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William Rowe (Ed.), ''The Salt Companion to Bill Griffiths'' ([[Salt Publishing]], 2007)
William Rowe (Ed.), ''The Salt Companion to Bill Griffiths'' ([[Salt Publishing]], 2007)

==External links==
*[http://pjoris.blogspot.com/2007/09/bill-griffiths-1948-2007.html Nomadics: Bill Griffiths (1948-2007)] Tribute by poet [[Pierre Joris]] which includes the opening section of ''Cycles on Dover Borstal'' (1974), which Joris published in a magazine he edited in the early 1970's called "SIXPACK"







Revision as of 16:15, 17 September 2007

Bill Griffiths (1948-12 Sept. 2007) was a poet and Anglo-Saxon scholar associated with the British Poetry Revival.

Griffiths was born in Middlesex. As a teenager, he became a Hells Angel, and his experiences with bikers provided material for many of his early poems. From 1971, these poems were published in Poetry Review, under the editorship of Eric Mottram, and by Bob Cobbing's Writers Forum. He also collaborated on a number of performance poetry pieces with Cobbing and others.

Griffiths soon started his own imprint, Pirate Press, which published work by himself and other like-minded poets. In addition to Cobbing and other Writers Forum poets, Griffiths listed his early influences as Michael McClure, Muriel Rukeyser, John Keats, George Crabbe, Gerard Manley Hopkins and Old English poetry.

In 1987, he obtained a Ph.D. in Old English from King's College London. He published a number of editions and translations of Old English texts.

Griffiths was a prolific poet who published widely in Britain and the United States. In later years he lived in Seaham, Durham and ran Amra Press, which published his poetry and books of local studies. His books of poetry from other publishers include Rousseau and the Wicked (Invisible Books, London, 1996), Etruscan Reader 5 (with Tom Raworth and Tom Leonard) (Etruscan Books, Buckfastleigh, 1997) Nomad Sense (Talus Editions, London, 1998), A Book of Spilt Cities (Etruscan Books, 1999), Ushabtis (Talus, 2001) and Durham and other sequences (West House Books, 2002).


References

William Rowe (Ed.), The Salt Companion to Bill Griffiths (Salt Publishing, 2007)

External links