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156:, the following year. At La Salle, Dlugos became involved in the anti-Vietnam War movement and started writing poetry. He left the Brothers in 1971 to openly embrace a politically active, gay lifestyle. Less and less motivated by academic life, he dropped out of La Salle in his senior year, eventually moving to
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Dlugos is widely known for the poems he wrote while hospitalized in G-9, the AIDS ward at
Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan, and is considered a seminal poet of the AIDS epidemic. His long poem "G-9," in which Dlugos celebrates life while accepting his mortality and impending death, was published in
124:(born Francis Timothy Dlugos) (August 5, 1950 – December 3, 1990) was an American poet. Early in his career, Dlugos was celebrated for his energetic, openly gay, pop culture-infused poems. Later, he became widely known for the poems he wrote as he was dying of
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at St. Mark's Church. His poems were praised for their innovation and wit, their appropriation of popular culture (as in his crowd-pleasing "Gilligan's Island"), and their openly gay subject matter. Dlugos's friends during his New York years included
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wrote, "This is poetry of extraordinary speed and energy that fuses fact and fantasy, dream and documentary. Tim Dlugos' every nerve seems to vibrate." Dlugos also edited and contributed to such magazines as
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Dlugos immersed himself in the Mass
Transit poetry scene in Washington, regularly attending readings at the Community Book Shop in Dupont Circle. His friends during this period included Ed Cox,
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based on Dlugos's poem "Gilligan's Island," was held at Fales
Library at New York University, where Dlugos's literary papers are archived.
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newspaper, which led to a successful career as a fundraising consultant and copywriter for liberal and charitable organizations.
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In 2011, "At
Moments Like These He Feels Farthest Away," an exhibition of paintings by artist
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NYU's Fales
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358:(edited by David Trinidad; High Risk Books/Serpent's Tail, 1996)
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216:. In 1977, he began a correspondence and friendship with
370:(edited by David Trinidad; Sibling Rivalry Press, 2021)
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364:(edited by David Trinidad; Nightboat Books, 2011)
468:Converts to Anglicanism from Roman Catholicism
362:A Fast Life: The Collected Poems of Tim Dlugos
297:A Fast Life: The Collected Poems of Tim Dlugos
291:Two decades after Dlugos's death, his friend
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428:Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry winners
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356:Powerless: Selected Poems 1973-1990
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228:(1982). Of the latter, critic
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247:The Poetry Project Newsletter
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346:(Little Caesar Press, 1982)
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458:La Salle University alumni
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195:In 1976, Dlugos moved to
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340:(Sherwood Press, 1982)
267:New Haven, Connecticut
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332:Je Suis Ein Americano
301:Lambda Literary Award
222:Je Suis Ein Americano
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448:American male poets
418:American LGBT poets
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58:"Tim Dlugos"
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413:1990 deaths
408:1950 births
338:A Fast Life
224:(1979) and
181:Ralph Nader
397:Categories
344:Entre Nous
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69:newspapers
478:Gay poets
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384:Archived
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