Irene Hoge Smith is a writer and psychotherapist. Her professional writing has addressed trauma, bereavement, torture and crises of meaning, and her personal essays have to do with love, loss, identity, and family complications.
She is a graduate of the New Directions postgraduate writing program of the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute and her essays have appeared in journals including Amsterdam Quarterly, Prick of the Spindle, Vineleaves Literary Journal, District Lines, Stonecoast Review, Chicago Quarterly Review, and Wisconsin Review. She was a Spring 2016 AWP Writer-to-Writer mentee, working with Claude Clayton Smith.
Irene Hoge Smith is completing a memoir about her mother, the late Southern California poet francEyE, who left the family when Smith was young, lived for several years with fellow poet Charles Bukowski (and had his daughter), and became a prolific and respected poet in her own right. The working title of the memoir is Goodnight Irene: My Mother, Bukowski, and Me.
Irene, It was wonderful to meet you yesterday at the AWP book fair. Your writing is beautiful. Best wishes to you!
Teri Ott
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Thanks so much, Teri! I enjoyed talking to you on Saturday. Hope you had an easy trip home.
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