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Irish writer and poet (born 1956) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Harpur (born 1956) is a British-born Irish poet who has published eight books of poetry.[1] He has won a number of awards, including the Michael Hartnett Award and the UK National Poetry Competition.[2] He has also published books of non-fiction and a novel, The Pathless Country.[3] He lives in West Cork and is a member of Aosdána, the Irish academy of the arts.[2]
James Harpur | |
---|---|
Born | 1956 (age 67–68) Weybridge, Surrey, UK |
Occupation | Poet |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Cambridge |
Notable works | Angels and Harvesters; The White Silhouette; The Examined Life; The Pathless Country (novel) |
Website | |
www |
James Harpur was born in Britain in 1956 to an Irish father and a British mother and now lives near Clonakilty in County Cork. His father was born in Timahoe, County Laois, the son of a Church of Ireland minister, and his mother was born in Le Vésinet, Paris.[4] Harpur studied Classics and English at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was a joint-winner of the Powell Prize for Poetry.[5] He taught English on the island of Crete and has subsequently worked as a lexicographer and freelance writer.
Many of the poems of his first collection, A Vision of Comets, take their inspiration from his time on Crete and from the Aegean area.[6] In 1995 he won the UK National Poetry Competition with a sonnet sequence, ‘The Frame of Furnace Light’, about the death of his father.[7] The poem was published in his second book, The Monk’s Dream. In 2000 Harpur became poet in residence in Exeter Cathedral, as part of the UK’s ‘Year of the Artist’ scheme.[8] In 2002 he moved to Ireland and settled in West Cork, near the town of Clonakilty.[4] His book, The Dark Age, featuring a sequence on Irish Dark Age saints, won the 2009 Michael Hartnett Award.[2] Further books include The White Silhouette (2018), described by the Irish Times as a ‘resonant, moving pilgrimage of great beauty’,[9] and The Examined Life (2021), described by Stephen Fry as a ‘quite marvellous work … an Odyssey, a Ulysses shaken up in the snow-dome of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.’[10]
In 2021 Harpur published his first novel, The Pathless Country, winner of the J.G. Farrell Award and an Irish Writers’ Centre Novel Fair award. The story is set in early-1900s Ireland and London and features a number of historical characters, including W.B. Yeats, Annie Besant, and J. Krishnamurti.[3]
According to the introduction to Harpur on the Poetry International website, he ‘is essentially an interior poet with a fascination for spirituality, and his poems are full of references to Christian as well as to other religious traditions. Stylistically, he has a deep sympathy with the mythopoeic strand of poetry, from Homer, Virgil and Dante to the Romantics and Yeats, Eliot and Ted Hughes. His non-literary influences include Carl Jung and J. Krishnamurti’.[11] In a review of The White Silhouette, Michael O’Neill wrote: ‘I have rarely encountered a contemporary voice that brings out as strongly and convincingly as does James Harpur’s in The White Silhouette the way in which spiritual wrestlings and traditions can live again in poetry.’[12]
(for The Pathless Country[3])
Official website https://www.jamesharpur.com
Introduction to Harpur’s work on the Poetry International website: https://www.poetryinternational.com/en/poets-poems/poets/poet/102-12503_Harpur
Interview with Harpur by Poetry Ireland Review (via author’s website): https://www.jamesharpur.com/pirpiece.htm
Interview with Harpur by Kevin Brophy for Axon magazine (Australia): https://axonjournal.com.au/issues/8-2/james-harpur-process-20132017
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