Luci Shaw (December 29, 1928 â December 1, 2025) was a British and American Christian poet and essayist.
Shaw was born in England on December 29, 1928. Her parents were medical missionaries, and she lived in Canada and Australia before moving to the United States to attend Wheaton College, Illinois. Shaw graduated from Wheaton in 1953 with high honors.
She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1995.
Shaw was writer in residence at Regent College in Vancouver, Canada. She lectured on art and spirituality, Christian imagination, poetry writing, and journaling as an aid to artistic and spiritual growth.
Shaw published 10 volumes of poetry (several still in print) and numerous non-fiction books. She also edited and collaborated on multiple other works, including several with Madeleine L'Engle. Her poems are widely anthologized. Shaw usually worked in free verse, and typically her poems are quite short and less than a page. Nevertheless, in tone and content, she affiliated most readily with the transcendental poets, often finding in natural details and themes the touch of the eternal or other-worldly.
Shaw was a charter member of the Chrysostom Society, an organization of published writers which "serves the Christian community by promoting the development of quality literature".
Shaw married Harold Shaw and had five children; Robin, Marian, John, Jeffrey, and Kristin. With her husband she started a publishing house, Harold Shaw Publishers, in the basement of their home in 1972. After Harold died from lung cancer in 1986, Shaw became president of Harold Shaw Publishers. Stephen Board became owner of Harold Shaw Publishers in 1990 and sold it to Random House's WaterBrook Press in 2000.
In 1991, she married John Hoyte. They were members of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Bellingham, Washington, where they resided until her death on December 1, 2025, at the age of 96.
A number of Shaw's works have been set to music by a variety of composers: