British poet and jazz musician Roy Fisher was raised in Birmingham, England, and educated at Birmingham University. Describing Fisher’s exploratory, Modernist-influenced poetic style in a review of his
Selected Poems for
Poetry, poet
Daisy Fried noted: “Sometimes prose, sometimes lineated, they are dense except when they aren’t, restless except when still, improvisational in feel inside a kind of nonce formal rigor.” Fisher lived in Birmingham until his early 40s, and much of his poetry is deeply engaged with the geography of that city. In an interview with John Kerrigan for
Jacket magazine, Fisher talked about the influence of place on his poetics: “[T]he landscape has come, with the passage of time and changes in my understanding, to moralise itself under my eye, without any nudging from me. I read it as a record of conduct as well as something subjectively transfigured.”
Fisher’s numerous collections of poetry include
City (1961),
A Furnace (1986), which was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation,
The Dow Low Drop: New and Selected Poems (1996), and
The Long and Short of It: Poems 1955–2005 (2005). The first American edition of his work was his
Selected Poems (2011). His work is included in the
New Penguin Book of English Verse (2000) and the
Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry (2001).
Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2005, Fisher has received the Andrew Kelus Poetry Prize, the Cholmondeley Award, and the Hamlyn Award. He lives in a village in Derbyshire.
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Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION
England
LIFE SPAN
1930–
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Biography
British poet and jazz musician Roy Fisher was raised in Birmingham, England, and educated at Birmingham University. Describing Fisher’s exploratory, Modernist-influenced poetic style in a review of his Selected Poems for Poetry, poet Daisy Fried noted: “Sometimes prose, sometimes lineated, they are dense except when they aren’t, restless except when still, improvisational in feel inside a kind of nonce formal rigor.” Fisher . . .