John Ennis is an Irish
poet born in
Westmeath in 1944.
Life
He retired as head of the School of Humanities at
Waterford Institute of Technology in 2009 and now divides his time between
Waterford and
Westmeath.[1] He is a graduate of
University College Cork and
University College Dublin.[2] He won the
Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award in 1975, the
Listowel Open Poetry Competition eleven times, and the Irish American Cultural Institute Award in 1996. He has been editor of Poetry Ireland Review and served on the board of Poetry Ireland for eleven years. From 2003 to 2007, he co-edited three anthologies of Canadian – Irish Poetry. In 2008, Memorial University awarded him an Honorary Doctorate in Laws for fostering links between Ireland and Newfoundland, and for his poetry.[3] In the ‘90s,
Seamus Heaney chose him as Ireland's most undeservedly neglected poet.[4]
Poetry books
Night on Hibernia (
Oldcastle, Co
Meath The Gallery Press, 1976)
Dolmen Hill (The Gallery Press, 1977)
A Drink of Spring (The Gallery Press, 1979)
The Burren Days (The Gallery Press, 1985)
Arboretum (Dublin, The Dedalus Press, 1990)
In a Green Shade (The Dedalus Press, 1991)
Down in the Deeper Helicon (Dedalus Press, 1994)
Telling the Bees (Dedalus Press, 1995)
Selected Poems (Dedalus Press, 1996)
Tráithníní (Dedalus Press, 2000)
Near St Mullins (Dedalus, 2002).
Postponing Ásbyrgi (Three Spires Press, 2012)
A Pullet for Jack (Book Hub Publishing, 2014)
Notes and references
^"John Ennis". irishwriters-online.com. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
^"John Ennis". gallerypress.com. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
^"John Ennis". corkpoetryfest.net. February 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2014.