Gregory Loselle (born 1963) is an American poet, dramatist, and writer of short fiction.
Winner of the Ruby Lloyd Apsey Award for Playwriting in 1988, for "New York Times,"[1] and author of a short play published by The Dramatic Publishing Company in 1981,[2] his fiction has been published in The Georgetown Review[3] and The Saturday Evening Post (his short story, "Lazarus," which won The Lorian Hemingway Short Fiction Competition in 2009[4]), while his poetry has appeared in literary journals such as Alehouse[5] Oberon, The Comstock Review, Inkwell, The Pinch and Rattle[6] and has won several competitions and awards, including The Rita Dove Poetry Prize in the Salem College International Writing Awards[7] and the Robert Frost Foundation's Robert Frost Award for Poetry in 2009.[8] He won four Hopwood Awards for Creative Writing, and the Academy of American Poets Prize, at the University of Michigan, where he earned an MFA in Creative Writing. [9]
Loselle is the author of two short collections of poetry published by Pudding House Books;[10] one of which, Phantom Limb, has been made available through Google Books,[11] and a third, The Whole of Him Collected, to be published in 2011 by Finishing Line Press.
He teaches secondary English and Art History in the Grosse Ile, Michigan (US) schools.[12]