- Roy Campbell (2 October 1901 – 22 April 1957) was a South African poet and satirist. He was considered by T.S. Eliot, Dylan Thomas and Edith Sitwell to have been one of the best poets of the period between the two World Wars, but his connections to right-wing ideology have impaired his reputation and any unbiased assessments of his writing. A willingness to make bitter enemies of influential literati also helped consign him to the outskirts of literature. As of 2009, his life and works—both singularly colorful—are little-known and overdue for re-examination.
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Authors
- Aleksey Porvin
- Alfred Dorn
- C.B. Anderson
- David Alpaugh
- David J. Rothman
- David Lee Garrison
- David W. Landrum
- Don Thackrey
- E.M. Schorb
- Ernest Slyman
- George Good
- George Held
- Hassan Melehy
- James B. Nicola
- Jared Carter
- John a'Beckett
- Joseph S. Salemi
- Juana Inés de la Cruz
- Karen Kelsay
- Keith Holyoak
- Leland Jamieson
- Leo Yankevich
- Margaret Menamin
- Mark Allinson
- Mary Rae
- Michael T. Young
- Mike Burch
- Patricia A. Marsh
- Peter Austin
- Richard Moore
- Richard O'Connell
- Roy Campbell
- Roy Scheele
- Russel Bittner
- Sally Cook
- Sarah Giragosian
- Sisley Huddleston
- T.S. Kerrigan
- Taylor Altman
- Tom Riley
- Wiley Clements
Jared Carter’s Book
Jared Carter’s book, Cross this Bridge at a Walk, is now available from Wind Publications in Kentucky.
Its sixteen narrative poems recount incidents in America’s history from the Revolution to the present, with cameo appearances by Mother Ann Lee, Emily Dickinson, Scott Joplin, and Bix Beiderbecke.
To read sample poems from the book, go to “Coxey’s Army,” “Spirea,” or “Jesus Walking on the Water.”