Peter Robinson

January 10, 2024
Poet

Quick Facts

Peter Robinson
Full Name Peter Robinson
Occupation Poet
Date Of Birth Feb 18, 1953(1953-02-18)
Age 71
Birthplace Salford
Country United Kingdom
Birth City Salford
Horoscope Pisces

Peter Robinson Biography

Name Peter Robinson
Birthday Feb 18
Birth Year 1953
Place Of Birth Salford
Home Town Salford
Birth Country United Kingdom
Birth Sign Pisces
Spouse Sheila Halladay

Peter Robinson is one of the most popular and richest Poet who was born on February 18, 1953 in Salford, Salford, United Kingdom. Peter Robinson (born 18 February 1953, full name: Peter John Edgley Robinson) is a British poet born in Salford, Lancashire.

Alongside his poetry, Peter Robinson’s ancillary activities have also received widespread critical attention. The translations of Vittorio Sereni, made in collaboration with Marcus Perryman, were described by Charles Tomlinson in The Independent (1990) as ‘versions that possess an uncanny accuracy, true to the fragmented, self-communing, smouldering and combustible humanity of Sereni’s work’. Choosing The Great Friend and Other Translated Poems (2002) as a Poetry Book Society Recommended Translation, Douglas Dunn wrote that ‘the range is eclectic without being scattered confusingly across too many languages and cultures. For me at least, much of this work is new’ while Glyn Pursglove, reviewing the book in Acumen, found that Robinson’s ‘attempted fidelity is not allowed to distort his own use of English and English verse and there is a great deal to admire and enjoy here. Indeed, one could wish the book a good deal longer.’ John Welle called the translations of Luciano Erba (2007) ‘marvelously attuned … accurate, carefully crafted, and in harmony with the idiom and spirit of the originals.’ They were awarded the 2008 John Florio Prize.

Highlights of the subsequent decade were provided by John Ashbery’s characterizing his poetry, along with that of other younger writers, as ‘curiously strong’ in PN Review (1993), while Peter Swaab, again in the TLS (4 Sept 1998) noted its ‘staying power’. James Keery published the first attempt to articulate this evolving oeuvre’s underlying themes in ‘Marred in a way you recognize’ in PN Review 126 (Mar-April 1999), and the first appreciation in a critical study came with Sumie Okada’s ‘A Sense of Being Misplaced’, Western Writers in Japan (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1999). Robinson’s many years working in that country made it difficult for him to maintain a profile in the British poetry scene, but his work continued to receive attention, and the publication of his Selected Poems (2003) prompted a number of reviews including a welcome by Patrick McGuinness in the Poetry Review (Winter 2005), a review in The Japan Times (20 Oct 2003) by David Burleigh, and one in Romanian by Catalin Ghita.

His current critical standing was underlined by the publication in 2007 of The Salt Companion to Peter Robinson, a collection of fourteen essays with a bibliography (1976–2006), edited by Adam Piette and Katy Price. The volume includes a preface by Roy Fisher in which he observes: ‘Thus the life-events don’t provide the driving force of the poems; rather they make up the terrain, a varied surface across which the poet travels, living his life but always exercising a strong disposition to make poems from somewhere close to everyday events. It’s as if he carries a listening device, alert for the moments when the tectonic plates of mental experience slide quietly one beneath another to create paradoxes and complexities that call for poems to be made. These are not the ordinary urgencies of autobiography, but they are the urgencies of new creations’ (p. 22).

Peter Robinson’s earliest published poetry was fortunate to receive numerous notices, including one in which the poet and novelist James Lasdun observed that ‘he is a poet, and one with a sensibility which, if attuned only to a somewhat limited range of experience, is unusually refined’ in Siting Fires 1 (1983). The best of these early reviews was Eric Griffiths’ in PN Review 35 (1983), which described Robinson as ‘in my judgement, the finest poet of his generation’. The publication of This Other Life (1988) brought his work to the attention of the national press for the first time with Martin Dodsworth in the Guardian (Friday 13 May 1988) describing the book as ‘grave and deliberated…beautiful and mysterious too’, Rachel Billington’s singling it out in the Financial Times (20 Feb 1988), and its being named a ‘Book of the Year’ in the Sunday Telegraph (4 Dec 1988). Stephen Romer described it as ‘love poetry of an exemplary kind’ in the Times Literary Supplement (19 Aug 1988) and John Kerrigan found in it ‘a miracle of balance’ in the London Review of Books (13 Oct 1988).

