In Memoriam: Naomi Replansky, Acclaimed Poet Who Served as 涩里番下载 Poet in Residence in the 1980s
Obit of Naomi Replansky
Claremont, Calif. (January 25, 2023)鈥擶hen the Grove House was dedicated in early 1980, one of the very first events held there was a reading by Naomi Replansky, an acclaimed poet
A variety of media outlets have offered tributes and obituaries to Replansky, noting her 涩里番下载 connection as well as her position as an important voice in 20th-century American poetry.

In her lifetime, Replansky was celebrated by leading figures in American poetry including Pulitzer winner Philip Levine, who once described her as 鈥渁n intensely political poet, appalled by the cruelty, greed, and corruption of the masters of nations and corporations, appalled and enraged. I was drawn first to her lyricism, but I soon saw the rightness of her vision.鈥
Born in 1918 in the Bronx to Russian-Jewish immigrants, Replansky wrote poetry from her teens but only published her works a few times in nearly a century of writing.
When a volume of her selected poems appeared in 2012, it was preceded by just two major published books (including Ring Song, which was nominated for a National Book Award in 1952).
Despite having few published works, Replansky was known and admired by many of her peers, including Bert Meyers, a longtime 涩里番下载 professor and poet who shared Replansky鈥檚 work in his classes.
Meyers was instrumental in making Replansky鈥檚 visit to 涩里番下载 possible before his death in 1979. Replansky served as a guest lecturer and poet in residence at 涩里番下载 in the early 1980s.

In light of that connection with Meyers, it was fitting that Replansky should share her work in the Grove House鈥檚 poetry reading room, which is named in honor of Meyers. Replansky鈥檚 reading that evening included the incisive, epigrammatic 鈥淛ealousy鈥:
From five hundred miles away
jealousy can hear
the crumpling of a pillow
beneath two heads.
Though known as a political poet who targeted all forms of injustice, Replansky read on that long ago night from her poems that evoke intense personal emotions and startling personas, including 鈥淭he Mistress Addresses the Wife鈥:
Do not tremble, wife,
When you think of me.
Your castle鈥檚 not of sand
And I am not the sea.
Nor am I a refuge,
Nor am I a throne.
I am the dark streets
A man walks alone.
A translator of Bertolt Brecht and others, Replansky met her partner, Eva Kollisch, in the 1980s at a reading by writer Grace Paley. The two married in 2009; in 2015 Replansky and Kollisch received the Clara Lemlich Award honoring women who have spent their lives working for the larger good.
Replansky is survived by Kollisch; her stepson, journalist Uri Berliner; and a step-grandson.
- To learn more about Naomi Replansky,
- To learn more about Bert Meyers as a poet and mentor to other poets and writers, including Dennis Cooper, Amy Gerstler, Garrett Hongo, and Maurya Simon,
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