Knowledge (XXG)

Laura Ulewicz

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in Locke. Always an inveterate gardener, she raised various kinds of garlic and everlasting flowers to sell at farmers’ markets. During the last thirty years of her life, she continued to write but published little after 1975.
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during the latter part of that time period. Ulewicz was a great influence on his early work; in fact much of his characteristic style for which he was later well-known came directly from her, and his acclaimed first book
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She died on October 5, 2007, aged 77, after a short illness. The local community commemorated her in its memorial site. Stephen Vincent, poet, editor, and artist, is the executor of her literary estate.
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Ulewicz refused to ever be branded a Beat herself. In 1955, at the height of media attention on North Beach and the Beats, she left for
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in which writers read and were interviewed. In 1968, while she continued to publish in magazines, she was the recipient of an
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neighborhood, where she opened and managed the I-Thou Coffee House. There, she organized
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in 1973. Initially, she worked at a local tomato cannery, but was later employed with
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editor wrote to propose a volume in which her work would be joined with
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to Polish-American auto workers with strong union ties, she lived in
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approach. In 1960 she traveled in Europe, eventually moving to
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Richardson, Anthony. Letter to Laura Ulewicz. 17 June 1964.
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Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library
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in 1950. There, she soon discovered the literary scene in
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In 1965, Ulewicz returned to live in San Francisco's
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Index

American
Detroit
Michigan
Chicago
New York
San Francisco
North Beach
Beat
Allen Ginsberg
Kenneth Rexroth
Ruth Weiss
Jack Gilbert
Seattle
Stanley Kunitz
formally structured
London
Edward Lucie-Smith
Guinness
Cheltenham Literature Festival
Haight-Ashbury
Hippy
poetry readings
Penguin
Denise Levertov
Sylvia Plath
KQED-FM
NEA
Locke, California
Child Protection Services
Social Welfare Department

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