Description
Poetry. "John Godfrey's poems keep the figures and voids, the letters and haunts, the anthems and hums all equally active. They work perspective from the inside-out, making through their cuts the world be worn as seen, on the streets-mind and felt underneath. Living sonics keep time where decisions quietly and loudly get made, every line on in or about a plane, with connections. A TORCH FOR ORPHANS turns out what it, being specific, and therefore mystical, is to be alone with many, to be many alone with this curious ongoing everybody, staying in the way of them who back walk, singing powerful unlikeness from the depths of the real spaces between us."—Anselm Berrigan
Author Bio
John Godfrey was born in Massena, New York in 1945. He integrated a kindergarten in a working-class second- generation Japanese neighborhood in Honolulu. Three years later he attended the public school in Bennington, Vermont for five years, followed by a year in Albany, New York. In 1960 he was relocated to Farmers Branch, Texas and finished high school in Dallas. He graduated from Princeton in 1967. Halfway through that alienating experience, in 1965, he was opened up to "The New American Poetry," particularly the New York avant-garde poetry culture of the time. He has lived in the East Village of Manhattan since the end of the 1960s. He has been employed as a waiter, a furniture mover, in an industrial laundry, as a farm worker in Wyoming, and as a janitor (in a San Francisco rock'n'roll studio). Returned to New York, he was an assistant editor for an art magazine, a type shop messenger, and then proofreader-dispatcher in the same shop, followed by a number of years in the alternative economy. There followed a period of language-journalism- political history studies in Thailand. After fulfilling prerequisites he earned a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Columbia University and licensure as a Registered Nurse in 1994. From 1994 to 2003 he was a visiting nurse in the maternal-pediatric HIV/AIDS homecare program of St. Mary's Hospital for Children. In 2003 he moved to the HIV/AIDS clinic at Kings County Hospital Center in East Flatbush, which provided pediatric, maternal, adolescent, young adult, and gestational treatment services. He played a prominent role in the prevention of mother-to-newborn transmission of HIV in 325 out of 325 cases before his retirement in 2011. He has published sixteen collections of writing, including A TORCH FOR ORPHANS (Cuneiform Press, 2020), THE CITY KEEPTS: SELECTED AND NEW POEMS 1966-2014 (Wave Books, 2016), and others.
Author City: NEW YORK, NY USA