Gary Soto was born in Fresno, California, in April, 1952,
to working-class Mexican-American parents. At a young age,
he worked in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley. He was
not academically motivated as a child, but became
interested in poetry during his high school years.
He attended Fresno City college and California State
University at Fresno while working toward an undergraduate
degree, and later studied poetry at the University of
California, Irvine, where he earned his MFA in 1976.
His first collection of poems, The Elements of San Joaquin,
won the United States Award of the International Poetry
Forum in 1976 and was published in 1977. The New York Times
Book Review honored the book by reprinting six of the
poems. Since then, he has published numerous books of
poetry, including A Simple Plan (Chronicle Books, 2007),
One Kind of Faith (2003), and Junior College (1997).
Soto's New and Selected Poems (1995) was a National Book
Award finalist. Other early titles include Canto
Familiar/Familiar Song (1994); Neighborhood Odes (1992);
Home Course in Religion (1991); Who Will Know Us? (1990);
Black Hair (1985); Where Sparrows Work Hard (1981); The
Tale of Sunlight (1978).
Influenced by a variety of poets, including Pablo Neruda
and Edward Field, Soto writes poems that focus on daily
experiences, often reflecting on his life as a Chicano.
About his work, the writer Joyce Carol Oates has said,
"Gary Soto's poems are fast, funny, heartening, and
achingly believable, like Polaroid love letters, or
snatches of music heard out of a passing car; patches of
beauty like patches of sunlight; the very pulse of a life."
Soto has also written three novels, Amnesia in a Republican
County, (University of New Mexico, 2003); Poetry Lover
(2001) and Nickel and Dime (2000); a memoir Living Up the
Street (1985), for which he received the Before Columbus
1985 American Book Award; numerous young adult and
children's books; and edited three anthologies: Pieces of
Heart (1993), California Childhood (1988), and Entrance:
Four Latino Poets (1976).
His honors include the Andrew Carnegie Medal, the United
States Award of the International Poetry Forum, The
Nation/"Discovery" Prize, and the Bess Hokin Prize and the
Levinson Award from Poetry magazine. He has also received
fellowships from the California Arts Council, the
Guggenheim Foundation, and the National Endowment for the
Arts.
He lives in northern California.
(http://www.poets.org)