Carl Phillips was teaching Latin to high school students when a poet changed his life. 
Phillips had long been an avid reader and wrote poems casually, but he never conceived of poetry as a career path. The poet Martin Espada visited the school where he worked and led a workshop for faculty. He saw what Phillips wrote in an exercise and suggested he apply for a state grant. 
He got the grant. 
Then he won a poetry contest that led to publication of his first collection, “In The Blood,” in 1992. 
The next year he secured a position on the faculty at Washington University, where he remains a professor of English and leads a workshop in the graduate creative writing program. 
Many awards and honors later, Phillips published his 15th poetry collection in March this year.


