Richard Hugo (born Richard Franklin Hogan) was an American poet, novelist, and writing teacher. His poetry offers moving testimony of the struggle of an isolated, suffering self to find happiness by affirming humanity and sympathy with the failed, lonely, and dispossessed against the backdrop of the landscapes of the Pacific Northwest, Montana, Italy, and the Isle of Skye.
Hugo was born in White Center, a working-class suburb of Seattle, on December 21, 1923. His father, Richard Franklin Hogan, left his mother, Esther Clara Monk Hogan, shortly after Hugo’s birth, and she left little Richard behind, in the care of her parents, Fred and Ora Monk. Even after Hugo’s mother remarried in 1927, she did not take Hugo to live with her. The poet remembers growing up feeling lonely, isolated, and
2211 words
Citation: Flajsar, Jiri. "Richard Hugo". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 20 September 2023 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=14693, accessed 21 November 2024.]