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British poet and novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
J. Clifford Ashby, generally known as Cliff Ashby, (10 November 1919 – 30 April 2012[1]) was a British poet and novelist.
He was born in Norfolk in 1919,[citation needed] and left school aged 14, taking a job as a window dresser in Leeds.
He was a conscientious objector in the Second World War, undertaking agricultural work in lieu of military service. In so doing he met several artists and poets, and began the path to his own literary career.[1]
As a poet he came to light through X magazine.
His poetry collections include In the Vulgar Tongue (1968), The Dogs of Dewsbury (1976), Lies and Dreams (1980), Plain Song: Collected Poems (1985)[citation needed] and A Few Late Flowers (2007).[1] His novels are The Old Old Story and How and Why (both 1969).[citation needed]
He died at home on 30 April 2012.[1]
On Ashby's Few Late Flowers (2008) Robert Nye says: "He has just published what must be the most remarkable swansong offered by a writer in their 89th year...A sequence of quietly original poems, it is the bittersweet distillation of a lifetime's experience" [2]
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