Nye Papers

 Collection
Identifier: SWWC-133

Scope and Contents

Forty-eight document boxes and seven oversized boxes containing drafts, diaries and notebooks, photographic material, correspondence, and published material document the working life of poet, writer, and educator Naomi Shihab Nye (1952-). The collection has been arranged into seven series: Series I: Personal and Biographical; Series II: Works; Series III: Correspondence; Series IV: Instruction; Series V: Appearances and Awards; Series VI: Writings on Nye; and Series VII: Works by Others. Multiple drafts of published and unpublished songs, poems, short stories, and essays document Nye’s creative work from an early age through high school, college, and adulthood. While her own books are not as well documented, Nye’s work as editor of several poetry collections is well-documented. Of note is correspondence with long-time editor Virginia Duncan, which documents their working relationship as well as several projects. Also of note is Shihab Nye’s teaching work, documented via poems written by children, clippings, and reports.

Dates

  • 1955 - 2010s
  • Majority of material found within 1970s - 2010s

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Materials from the Wittliff Collections are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. The user assumes responsibility for determining copyright status, obtaining permission to publish, and abiding by U.S. copyright laws. https://www.thewittliffcollections.txstate.edu/research/visit/policies/publication.html

Biographical Note

Overview

Naomi Shihab Nye, acclaimed poet who also writes essays, songs, novels, and children’s books; edits poetry anthologies, and teaches poetry writing to youth and adults, was born in 1952 in St. Louis, Missouri to Aziz Shihab, a journalist and immigrant from Palestine, and Miriam Shihab, a Montessori teacher with a fine arts degree in painting. Nye has won numerous awards, including her first major recognition for Hugging the Jukebox as a National Poetry Series selection in 1982, critical acclaim for her 2011 short story collection There Is No Long Distance Now: Very Short Stories, Best Books for Young Adults several times from the American Library Association, and the gratitude of San Antonio Independent School District teachers for her poetry teaching packets. Nye is a Lannan Fellow, a Guggenheim Fellow, and Poetry Foundation Young People’s Poet Laureate for 2019-2021. Nye referred to herself as an “itinerant writer,” referring to the twelve years from 1974-1986 she spent teaching poetry in schools around Texas, while also writing and publishing. Nye lists her early influences, starting at age five, as Carl Sandberg, Margaret Wise Brown, Emily Dickinson, William Blake, and Louisa May Alcott. High School and college influences include Henry David Thoreau, Jack Kerouac, Gregory Corso, Gary Snyder, Gertrude Stein, and William Stafford; the last of whom Nye was able to work with, and she became friends with Stafford and his family.

Nye began writing early in life, publishing poetry at age 7 and continuing throughout her childhood. She wrote a column for teens in high school, and while teaching across Texas and the country she continued to write and publish. While teaching children poetry during the Gulf War, which began in 1991, Nye read the students poetry written by Iraqi writers, and ultimately edited This Same Sky: A Collection of Poems from Around the World, which includes 129 poets from 68 countries. Her young adult novel Going Going, 2005, is an attempt to recognize and document her neighborhood in San Antonio, Texas as it changed due to gentrification. This attention to the connection of people across the world, and their local daily realities, imbues Nye’s work. For Nye, the best audience is children, and she does not recognize a distinction between adult and children’s writing. While writing poetry for adults in the 1970s and 1980s, Nye searched for cross-over texts to use with the young people she was teaching. In the 1990s her editor Virginia Duncan suggested she write for children, which she did with Sitti’s Secrets, and continues today. To date, Nye has published audio recordings of songs she wrote and sang; children’s books, including picture books, poetry, poetry anthologies, and young adult novels; written and edited poetry for adults; served as a columnist for Organica and poetry editor for The Texas Observer; and contributed to numerous poetry anthologies and periodicals.

