Michael Longley

Michael Longley, CBE (born 27 July 1939) is a poet from Belfast in Northern Ireland.

Life and career

Michael Longley reading his poetry at the Corrymeela Peace Center in Ballycastle, Northern Ireland, July 2012.

Born in Belfast, Longley was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution, and subsequently read Classics at Trinity College, Dublin, where he edited Icarus.

He was Professor of Poetry for Ireland from 2007 to 2010, a cross-border academic post set up in 1998, previously held by John Montague, Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Paul Durcan. He was succeeded in 2010 by Harry Clifton.[1]

North American editions of Longley's work are published by Wake Forest University Press.

His wife, Edna Longley, is a critic on modern Irish and British poetry.[2] They have three children.

An atheist, he describes himself as a "sentimental" disbeliever.[3]

On 14 January 2014, Longley participated in the BBC Radio 3 series "The Essay - Letters to a Young Poet". Taking Rainer Maria Rilke's classic text, Letters to a Young Poet as inspiration, leading poets wrote a letter to a protege.[4]

Awards and honours

Gorse Fires (1991) won the Whitbread Poetry Prize. The Weather in Japan (2000) won the T. S. Eliot Prize and the Hawthornden Prize.

He holds honorary doctorates from Queen's University Belfast (1995) and Trinity College, Dublin (1999) and was the 2001 recipient of the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry. Longley was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2010 Birthday Honours.[5]

He won a 2011 London Awards for Art and Performance. His collection, A Hundred Doors, won the Poetry Now Award in September 2012.[6]

His 2014 collection The Stairwell won the 2015 International Griffin Poetry Prize.

in 2015, he received the Ulster Tattler Lifetime Achievement Award.

List of works

Michael Longley reading his poetry at the Corrymeela Peace Center in Ballycastle, Northern Ireland, July 2012.

See also

References

Further reading

External links

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