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Jack Ridl

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Jack Ridl born on April the 10th of 1944, is an American poet, and was a professor of English at Hope College,[1]

Life and career

Ridl's father, Charles "Buzz" Ridl, coached basketball at Westminster College, Pennsylvania and the University of Pittsburgh. Ridl graduated from Westminster College, Pennsylvania with a BA and M.Ed., in 1970. He lives in Laketown Township, Michigan, with his wife, Julie.[2][3][4]

His work has appeared in LIT, The Georgia Review, FIELD, Poetry, Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, Gulf Coast, The Denver Quarterly, Chelsea, Free Lunch, The Journal, Passages North, Dunes Review,[5] and Poetry East. Hope College has named its Visiting Writers Series for him.[6]

The sun rises over the trees behind our
house and the dogs want out. Today

it's supposed to snow again. Tonight
we'll have soup, just the two of us

and talk about our month in Italy,
how we wondered if we could live

in all that light. We'll remember
the last time we danced alone.[5]

Awards

  • 2002 Say-the-Word Poetry Award from The Ellipse Art Center in Arlington, Virginia, for "The Dry Wallers Listen to Sinatra While They Work", chosen by David St. John
  • 2001 Chapbook Award from The Center for Book Arts in New York City, for Against Elegies, selected by Sharon Dolin and Billy Collins
  • 1996, The Carnegie Foundation named him Michigan Professor of the Year.

Works

  • The same ghost: poems. Dawn Valley Press. 1984. ISBN 978-0-936014-13-5.
  • After School, Samisdat (1987)
  • Be tween. Dawn Valley Press. 1988. ISBN 978-0-936014-18-0.
  • Against Elegies, The Center for Book Arts, (2001)
  • Broken Symmetry. Wayne State University Press. 2006. ISBN 978-0-8143-3322-8.
  • Losing Season. CavanKerry Press. 2009. ISBN 978-1-933880-15-0.

Non-fiction

Editor

References

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