Michael Delp
Michael Delp is an American writer of both prose and poetry.
Life and work
Tonight I'm listening to John Fahey coax the legend of Blind Joe Death
out of his fingers. He's a ghost now, if you remember, dead for years,
the guitar grown out of his bones. You're walking with him through
the Arizona night. Wordsworth is there too, whispering, "come forth
into the light of things" and I imagine your blind left eye suddenly
opening to the world again, and just then, you stoop to kiss the breasts
of one of those cow dogs turned maiden and one of her wondrous
nipples pierces your good eye.[1]
- ^ Dunes Review. Volume 16 Issue 1. Winter, 2012.
Delp was an instructor of creative writing at the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. Delp's literary works have been recognized and highlighted at Michigan State University in their Michigan Writers Series.[1] He is known for writing about nature, especially fishing and water.[2] He was co-editor (with Conrad Hilberry and Herbert Scott) of the anthology Contemporary Michigan Poetry: Poems from the Third Coast (1988).
Works
The Last Good Water: Prose and Poetry, 1988-2003, was published in 2003.[3] Other works include:
- Contemporary Michigan Poetry: Poems from the Third Coast (1988) - Co-editor with Conrad Hilberry and Herbert Scott
- Over the Graves of Horses (1988)
- Under the Influence of Water: Poems, Essays, and Stories (1992)
- The Coast of Nowhere: Meditations on Rivers, Lakes, and Streams (1998)
- New Poems from the Third Coast: Contemporary Michigan Poetry (2001) - Co-editor with Conrad Hilberry and Josie Kearns
- The Last Good Water: Prose and Poetry, 1988-2003 (2003)
- As If We Were Prey (2010)
Notes
- ↑ "Michigan Writers Series". Michigan State University Libraries. Retrieved 2012-07-15.
- ↑ "Michael Delp". Archived from the original on 2006-08-29. Retrieved 2007-02-04.
- ↑ Delp, Michael (2003). The Last Good Water: Prose and Poetry, 1988-2003. Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press. pp. 144 pages. ISBN 0-8143-3171-8.