Andrew Sant

Andrew Sant (born 1950) is an English-born Australian poet and essayist.[1]

Andrew Sant

In 1962 Sant moved from London, where he was born, with his family to Melbourne where he finished his formal education. He has since lived in London for periods, particularly between the years 2002–2016. In 2001 he was resident at the University of Peking in Beijing, China. In the early nineties he was resident in the Australia Council-administered B R Whiting studio in Rome.

He co-founded in 1979 the literary magazine, Island, based in Tasmania where, by that time, he had moved. He served as an editor for ten years. Other occupations have included teaching at both secondary and tertiary levels, teaching literacy to the unemployed and to prisoners, managing a hostel for juvenile offenders, copywriting and, as part-owner of a small Tasmanian company, cider making.

His most recent poetry collections include Tremors: New & Selected Poems (2004), Speed & Other Liberties (2008), Fuel (2009) The Bicycle Thief & Other Poems (2013) and Baffling Gravity (2019). His poems have appeared individually in The Times Literary Supplement, Poetry, Poetry London, The Australian, The Age, and Antipodes, among many other publications, and in major anthologies of Australian poetry. Sant has been described as a "distinctive and distinguished poet" in Australian Book Review. He is also the author of a number of published essays which have appeared in the annual Best Australian Essays anthology and collected in How to Proceed of which The Times Literary Supplement said, "There is a wonderfully digressive quality ... His syntax follows suit: sentences balloon across lines, the subject weaving in and out of focus as his mind travels around it. There are moments of sparkling poetic clarity." Sant has been invited to read his work in numerous countries including Canada, Germany, Italy, Sweden, New Zealand and, often, the UK. He now lives in Melbourne.

Bibliography

Poetry

Collections

  • Sant, Andrew (1980). Lives. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
  • The Caught Sky (Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1982)
  • The Flower Industry (Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1985)
  • Brushing the Dark (William Heinemann, Melbourne, 1989)
  • Album of Domestic Exiles (Black Pepper publishing, Melbourne, 1996)
  • Russian Ink (Black Pepper publishing, Melbourne, 2002)
  • The Islanders (Shoestring Press, Nottingham UK, 2001)
  • The Unmapped Page - Selected Poems (Arc, UK, 2004)
  • Tremors: New & Selected Poems (Black Pepper publishing, Melbourne, 2004)
  • Speed & Other Liberties (Salt Publishing, Cambridge, UK, 2008)
  • The Lives and Times of the Islanders (Shoestring Press, Nottingham UK, 2008)
  • Fuel (Black Pepper, Melbourne, 2009)
  • The Bicycle Thief (Picaro Press, Warner's Bay, NSW, 2009) chapbook
  • The Bicycle Thief & Other Poems (Black Pepper publishing, Melbourne, 2013)
  • Baffling Gravity (Shoestring Press/Puncher & Wattmann 2019)

List of poems

Title Year First published Reprinted/collected
Mood piece 2014 Sant, Andrew (Autumn 2014). "Mood piece". Meanjin. 73 (1): 93.

Essays

  • How to Proceed(Shoestring Press, Notts, UK, 2015)(Puncher & Wattmann, Sydney, 2016)

Anthologies

  • First Rights - a Decade of Island Magazine (Greenhouse Publications, Melbourne, 1989)
  • Toads (Allen and Unwin, Melbourne, 1992)
gollark: Because they would probably damage things and thus be bad.
gollark: > I'm a very quiet polite person. I have agoraphobia, I never leave or bother anyone> Tbh I'm about to just beat him sensless.
gollark: Well, it might be rude, but it would be ruder and also probably a crime to break their camera.
gollark: Damaging people's things would be a crime. Also trespassing.
gollark: Trying to get revenge on them for... having a camera pointed at you... by breaking the camera probably would not work out very well for you.

References

  1. "Speed & Other Liberties". Salt Publishing. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
  • 30 poems chosen by the author for the Australian Poetry Library
  • 4 poems
  • Black Pepper Andrew Sant biography


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