Tom Sexton

For the 19th-century baseball player, see Tom Sexton (baseball).

Tom Sexton (born 1940) is an American poet and academic who served as Poet Laureate of Alaska.

Youth and education
Sexton grew up in Lowell, Massachusetts. After graduating from Lowell High School in 1958, he spent three years in the Army – two of them stationed in Alaska. He then worked odd jobs, before enrolling in Northern Essex Community College in Haverhill, Massachusetts.

He went on to enter Salem State College, graduating in 1968 with a bachelor’s degree in English. He then went to the University of Alaska, where he earned a Master of Fine Arts degree

Career
Sexton was hired to help establish the English Department at the newly opened Anchorage Campus. From 1970 to 1994, Sexton taught English and creative writing at the University of Alaska – Anchorage where he established the creative writing program and served as English Department chair for several years.

He was a founding editor of the Alaska Quarterly Review, leaving the magazine when he retired in 1994. He was appointed Alaska's Poet Laureate in 1995, having been selected by the Alaska State Council on the Arts (AKSCA) and confirmed by the Alaskan legislature.

Sexton is the author of ten books of poetry. His A Clock With No Hands is a collection of poems about growing up in Lowell.

Personal life
Sexton and his wife, Sharyn, spend every other winter in Eastport, Maine.

Recognition
Seaton became Alaska's state Poet Laureate in 1995

Publications

 * ''I Think Again of Those Ancient Chinese Poets. Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska Press, 2011.