Each day during the month of April, KUOW is highlighting the work of Seattle-based poets for National Poetry Month. In this series curated by Seattle Civic Poet and Ten Thousand Things host Shin Yu Pai, you'll find a selection of poems for the mind, heart, senses, and soul.
Melinda Mueller was a coauthor of an early list of rare, threatened, and endangered plant species of Washington State. Her scientific knowledge and deep attention to nature give voice to the ghost forests that were once verdant woodland in her poem "Larva."
Melinda Mueller was born in Helena, Montana. She earned a degree in Botany at the University of Washington and Masters in Biology at Central Washington. Mueller’s most recent poetry collection, "Mary’s Dust", was published by Entre Rios Books in 2018. "The After", was released by Entre Rios Press in 2017. "What the Ice Gets: Shackleton’s Antarctic Expedition, 1914-1916" (Van West & Company, 2000) received a 2001 Washington State Book Award and the American Library Notable Books Award for Poetry, in 2002. Melinda recently retired after teaching high school science for 39 years at Seattle Academy of Arts & Sciences.