Frank Rossini was born in the Flushing section of New York City. He attended Catholic schools for 16 years, graduating from Fordham University with a BA in English. He began a 43-year career in education as a student teacher in Roxbury, Massachusetts & a student in Harvard University's Graduate School of Education. He also began writing song lyrics with a boyhood friend, Tom Intondi, a singer/songwriter on the Greenwich Village folk music scene. Along the way, he met Tom Weatherly, the author of Mau Mau American Cantos, who encouraged him to write poetry. In 1972, he moved to Eugene, Oregon where he taught in a program for young migrant farmworkers at the University of Oregon & completed a Masters of Education & an MFA in Creative Writing. From 1980 to 2010, he was an instructor at Lane Community College, working with adult learners. He has written & published poetry in various journals over the past fifty years. Silverfish Review published a chapbook of his poems, sparking the rain, in 1979. In 2012, sight | for | sight books published a limited edition book of his poems, MIDNIGHT THE BLUES, which focuses on his long love of jazz that began with a spiritual awakening at midnight on January 1, 1968 while listening to John Coltrane's A Love Supreme for the first time. His most recent work is LAST CONFESSION (sight | for | sight books, 2021). He lives with his wife, Lynn Nakamura, & their dog, Camas, on a small piece of land on the edge of Eugene, where he writes, listens to jazz, & tends a "wild garden."