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  • Salvador Espriu

    Salvador Espriu (1913–1985) has been described by Harold Bloom as “an extraordinary poet by any international standard” and “deserving of a Nobel Prize,” whose work is “preternaturally hushed, haunted by the skeptical wisdom of Job and Ecclesiastics.” The author of nine books of poems whose obscurity beyond Catalonia reflects that of the Catalan in which he wrote, Espriu is an elegiac poet whose work is informed metaphorically by the cataclysm of Franco’s conquest of Catalonia and the suppression of Catalan language and culture. Yet as he eschews mention of specific events and personages, his writing takes on an encompassing resonance.



  • Lucía Estrada

    Lucía Estrada is a Colombian poet and the author of seven collections of poetry. She has won numerous local and national awards, including the National Poetry Prize for her most recent collection, Katábasis. Her work has appeared in a variety of national and international publications and has been translated into English, French, Japanese, Greek, Swedish, Portuguese, Italian, and German. Eulalia Books will be publishing a bilingual edition of Katábasis later this year.



  • Ashur Etwebi

    Ashur Etwebi was born in 1952 in Libya. Since December 2014, he has been living in Norway after he was attacked by extremists and his house in Tripoli was burned down. He is one of Libya’s leading poets and is also an editor, translator, and painter.


  • Molly Evans

    Molly Evans is a WLT intern.


  • George Evans

    George Evans’s poetry collections have been published in the UK, US, and Costa Rica, including The New World, Sudden Dreams, and the bilingual Espejo de la tierra / Earth’s Mirror, translated by Daisy Zamora. He has also published two volumes of translations: The Time Tree, by Vietnamese poet Huu Thinh, and The Violent Foam, by Daisy Zamora.



  • Marjorie Evasco

    Marjorie Evasco left Manila to regrow roots in her home island, Bohol, in the Central Visayas of the Philippines. She continues to write in two languages, Binisaya and English, care for a garden, and plant trees. She’s committed to work for literary and cultural development and teaches graduate school.



  • Brian Evenson

    Brian Evenson is the author of over a dozen books of fiction, most recently the story collection A Collapse of Horses. His translations from the French include books by David B., Christian Gailly, Jean Frémon, Jacques Jouet, and others. He teaches in the Critical Studies program at CalArts.



  • Elisabeth Eybers

    Elisabeth Eybers (1915–2007) was the first woman to publish a volume of poetry in Afrikaans in 1936. She emigrated to the Netherlands in 1961, where she continued to write in Afrikaans, publishing twenty-one collections of poetry during her lifetime.



  • Photo by by Robert Ebsteindiv>

    Banning Eyre

    Banning Eyre is an author, guitarist, photographer, and producer. He has written about international music, especially African music, since 1988 and has long served as lead producer for the syndicated, Peabody Award–winning public radio program Afropop Worldwide. He has also contributed to National Public Radio’s All Things Considered and to many other publications.



  • Elnaz Eyvaz

    Born in Baku in 1976, Elnaz Eyvaz is a secondary school literature teacher and works for the Azerbaijan State Television and Radio Company. She has published two books of poetry (It Is Good That I Can Write and A Man’s Confession) and was a nominee for the 2011 Nasimi Prize for Literature.