Early Life and Family

Naomi Nye and her family moved to Jerusalem when she was in high school, around 1965, where she met her father’s family for the first time. Nye attended a school that instructed in Arabic, Armenian, and English, though she only knew English. After the 6-Day War in 1967, she moved with her parents and brother to San Antonio, Texas, where she still resides. Nye graduated from high school in Texas without ever having attended a football game, and in honor of this accomplishment the football players bought her a mum. Nye attended Trinity University in San Antonio and lived with her parents. She graduated summa cum laude in 1974 with a degree in English and World Religions. In 1978, Nye married Michael Nye, a lawyer-turned-photographer, and in 1986 they had a son, Madison Cloudfeather. After college, Naomi and Michael traveled extensively in Mexico and Central America, which produced many unpublished poems from this time period, and in response to the Mexican American culture in San Antonio but lack of Mexican culture, the anthology The Tree Is Older than You Are: A Bilingual Gathering of Poems and Stories from Mexico with Paintings by Mexican Artists, decades later in 1995. Nye continued her high school work of essayist, writing numerous articles on topics from poetry to politics to housework for various newspapers, served as a columnist for Organica: A Magazine of Art and Activism.

Non-Writing Work

Nye was the most active employee at the Texas Commission on the Arts Writers in the Schools Project, working across Texas and publishing chapbook and poetry. She stopped this work in 1986 when her son was born. Nye also worked as a visiting instructor or writer in residence across US colleges and schools, as well as internationally, including at the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Hawai’i Manoa, the University of Texas at Austin and at San Antonio, and Texas State University in San Marcos. Nye also contributed to two PBS television series, the “Language of Life” with Bill in 1995, and “The United States of Poetry” in 1996. As a young woman in the late 1970s, Nye wrote songs and played guitar and sang in coffee shops and for schoolchildren. She recorded an album of children’s songs, Rutabaga-Roo in 1979, and an album of folk songs, Lullaby Raft in 1981. Nye writes for adults and children, is adept in multiple genres, finds home in her backyard and wherever in the world she travels, and teaches and edits anthologies as well as writes poetry. Similarly, she is both loving and accepting of all people, and a fierce activist for peace and justice.

Sources

List of Works

Works For Children

  • Sitti's Secrets, illustrated by Nancy Carpenter, Four Winds Press (New York, NY), 1994
  • Benito's Dream Bottle, illustrated by Yu Cha Pak, Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1995
  • Lullaby Raft, illustrated by Vivienne Flesher, Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1997.
  • Habibi (young-adult novel), Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1997.
  • Come with Me: Poems for a Journey, illustrated by Dan Yaccarino, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2000.
  • Nineteen Varieties of Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East, HarperCollins (New York, NY), 2002.
  • Baby Radar, illustrated by Nancy Carpenter, HarperCollins (New York, NY), 2003.
  • A Maze Me: Poems for Girls, illustrated by Terre Maher, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2005.
  • Going Going (young-adult novel), Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2005.
  • Honeybee: Poems and Short Prose, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2008.
  • The Turtle of Oman (novel), illustrated by Betsy Peterschmidt, Greenwillow Books, an imprint of Harper Collins Publishers (New York, NY), 2014.


Works For Children; Editor
  • This Same Sky: A Collection of Poems from Around the World, Four Winds Press (New York, NY), 1992.
  • The Tree Is Older than You Are: A Bilingual Gathering of Poems and Stories from Mexico with Paintings by Mexican Artists, Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1995.
  • (With Paul B. Janeczko) I Feel a Little Jumpy around You: A Book of Her Poems and His Poems Collected in Pairs, Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1996./li>
  • The Space between Our Footsteps: Poems and Paintings from the Middle East, Simon & Schuster (New York, NY), 1998, published as The Flag of Childhood: Poems from the Middle East, Aladdin Paperbacks (New York, NY), 2002.
  • What Have You Lost?, photographs by husband, Michael Nye, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 1999.
  • Salting the Ocean: One Hundred Poems by Young Poets, illustrated by Ashley Bryan, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2000.
  • Is This Forever, or What? Poems and Paintings from Texas, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2004.

