James Reiss Collection
Scope and Content
This collection starts with correspondence and includes letters from colleagues and fellow writers, which offer valuable information on writing and publishing, from finding work and applying for grants to the writing process and getting published. Colleagues and former students sometimes included copies of their work in their correspondence for Reiss to read over and critique, while Reiss did the same with his new work. Reiss also wrote and received many congratulatory letters in response to new poems or books recently published. The collection also includes a large amount of correspondence from publishers, whether they were rejecting, accepting, or soliciting work, and offers information on the publishing process.
The correspondence also contains letters of a more personal nature, including holiday cards, post cards and letters to and from family. These family letters, covering a range of topics from visits, to health and family disputes, provide insight and background into Reiss's more autobiographical poems. Letters from friends and colleagues sometimes contain a combination of both personal and professional matters. James Reiss's correspondents include Rita Dove, John Irving and Philip Schultz, among many others.
The collection also includes correspondence and papers from Reiss's time as a Professor of English at Miami University, and covers a wide range of subjects from class schedules and course loads to setting up and teaching workshops, materials covered in class, and the creation of a Miami University Press poetry series.
The bulk of the collection is made up of manuscript materials. As a writer, James Reiss had a specific system for filing his work. Both working copies and final versions of the poems were kept in folders separated by year, ranging from 1969-2007. Many of the poems have the corresponding month and day noted. The poems, both handwritten and typed, were often composed on the back of other poems, student work and even correspondence. The working copies together with the final versions, give valuable insight into Reiss's working style as a writer. Sometimes he would make several photocopies of a poem and then make changes and corrections by hand. Other times he would take an entire piece of paper to simply rework a single line of a poem, over and over, till he got it right. He would also change or re-purpose rejected titles. Many times a line that was cut from one poem would end up in another.
Interspersed with the poems are journal entries and notes. Many of these discuss Reiss's writing and feelings, family matters, daily life, publishing and Reiss's career. Often the journal entries served as a type of "warm-up" or automatic writing that Reiss would use at the beginning of a writing session and can include what Reiss was hoping to accomplish with his writing and how he felt about his work.
The collection also includes a small amount of miscellaneous unpublished writings, not included in Reiss's year by year filing system, including introductions written by Reiss, juvenilia, short stories, plays, visual poetry and drawings. Also included in the collection is Reiss's line-editing work on the translations from Hebrew of his estranged brother's poetry.
The collection contains published material as well. Reviews both written by and about Reiss and articles written by and about Reiss are included within the collection, along with a scrapbook of newspaper clippings collected by Reiss.
The collection also includes photographs, consisting of family and friends, colleagues, book and retirement parties, travel, and publicity headshots.
The rest of the collection is made up of miscellaneous materials and includes items such as pamphlets from Miami University, financial receipts and paystubs from publishers, announcements, writings by others, the journals of Reiss's mother and father, awards and plaques and even a lock of Reiss's first wife's hair.
Dates
- Creation: 1960-2008
Language of Materials
The records are in English
Restrictions on Access
This collection is open for research.
Restrictions on Use
This collection is under the rules and regulations of the Walter Havighurst Special Collections and University Archives, Miami University Libraries. The Walter Havighurst Special Collections and University Archives, Miami University Libraries, owns the property rights to this collection. Learn more about our policy here: https://spec.lib.miamioh.edu/home/permission/
Copyright
Reproduction of materials in the collection is subject to the restrictions of copyright law. To use any materials not yet in the public domain, the researcher must obtain permission from the copyright holder.
Biography of James Reiss
James Reiss is a widely published writer and poet. Reiss was born in New York City and grew up in Washington Heights. He received both his B.A. (1963) and M.A. (1964) in English from the University of Chicago. Reiss began teaching at Miami University in 1965 as an instructor of English and served as an assistant professor (1969-73), associate professor (1973-81), and professor of English (1981-2007). Reiss retired from Miami University in 2007, and is currently a Professor Emeritus of English. Reiss was also a Visiting Poet and Associate Professor of English at Queens College from 1975-76. Reiss spent many of his teaching years commuting between Oxford, OH and New York City on a weekly basis.
Reiss has published five books of poems, "The Breathers," "Express," "The Parable of Fire," "Ten Thousand Good Mornings" and "Riff on Six: New and Selected Poems," and was the co-editor of a sixth book, "Self-Interviews: James Dickey." His poems have appeared in numerous publications including "The Atlantic Monthly," "Esquire," "The Hudson Review," "The Kenyon Review," "The Nation," "The New Republic," "The New Yorker," "The Paris Review," "Poetry," "Slate," and "The Virginia Quarterly Review."
Reiss has received several writing fellowships and awards and has been nominated for a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize in poetry.
Source: Reiss, James. "A Few Things About James Reiss." James Reiss. 16 Dec. 2008http://www.jamesreiss.com/About.html.
Extent
17 linear feet
Abstract
This collection includes correspondence, newspaper clippings, receipts, photographs, manuscript materials and miscellanea.
Statement of Arrangement
Series I: Correspondence
Series II: Manuscript Material
Sub-Series I: Poems/Stories
Sub-Series II: Notes/Journals
Sub-Series III: Misc.
Series III: Published Material
Sub-Series I: Tear sheets/Clippings
Sub-Series II: Books/Journals
Series IV: Miscellanea
Series V: Photographs
Series VI: Recordings
Processing Information
Collection processing completed in 2008 by Ashley Jones. Finding Aid revised 2014 by Ashley Jones.
Topical
- Title
- Guide to the James Reiss Collection
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Ashley Jones
- Date
- 2015
- Description rules
- Finding Aid Prepared Using Dacs
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English
Repository Details
Part of the Walter Havighurst Special Collections Finding Aids Repository