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Ned Balbo

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Ned Balbo

Genre
  
poetry, essay


Ned Balbo POETS ON ADOPTION NED BALBO
Born
  
November 19, 1959 (age 64) (
1959-11-19
)

Occupation
  
poet, essayist, and professor

Alma mater
  
Brentwood High School '77Vassar College '81, A.B.Johns Hopkins University '86, M.A.University of Iowa '89, M.F.A.

Notable awards
  
Willis Barnstone Translation Prize co-winner, 2013Poets' Prize, 2012Donald Justice Poetry Prize, 2010ForeWord magazine Book of the Year Gold Medal, 2005Ernest Sandeen Prize in Poetry, 2005Robert Frost Foundation Poetry Award, 2003John Guyon Prize in Literary Nonfiction, 2002Towson University Prize for Literature co-winner, 1998

Books
  
Lives of the Sleepers, Galileo's Banquet

Education
  
Vassar College, Brentwood High School

Ned balbo loves the lavender review and jane satterfield does too


Ned Balbo (born November 19, 1959, Mineola, New York) is an American poet, translator, and essayist.

Contents

Ned balbo elusive enterprise zim s birds revisited


Life

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Ned Balbo grew up on Long Island, New York. He was raised by Betty and Carmine Balbo, his birth mother's half-sister and her husband, who he believed were his parents. At thirteen Balbo learned he was adopted. This background informs his creative work.

Ned Balbo Ned Balbo The Poetry Foundation

Balbo graduated from Brentwood High School in 1977. He earned his Bachelor of Arts at Vassar College in 1981, his Master of Arts at Johns Hopkins University in 1986, and his Master of Fine Arts at the University of Iowa in 1989.

Ned Balbo Ned Balbo loves the Lavender Review and Jane Satterfield

Balbo taught poetry and prose at Loyola University Maryland from 1990 to 2014. He currently teaches in the MFA program in Creative Writing and Environment at Iowa State University. He is married to poet-essayist Jane Satterfield.

Poetry and style

Ned Balbo NedBalbojpg

According to Lisa Vihos in Verse Wisconsin, "Balbo...gives shape and heft to the formless, fleeting pastboth historical and personalthrough his rich language." In reviewing The Trials of Edgar Poe and Other Poems for JMWW, Patricia Valdata observes that Balbo's work "raises difficult questions about home, about the relationship of parent to child, about a society's responsibility to its poor." Writing in Studio, Lucas Jacob notes that in The Trials of Edgar Poe and Other Poems, "Balbo...reminds us of the grace we find in our time with each other on this 'island' of life on Earth."

Balbo has written in a variety of forms, including blank verse, sonnets, villanelles, sestinas, and nonce forms, as well as free verse. His poetic influences include Ai, Elizabeth Bishop, Louise Bogan, Robert Frost, Randall Jarrell, Denis Johnson, Weldon Kees, and others.

Awards

In addition to book awards, Balbo has received three Maryland Arts Council Individual Artist Awards in poetry and the Robert Frost Foundation Poetry Award.

He received the John Guyon Literary Nonfiction Prize for the essay "Walt Whitman's Finches: on discretion and disclosure in autobiography and adoption," published in the literary journal Crab Orchard Review in 2002. "My Father's Music," an essay on adoption, ethnicity, and popular culture, and a finalist for the Pirate's Alley William Faulkner Society's Gold Medal in the Essay, appears in Our Roots Are Deep with Passion: Creative Nonfiction Collects New Essays by Italian American Writers (Other Press, 2006). An Italian version of this essay (Carla Antonucci, translator) appeared as “La Musica di mio padre” in Padri: Tre memoir italo americani, edited by Anna Maria Crispino (Iacobelli: Rome, 2009).

Balbo has also been a Walter E. Dakin fellow at the Sewanee Writers Conference and several times a fellow in poetry at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts.

References

Ned Balbo Wikipedia