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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."Beth and her husband Nelson were cut from a different kind of poetic cloth. Nelson taught a poetry workshop at the University of Washington and had a clear renown — Sean said his father had a following of students that spanned decades. His poetry was more personal, humorous, and quirky.

"She spent more time writing than teaching," Sean said.

Those differences drew different recognitions to the Bentleys. Beth was constantly sending poems to magazines, which drew an intellectual crowd that later waned as cultural tastes in poetry shifted. The tenor of her work eventually changed too, from more personal reflections on raising a family to broader themes of memory, her Jewish upbringing, and relationships at large.

"Poetry itself was becoming less formal and more confessional, and she just felt like she was too old-fashioned," Sean said. "Attached to that, she felt like she was growing too old, that all these young whippersnappers reading poetry...she just thought, 'I've got too many miles on the odometer.'"

Beth's posthumous collection tackles her feelings of being an outsider, from being Jewish in a Christian world, an intellectual in an unintellectual culture, and being a woman in a male-dominated industry.

"If there are readers who might identify with the notion of being underappreciated, or at some kind of a remove from the mainstream, it might be worth taking a look at her work," Sean said. "It's very moving."
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