Jesse Ball

Jesse Ball

Jesse Ball at a restaurant in Shaoxing, China, on July 31, 2012
Born (1978-06-07) June 7, 1978
Port Jefferson, New York
Nationality American
Occupation poet
Novelist

Jesse Ball (born June 7, 1978) is an American poet and novelist. He has published novels, volumes of poetry, short prose, and drawings. His works are distinguished by the use of a spare style and have been compared to those of Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino.[1][2][3]

Biography

Early Life and Education

Ball was born into a middle-class, English-speaking Irish-Sicilian family in Port Jefferson, New York, on Long Island. Ball's father worked in Medicaid; his mother worked in libraries. His brother, Abram, was born with Down syndrome and attended a school some distance from the place where they lived.[2] Ball attended Port Jefferson High School, and matriculated at Vassar College.

Following Vassar, Ball attended Columbia University, where he earned an MFA and met the poet Richard Howard. Howard helped the then 24-year-old poet publish his first volume, March Book, with Grove Press.

Career

Ball's fiction and poetry have appeared in many national journals, among them Harper's, The New Republic, Circumference, Oberon, Agenda (UK), The Paris Review, Guernica Magazine, The Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Fence, and Conduit. In 2006, his poem "Speech in a Chamber" was chosen for the anthology The Best American Poetry 2006.[4] His career and his 2014 book Silence Once Begun were reviewed by renowned literary critic James Wood in the New Yorker in February 2014.[5]

Works

Awards

Notes

  1. "New York Times review".
  2. 1 2 "Profile in New City Chicago".
  3. "Review of "The Curfew"".
  4. Best American Poetry 2006
  5. Wood, James. "James Wood: Jesse Ball’s "Silence Once Begun"". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2014-04-18.
  6. "Silence Once Begun: A Novel". Amazon.com. 2014-01-28. Retrieved 2014-04-18.
  7. http://www.amazon.com/Cure-Suicide-Novel-Jesse-Ball/dp/1101870125/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427646991&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=a+cure+for+suicde
  8. "How to Set a Fire and Why: A Novel". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2016-03-02.
  9. http://pioneerworks.org/books/notes-on-my-dunce-cap/

References

External links

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