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Poet
& Essayist
5th Avenue Theatre, October 4, 1999
Biography
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Born in Lincoln, England in 1949, James Fenton achieved success in
his writing career at a young age. He published his first volume of poetry
at 23, and a year later he won the Eric Gregory Award (£1,000) for
poets. While many young poets might have tried to parlay the prize into
a teaching position or another published book, Fenton, in his typical
non-conformist style, utilized the prize money to finance his own adventures.
In 1974, Fenton set off for Southeast Asia where he worked as a freelance
reporter covering stories for The Nation and The New Statesman
on pivotal world events, including the fall of Saigon and the rise of
the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. Of his decision to move abroad, Fenton remarked,
I wanted very much to see a communist victory. I wanted to see a
war and the fall of a city because . . . because I wanted to see what
such things were like. I had once seen a man dying, from natural causes,
and my first reaction as I realized what was happening was to be glad
that I was there. This is what happens, I thought, so watch it carefully,
dont miss a detail.
Fentons tenure in Southeast Asia greatly influenced his poetry,
as revealed in his first American publication, Children in Exile: Poems
1969-1984. The poems in this collection reflect upon the political
unrest and brutality he confronted while working abroad. Whether serious
or lighthearted, Fentons poems always possess a rhythmic and musical
quality. Paul Theroux wrote that Fentons poems are passionate
and personal; they can also be extremely funny and violent; they are always
full of the pleasures of the language. His collection Out of
Danger (1994) includes poignant works about love and friendship as
well as powerful political poems on such topics as the student massacre
at Tiananmen Square and the religious conflict in Jerusalem. Praised as
the most talented poet of his generation, Fenton is also an
accomplished journalist and critic. His book, Leonardos Nephew:
Essays on Art and Artists, was published in 1999.
During the 1980s, Fenton served as chief book reviewer for The Times
(London) and as the Southeast Asia correspondent for The Independent.
Fenton won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize for his poetry in 1984.
Since 1994, he has served as Professor of Poetry at Oxford University.
Selected
Works
Terminal Moraine (1972)
A Vacant Possession (1978)
The Memory of War and Children in Exile: Poems 1968-1982 (1983)
You Were Marvelous (1985)
The Snap Revolution (1986)
Cambodian Witness: The Autobiography of Someth May (1987)
All the Wrong Places: Adrift in the Politics of the Pacific Rim (1988)
Out of Danger (1994)
Leonardo's Nephew: Essays on Art and Artists (1998)
A Garden from a Hundred Packets of Seeds (2001)
The Strength of Poetry : Oxford Lectures (2001)
Web
Site Links
Essay
on James Fenton by BBC commentator Dana Gioia
Fenton's reviews
in The New York Review of Books
Smithsonian Magazine review
of Leonardo's Nephew
Underwritten
by The New York Times
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