Nathan Xavier Osorio is an American poet and educator from Los Angeles, California. He is the author of Querida, which won the 2024 Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize and was published by the University of Pittsburgh Press. His chapbook The Last Town Before the Mojave was selected by Oliver de la Paz for the Poetry Society of AmericaâÂÂs 2020 Chapbook Fellowship. In 2025, Osorio was selected as the 46th resident poet of the Dartmouth poet-in-residence at Frost Place.
OsorioâÂÂs poetry, translations, and essays have appeared in BOMB, The Offing, Boston Review, Public Books, and Notre Dame Review.
Osorio was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. He is of Mexican and Nicaraguan descent and is the son of a grocer and a nurse. He earned a PhD in Literature from University of California, Santa Cruz, with a concentration in Latin American and Latino Studies and Visual Studies, and has an MFA in Poetry and Literary Translation from Columbia University School of the Arts.
Osorio is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Texas Tech University. In 2023, he served as a Humanities Institute Public Fellow at the University of California Press, and in 2024 he was selected as a ChancellorâÂÂs Postdoctoral Fellow at University of California, Irvine, where he worked with Héctor Tobar on a poetry project, Tierra Madre.
OsorioâÂÂs poetry engages with themes of migration and family history, particularly the experience of growing up in Los Angeles as the child of immigrants. In an essay accompanying his poem âÂÂEnglish as a Second Language,â he has described his work as shaped by his parentsâ migration from Nicaragua and Mexico and by recurring travel between Southern California and Baja California.
He has characterized his debut collection, Querida, as a reflection of his family and home life. He has also explained using literary devices like ekphrasis and non-Western cosmologies as part of his poetics. In an interview with poet Eduardo MartÃÂnez-Leyva, Osorio described his work as an attempt to create new rituals and forms that make room for vulnerability while challenging inherited structures of power.
a View-Master Reel," Frozen Sea