Tess Taylor

Tess Taylor is the author of five celebrated poetry collections including The Misremembered World, The Forage House, Last West: Roadsongs for Dorothea Lange, and Rift Zone (named a 2020 Boston Globe best book), and Work & Days (a 2016 NY Times best poetry book). Her work as a cultural critic appears in Harper’s Magazine, The Atlantic, CNN, The New York Times, and more. She has taught widely, from UC Berkeley to Queen’s University in Belfast, and served as on air poetry reviewer for NPR’s All Things Considered for over a decade. She recently published her first full length poetry anthology: Leaning Toward Light: Poems for Gardens and the Hands that Tend Them, a collection of contemporary gardening poems for an era of climate crisis. A staged adaptation of her book of poems about Dorothea Lange will launch at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art in 2025. Her next book, Come Bite, will be published in 2026. She lives and gardens just outside Berkeley, California.

Tess was awarded an Academy of American Poets’ Poet Laureate Fellowship in 2024 and is currently serving as the Poet Laureate of El Cerrito, California, where she is hosting literary events in schools and community centers. Read about the Poet Laureate Project here.

Read Tess’s full bio