Ralph Thompson (poet)
Ralph Thompson (born 1928), is a Jamaican businessman, educational activist, artist and poet.
Life and business career
Thompson was born in Poughkeepsie, NY, to a Jamaican mother and US father, but the marriage lasted only three years, and from 1931 he and his sister were raised in Jamaica. His mother's family, "a mixture of crypto Jewish (Isaacs) and Irish stock (Fielding)", was "staunchly Catholic and claimed to be white".[1] He was educated by Jesuits both at St George's College in Kingston and at Fordham University in New York, where he earned a Doctor of Law degree in 1952. After graduation he served for two years as an officer in the United States Air Force, principally in Japan, but returned to Jamaica in 1953, married a Jamaican, Doreen Lyons, in 1954, and has since lived in Kingston with his wife and children save for a brief period in the 1970s.
Thompson's business career was initially in property development with Abe Issa, the "father of Jamaican tourism", then independently. After his return to Jamaica he was deeply involved in governmental redevelopment of agriculture, and in 1988 was appointed a Commander of Distinction by the administration of Edward Seaga. His last major post was as CEO of Seprod Ltd, a large Jamaican manufacturing firm supplying household products and consumer goods for the local market.
Thompson is also a noted educational activist, speaking on radio and TV, and frequently writing for The Gleaner and The Observer. He is also an amateur painter, and has publicly exhibited several times in Kingston; a selection of his paintings was published by Peepal Tree Press in 2008.[2]
Poetry
During his residence in Florida in the late 1970s Thompson took a Masters in English Literature at the University of South Florida, submitted some poems as part of an assignment, and was encouraged to publish them. He began to write poetry more intensively, and in 1987 Alan Ross accepted "Florida" for the London Magazine. Thompson has subsequently published more than 20 poems in British, US, and Caribbean journals, including The Caribbean Writer and Mississippi Review. His work is represented in The Heinemann Book of Caribbean Poetry (1992), A World of Poetry for CXC (1994), several Observer Arts Magazine anthologies, The Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse (2005), and Writers Who Paint / Painters Who Write (2007).
He has published two collections of poetry and a verse novel:
- The Denting of a Wave (Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 1992), ISBN 0-948833-62-9
- Moving On (Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 1997), ISBN 978-1-900715-17-1
- View from Mount Diablo (Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 2003; 2nd, annotated edition, Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, & Tirril: Humanities-Ebooks, 2009), ISBN 1-900715-81-3 (2003), ISBN 978-1-84523-144-6 (2009 paperback), ISBN 978-1-84760-093-6 (2009 digital).
These volumes were all positively reviewed both in local Jamaican publications[3] and in The Caribbean Review of Books and The Caribbean Writer.[4] Thompson was encouraged to write View from Mount Diablo by Derek Walcott, a personal friend,[5] and it won the Jamaican National Literary Prize in manuscript in 2001. It was also warmly praised by the Pulitzer Prize-winning Jamaican-American poet Louis Simpson:
View from Mount Diablo is a remarkable achievement. Its knowledge of the island, the entwining of private lives and politics, lifts Jamaican poetry to a level that has not been attempted before. The poetry is strong, imaginative, fascinating in detail. It describes terrible things with understatement, yet with compassion. I don't think anything could be more harrowing than the rape of Chantal, or the boy begging Alexander to spare his life.... This is narrative poetry at its best.[6]
The verse novel was serialised in The Jamaican Observer, and the first edition sold more than 300 copies in Jamaica (where the average sale of any new paperback is about 70 copies).[7]
A CD of Thompson reading 28 of his poems, Taking Words for a Walk, was released by the Intermedia Foundation, NY, in 2006. In the liner notes the distinguished Jamaican poet Edward Baugh, who is Professor Emeritus of Caribbean Literature at the University of the West Indies, Mona, says:
Rippling through these poems, nuancing their meaning, is an alertness to class and color distinctions, which grounds the poems in Jamaican social reality and no doubt in the poet's own place in that reality. In "Carpenters", for instance, it matters that peasant Malcolm is "purple black," while the boy is "nearly white." In the sharply, wittily satirical "Pride and Prejudice", the central factor of color consciousness and discrimination operates across cultural boundaries. On a more ominous note are the poems which evoke the sense of social malaise and schism in contemporary Jamaica, a malaise that seems to threaten violent upheaval, poems such as "Vigil", "Death of a Honda Rider", "Jamaican Gothic", "The Garden", and "This New Light".[8]
In October 2015 Thompson received the Silver Musgrave Medal for his contribution to literature.[9]
References
- ↑ "About the author", in Ralph Thompson, View from Mount Diablo (Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 2003), p. 56.
- ↑ Jacqueline Bishop (ed.), Writers Who Paint / Painters Who Write: Three Jamaican Artists (Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 2007), pp. 32–45.
- ↑ See, for example, Mary Hanna, "The Poems of Ralph Thompson", in The Sunday Gleaner, September 3, 2006.
- ↑ Reviewers included Louis Simpson (in Caribbean Review of Books, No. 7, February 1993, pp. 10–11) and Mervyn Morris (in Poetry News 12, Winter 2005–06, p. 5); 17 reviews are posted or linked at the Peepal Tree Press website.
- ↑ Ralph Thompson, "In My Own Words" (February 2009), at Geoffrey Philp's Blog Spot
- ↑ Quoted on the back cover of the 2003 Peepal Tree Press edition of View from Mount Diablo.
- ↑ Ralph Thompson, View from Mount Diablo: An Annotated Edition, ed. John Lennard (Tirril: Humanities-Ebooks, 2009), p. 36.
- ↑ Edward Baugh, liner notes, p. 3, in Ralph Thompson, Taking Words for a Walk, New York: Intermedia Foundation, 2006; CD IF702.
- ↑ "Gold for Sly and Robbie", Jamaica Gleaner, 30 October 2015. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
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