Name Adam Miller | Role Poet | |
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Books Ticket to Exile, Apocalypse is my garden |
Adam David Miller- Poetry in Motion-Portraits by Antonio Ferrera
Adam David Miller (born October 8, 1922) is an African-American poet, writer, publisher, and radio programmer and producer. Born in Saint George, South Carolina, Miller published one of the first collections of modern African-American poetry, as well as four books of poetry and a memoir, Ticket to Exile about his life growing up in the Jim Crow South.
Contents
- Adam David Miller Poetry in Motion Portraits by Antonio Ferrera
- Poetry at the albany library adam david miller al young
- US Navy
- Laney College
- Publishing
- Quotes about Adam David Miller
- References

Poetry at the albany library adam david miller al young
US Navy
Miller served in the United States Navy from 1942 -1946. He attended university on the G.I. Bill, earning a Masters Degree in English (1953) from the University of California at Berkeley where he also completed post-degree work in drama and helped found the university’s Graduate Student Journal.
Throughout his career, Miller has promoted and published other writers. In Dices, Or Black Bones, (1970), he showcased the early poems of Al Young, California’s poet laureate (2005–2008), Ishmael Reed, Clarence Major, Lucille Clifton, Etheridge Knight and Victor Hernandez Cruz. Miller’s own first book of poetry was Neighborhood and Other Poems (1992), followed by Forever Afternoon (1994), which won the Naomi Long Madgett Poetry Award and was published by Michigan State University Press; next came Apocalypse Is My Garden (1997) and Land Between (2000). Ticket to Exile, A Memoir (2007) published by Heyday Books, received nomination for best nonfiction book in 2007 from the Northern California Book Reviewers Association.
Laney College
Miller taught English for 21 years at Laney College in Oakland, California where he helped create Good News, a faculty and community journal of art and culture. He continued to teach at UC Berkeley until 1991 and has twice been an Invited Fellow with the Bay Area Writing Project (1978 and 1994). For six years, Miller served on the Berkeley Arts Commission and helped inaugurate the downtown “Poetry Walk.”
Publishing
In the 1960s, Miller helped launch Aldridge Players West, a Black drama group in San Francisco. He also created Mina Press which brought out Japanese American Women: Three Generations by Mei T. Nakano in 1990, as well as other works. He has worked with San Francisco Bay Area public television and radio for over 30 years, creating programs on Norwegian culture and arts, the writings of Nisei (Japanese-Americans), women’s history and labor history. He has been a regularly featured poet on listener-sponsored KPFA, 99.4 FM radio in Northern California.
Miller is married to Elise Peeples, philosopher and author of The Emperor Has a Body, and founder of Art Between Us, a collaborative art and healing organization. They make their home in Berkeley, California.