Austin Robert Smith (born 1982)[1] is an American poet and fiction writer.[2] Smith is one of three sons of Dan and Cheryl Smith, and he grew up on a farm north of Freeport, Illinois. Smith's father, Dan Smith, also wrote poetry and has been described as a "farmer-poet."[3]
Smith has published two books of poetry, both in the Princeton Series of Contemporary Poets,[4] and three poetry chapbooks. His poems have appeared in journals including The New Yorker,[5][6]Poetry,[7] and Virginia Quarterly Review,[8] and his short fiction has appeared in journals including Kenyon Review,[9]Sewanee Review,[10] and ZYZZYVA.[11]
Smith's poetry deals with themes including rural life, violence, and war. Originally from rural Illinois,[15] Smith often expresses a strong tie to the Midwestern United States. As Smith wrote in 2018, "I feel it's even more important than ever to write of this region, to identify the trends that have led to the decline of small towns and small family farms, and to celebrate the people and the land so that no reader of mine will ever think of the Midwest as flyover country again."[13]
Smith's works have been reviewed in publications including the New York Times,[16]Publishers Weekly,[17][18] the Washington Post,[19] WBUR's Here and Now,[20] and Yale Review.[21]