Kevin R. Griffith

Kevin R. Griffith (born January 22, 1964) is an American poet and short fiction writer. He has published several books and currently teaches English at Capital University in Bexley, Ohio. In addition to his books, he has had over two hundred poems published over the last twenty years.[1]

Kevin R. Griffith
Born (1964-01-22) January 22, 1964
Adrian, Michigan, U.S.
Occupationwriter, professor
Notable awardsAmerican Book Series, Backwaters Prize, Pearl Poetry Prize, Excellence Awards in Poetry, Columbus Writing Award in Poetry

Griffith was born and raised in Adrian, Michigan and would eventually go to Ohio State University. It was there he discovered poetry and writing.[2] In 1992 he graduated from college with a Ph.D. in English. The following year, he wrote his first book, Someone Had to Live, which went on to win the American Book Series.

Capital University

Griffith began teaching at Capital University in 1994. Currently he teaches Creative Writing, Fiction Writing, Poetry Writing, the English Language, Critical Writing, and Humanities. He is also the adviser for the University's literary magazine the ReCap,[3] and the Capital University Creative Writing Club. Griffith's teaching style is consistently praised for his passion for teaching and his use of humor to keep class interesting.

Poetry, awards, and short fiction

Griffith has won several awards for his poetry, including the American Book Series for Someone Had To Live, the Backwater Prize for Paradise Refunded, and the Pearl Poetry Prize for Denmark, Kangaroo, Orange. He has had poems appear in over one hundred publications as well.[4] In addition, Griffith has had ten short stories published in the last few years. His publications appear in Hotel Amerika, Spectrum (magazine), Mid-American Review and others.

Bibliography

Poetry

Someone Had To Live (1993)

Paradise Refunded (1998)

Denmark, Kangaroo, Orange (2007)

101 Kinds of Irony (2012)

Chapbooks

Labors

Manigault's Hunger

As Editor

The Common Courage Reader: Essays for an Informed Democracy (2002)

gollark: The market system (roughly) satisfies people's values, and apparently most people's actual values don't include giving up anything to help people they don't directly interact with.
gollark: Well, yes, it isn't perfect, through broadly speaking I think stuff like people not getting food is more down to people not caring than the structure of society.
gollark: And yet we have a mostly functioning system which produces mostly enough food, and is able to make the mind-breakingly complex supply chains for that food work.
gollark: Pretty much everything we actually produce is in the "not entirely necessary but nice to have" box.
gollark: There is lots of stuff which nobody really *needs* - you can live without it, society could work without it (if we had set stuff up that way) - but it's not very nice to not have it. Like computers, or modern medicine, or non-bare-minimum food and housing.

References

  1. Capital University Directory Archived September 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved March 2014
  2. Capital University Professor Brings Passion to Poetry Archived March 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved March 2014
  3. ReCap, retrieved March 2014
  4. E-Portfolio, retrieved March 2014

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