John Skoyles (poet) explained

John Skoyles (born December 11, 1949, in Queens, New York) is an American poet and writer.

Early years

John Skoyles was born in Flushing, New York, the son of Olga (Bertolotti) and Gerard Skoyles, an envelope salesman. He attended Mater Christi High School (now St. John’s Prep) in Astoria, graduating in 1967. He did his undergraduate work at Fairfield University and attended workshops at The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery, where he was a student of Dick Gallup and Lewis MacAdams. He has an M.A. in English and an M.F.A. from the University of Iowa.

Career

John Skoyles has taught at Southern Methodist University, Sarah Lawrence College, Warren Wilson College (where he directed the MFA program) and Emerson College. He has also served as the Executive Director of the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown from 1992 to 1994 and again in 2007.

He has written twelve books of fiction, nonfiction and poetry and is the poetry editor of Ploughshares. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, American Poetry Review, Poetry, The Paris Review and others “My Mother, Heidegger, and Derrida”. He is a member of the Order of the Occult Hand and of the Writing Committee of the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His latest book of prose is Driven, a memoir in travelogue form. His seventh book of poems, Yes and No, was published by Carnegie-Mellon University Press in the fall of 2021. He lives in New York City.

Bibliography

Poetry

Collections
List of poems
width=25%TitleYearFirst publishedReprinted/collected
Autobiography2014Skoyles, John . March 31, 2014 . Autobiography . The New Yorker . 90 . 6 . 62–63 .

Novels

Non-fiction

Memoirs

References

on Yes and No by John Skoyles, Alive at the End of the World by Saeed Jones & True Figures by David Blair – On the Seawall

Sources

Contemporary Authors Online. The Gale Group, 2005.