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Belgian-Irish poet and academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miriam Gamble (born 1980) is a poet who won the Eric Gregory Award in 2007 and the Somerset Maugham Award in 2011. She works as a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh.
Miriam Gamble | |
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Born | 1980 Brussels, Belgium |
Alma mater | University of Oxford Queen's University of Belfast |
Notable work | The Squirrels Are Dead (2010) Pirate Music (2014) |
Miriam Gamble was born in Brussels, Belgium, in 1980 and grew up in Belfast in Northern Ireland.[1] She studied English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford and Modern Literary Studies at Queen's University of Belfast where she also received her PhD in Form, Genre and Lyric Subjectivity in Contemporary British and Irish Poetry. She moved to Scotland in 2010 and began teaching creative writing at the University of Edinburgh in 2012.[2]
Her first collection of poems called, The Squirrels Are Dead was published in 2010 by Bloodaxe Books. Gamble's second collection, Pirate Music, was also published by Bloodaxe Books.[3] Her third, What Planet, was published by Bloodaxe in May 2019 and received the 2020 Pigott Poetry Prize.[4]
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