John Bensko

John Bensko is an award-winning American poet who teaches in the MFA program at the University of Memphis, along with his wife, the fiction writer Cary Holladay.[1] He lives in Memphis, Tennessee.[2]

Career

Bensko has an MFA in Creative Writing from The University of Alabama (1979) and a Ph.D. in 20th century poetry and narrative technique from Florida State University (1985). He was a student of Thomas Rabbitt in poetry and Barry Hannah in fiction, and classmate of Clark Powell:

Our weekly workshops were simple - take the latest purple mimeographed worksheet of student's poems, and have everyone critique the poems. I once wrote a four-line poem that had an epigraph from Moby Dick that was almost an entire paragraph. I read the poem. Silence. Then everybody started laughing. It was that bad. Another student named John Bensko made a comment that broke everybody up: "This poem is a bit top-heavy."[3]

Before coming to the University of Memphis, he taught at The University of Alabama, Old Dominion University, Rhodes College, and, as a Fulbright Professor in American Literature, at the University of Alicante, Spain. He has been the Coordinator of the MFA program at the University of Memphis and was Director of the River City Writers Series for the 2005-2006 season.[4]

His work has appeared in Georgia Review, Iowa Review, New England Review, New Letters, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, AGNI, Critical Quarterly, The Southern Review, The Southern Poetry Review, Shenandoah, Chelsea, OnEarth, Epoch, The Gettysburg Review, TriQuarterly, Poet Lore, The Journal, Prairie Schooner, and many other periodicals.

Personal life and family

A resident of Memphis along with his Virginia-born wife Cary Holladay,[5] John Bensko was born in Birmingham, Alabama.[6] He is the son of John Bensko, Jr, in turn the son of John (longtime mayor of Brookside, Alabama) and Julia Bensko; other relatives include uncle Robert Ray Bensko, Sr. (1936-2012) and cousins Robert Ray Bensko, Jr, Kristy Bensko, Jennifer Bensko Ha.[7]

Awards

Selected works

Books

Anthologies

See also

References

External references