Works For Adults

  • Tattooed Feet, Texas Portfolio (Texas City, TX), 1977.
  • Eye-to-Eye, Texas Portfolio (Texas City, TX), 1978.
  • Different Ways to Pray, Breitenbush Publications (Portland, OR), 1980.
  • On the Edge of the Sky, Iguana (Madison, WI), 1981.
  • Hugging the Jukebox, Dutton (New York, NY), 1982.
  • Yellow Glove, Breitenbush Books (Portland, OR), 1986.
  • Invisible, Trilobite Press (Denton, TX), 1987.
  • (Translator of poetry, with Salma Khadra Jayyusi) Fadwa Tuqan, A Mountainous Journey: An Autobiography, translated by Olive Kenny, edited by Jayyusi, Graywolf Press (St. Paul, MN), 1990.
  • (Translator, with May Jayyusi) Muhammad al-Maghut, The Fan of Swords: Poems, edited and introduced by Salma Khadra Jayyusi, Three Continents Press (Washington, DC), 1991.
  • Mint, State Street Press (Brockport, NY), 1991.
  • Travel Alarm, Wings Press (San Antonio, TX), 1992.
  • Red Suitcase, BOA Editions (Brockport, NY), 199..
  • Words under the Words: Selected Poems, Far Corner Books/Eighth Mountain Press (Portland, OR), 1995.
  • Fuel, BOA Editions (Rochester, NY), 1998.
  • Mint Snowball, Anhinga Press (Tallahassee, FL), 2001.
  • You and Yours, BOA Editions (Rochester, NY), 2005.
  • (Editor) Between Heaven and Texas, University of Texas Press (Austin, TX), 2006.
  • Tender Spot, Bloodaxe Books (Northumberland, England), 2008.
  • (Selector) Time You Let Me In: 25 Poets under 25, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2010.
  • Transfer: Poems, BOA Editions (Rochester, NY), 2011.
  • Famous: Poem, illustrated by Lisa Desimini, Wings Press (San Antonio, TX), 2015.
  • Voices in the Air: Poems for Listeners, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2018.
  • Cast Away: Poems for Our Time, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2019.
  • The Tiny Journalist: Poems, BOA Editions (Rochester, NY), 2019.
  • Everything Comes Next: Collected and New Poems, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY ), 2020.


Recordings
  • Rutabaga-Roo: I've Got a Song and It's for You (children's songs), Flying Cat (San Antonio, TX), 1979.
  • Lullaby Raft(folk songs), Flying Cat (San Antonio, TX), 1981.
  • The Spoken Page (poetry), International Poetry Forum, 1988.
  • The Poet and the Poem, Library of Congress Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature (Washington, DC), 2000.


Other
  • Never in a Hurry: Essays on People and Places, University of South Carolina Press (Columbia, SC), 1996.
  • I'll Ask You Three Times, Are You OK? Tales of Driving and Being Driven, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2007.
  • (Author of foreword) Cary Clack, Clowns and Rats Scare Me: Columns, Trinity University Press (San Antonio, TX), 2009.
  • There Is No Long Distance Now: Very Short Stories, Greenwillow Books (New York, NY), 2011.
  • With Christopher Omelas), Name Them--They Fly Better: Pat Hammond's Theory of Aerodynamics, Maverick Books, an imprint of Trinity University Press (San Antonio, Texas), 2017.


Contributor, including
  • What You Wish for: Stories and Poems for Darfur, edited by Alexander McCall Smith, G.P. Putnam's Sons (New York, NY), 2011.
  • Columnist for Organica
  • Columnist for Texas Observer
  • Poetry in America: Favorite Poems, Library of Congress Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature (Washington, DC), 2000.

Extent

30 Linear Feet

55 boxes (48 document boxes and 7 oversized boxes )

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

  • The descriptive data created for this finding aid is licensed under the CC0 Creative Commons license and is free for use without restriction.

Abstract

Naomi Shihab Nye, acclaimed poet who also writes essays, songs, novels, and children’s books; edits poetry anthologies, and teaches poetry writing to youth and adults, was born in 1952 in St. Louis, Missouri to Aziz Shihab, a journalist and immigrant from Palestine, and Miriam Shihab, a Montessori teacher with a fine arts degree in painting. Forty-eight document boxes and seven oversized boxes containing drafts, diaries and notebooks, photographic material, correspondence, and published material document the working life of poet, writer, and educator Naomi Shihab Nye (1952- ).

Physical Location

Materials may be stored off-site. Advance notice is required for use: https://www.thewittliffcollections.txstate.edu/research/makearesearchappointment.html.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchase, 2017.

Related Materials

A collection of 53.6 linear feet (115 boxes and 1 drawer of oversize material) of additional Naomi Shihab Nye Papers are held at the University of Texas at San Antonio Special Collections, described here: https://txarchives.org/utsa/finding_aids/00125.xml">.

Title
Guide to the Naomi Shihab Nye Papers
Author
Lauren Goodley, with Susannah Broyles and Carol Alvarez
Date
2020
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2021: Revised for ArchivesSpace by Lauren Goodley

Repository Details

Part of the The Wittliff Collections Repository

Contact:
601 University Drive
San Marcos Texas 78666 USA