Marjorie Pizer
Marjorie Pizer (1920 – 4 January 2016) was an Australian poet. Pizer was born in Melbourne and studied literature at the University of Melbourne from 1939, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts. Pizer began her working life as a clerk in the public service. She met and married the poet Muir Holburn (q.v.) and they left for Sydney, where they became members of the Communist Party (until the invasion of Hungary). In 1947 they set up Pinchgut Press in a spare room. She was enamoured of poetry since a young age before beginning to compose her own works.[1]
Bibliography
Creeve Roe, Poems of Victor Daley; co-editor with Muir Holburn, 1947
Freedom on the Wallaby, Poems of the Australian People; editor, 1953
The Men Who Made Australia, Stories and Poems by Henry Lawson; editor, 1957
Come Listen, Poetry for Schools; co-editor with Joan Reed, 1966
Thou and I, Poems, 1967
To Life, Poems, 1969
Tides Flow, Poems, 1972
Seasons of Love, Poems, 1975
Full Summer, Poems, 1977
Gifts and Remembrances, Poems, 1979
To You the Living, Poems of Bereavement and Loss, 1981, 1991, 1992, 2010
The Sixtieth Spring, Poems, 1982
Below the Surface, Reflections on Life and Living; co-authored with Anne Spencer Parry, 1982, 1990, 1994
Selected Poems, 1963-1983, 1984
Poems of Lesbia Harford; co-editor with Drusilla Modjeska, 1985
Equinox, Poems, 1987
Fire in the Heart, Poems, 1990
Journeys, Poems, 1992
Winds of Change, Poems, 1995
Await the Spring, Poems, 1998
A Fortunate Star, Poems, 2001
A Poet's Life, Poems, 2006, 2010
Poems, Poems, 2010
References
- ↑ "Marjorie Pizer HOLBURN". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 12 January 2016.