J. Michael Yates Explained

J. Michael Yates
Birth Name:Joel Michael Yates
Birth Date:10 April 1938
Birth Place:Fulton, Missouri, U.S.
Death Place:Vancouver, Canada
Occupation:Corrections officer
playwright
Nationality:Canadian
Alma Mater:University of Missouri
University of Michigan
Genre:Fiction
Poetry

Joel Michael Yates (April 10, 1938 – April 15, 2019), known as J. Michael Yates, was a Canadian poet, dramatist, fiction writer, and corrections officer.

Early life and career

Yates was born in Fulton, Missouri and raised in Germany. He did graduate degrees at the Universities of Missouri and Michigan, and received an honorary doctorate from Ohio University. Yates emigrated to Vancouver, British Columbia in 1966.

Yates was a widely published author of poetry, fiction, drama, translations, and philosophical essays. He has edited several anthologies and founded and edited several literary magazines. His work has been translated into most of the western languages and several of the eastern ones and his drama for radio, television, and stage have been produced both nationally and internationally. His last rank as a university professor was Distinguished Professor.

He won many literary prizes including the Major Hopwood Awards (both poetry and drama the same year) and the Lifetime Achievement Award in the Arts and Sciences from University of Missouri, The Look of Books (for Volvox: Poetry from the Unofficial Languages of Canada in English Translation), The Olympic Arts Award for Schedules of Silence.

He has also been a logger, a powder monkey, a motorcycle racer, a broadcasting executive, a broadcaster, an advertising executive, a print salesman, a commercial photographer, a publisher. He retired after seventeen years as a Maximum Security Prison Guard and SWAT team member, and taught languages, history of ideas, and science with his wife in their home in Vancouver.

Death

Yates died on April 15, 2019, at his home in Vancouver. He was survived by his wife and two stepsons.[1]

Bibliography

Poetry

Fiction

Fiction and drama

Drama

Non-fiction

Anthologies

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joel Michael Yates . remembering.ca . 2020-02-15.