Peter Robinson Net Worth

Net Worth $5 Million
Source Of Income Poet
House Living in own house.

Peter Robinson is one of the richest Poet from United Kingdom. According to our analysis, Wikipedia, Forbes & Business Insider, Peter Robinson 's net worth $5 Million. (Last Update: December 11, 2023)

With the exception of five years spent in Wigan, Peter Robinson grew up in Liverpool. He graduated from the University of York in 1974. In the 1970s he edited the poetry magazine Perfect Bound. He helped organize several international Cambridge Poetry Festivals between 1977 and 1985, and was festival coordinator in 1979. He was awarded a doctorate from the University of Cambridge in 1981 for a thesis on the poetry of Donald Davie, Roy Fisher and Charles Tomlinson. Among the most decisive events for his creative life, a sexual assault in Italy on his girlfriend in 1975 — which he witnessed at gunpoint — formed the material for some of the poems in This Other Life (1988) and provided the plot outline for a novel called September in the Rain published in September 2016.

During the 1980s he was one of the organisers of the exhibition Pound’s Artists: Ezra Pound and the Visual Arts in London, Paris and Italy at Kettle’s Yard and the Tate Gallery, co-edited the magazine Numbers and was advisor to the 1988 Poetry International at the South Bank Centre, London. After teaching for the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and at the University of Cambridge, he held various posts in Japan. His most extended employment, from 1991 to 2005, was teaching English Literature and English as a second language at Tohoku University in Sendai. He underwent a successful brain tumour operation in 1993 while his first marriage was failing. He remarried in 1995 to an educationalist and now has two daughters, Giulia and Matilde. In 2007 he returned to the UK to take up a post as Professor of English and American literature at the University of Reading. Since returning to Reading, as well as founding the creative writing pathway and leading research at the university on poetry and poetics, he has organised a centenary conference on the work of the poet Bernard Spencer (1909–1963), instigated the publication of an annual creative arts anthology, and helped found the Reading Poetry Festival. He is poetry editor for Two Rivers Press and literary executor for the estates of the poets Roy Fisher (1930–2017) and Mairi MacInnes (1925–2017).

Peter Robinson’s literary criticism began to gain national attention when Donald Davie reviewed In the Circumstances: About Poems and Poets (1992) in the London Review of Books noting that ‘Robinson deserves every credit for forcing his way into the thickets.’ Poetry, Poets, Readers: Making Things Happen (2002) was welcomed by Andrea Brady in Poetry Review when she remarked that ‘The conviction, pleasures and gratitude of committed reading are evident in this affirmation of the poetic contract between readers and writers.’Angela Leighton summed up his critical contribution in her review for the Times Literary Supplement of Twentieth Century Poetry: Selves and Situations (2005) when she wrote that ‘Robinson has been a generous promoter of contemporary poetry for decades, and this collection of essays bears witness to his dedication and energy. He writes with an unformulaic enthusiasm, moving easily from biographical, political and poetic context to the nitty-gritty of close reading, while also striking an easy, readable tone’. Five years later, in the same journal, Justin Quinn found that Poetry & Translation: The Art of the Impossible (2010) was ‘Vigorously and wittily argued … an excellent and provocative contribution to a complex debate.’

Height, Weight & Body Measurements

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Who is Peter Robinson Dating?

According to our records, Peter Robinson married to Sheila Halladay. As of December 1, 2023, Peter Robinson’s is not dating anyone.

Relationships Record : We have no records of past relationships for Peter Robinson. You may help us to build the dating records for Peter Robinson!

Facts & Trivia

Peter Ranked on the list of most popular Poet. Also ranked in the elit list of famous people born in United Kingdom. Peter Robinson celebrates birthday on February 18 of every year.

Do you need to read Peter Robinson books in order?

It is possible to read each of the novels without having read any of the others but some do contain major spoilers, so if you are intending to read more than one it is best to read them in chronological order.

Is there a new DCI Banks novel?

Not Dark Yet: A DCI Banks Novel: 27 (Inspector Banks Novels) Paperback – Large Print, 23 Mar. 2021.

How many DCI Banks novels are there?

With twenty-six books so far and a brilliant TV adaptation on ITV, there are plenty of mysteries to delve into and Peter Robinson proves himself time and again a master of the police procedural.

Is Peter Robinson still writing books?

He is presently working on a Banks trilogy, which began with Careless Love in 2018 and continues with Many Rivers to Cross in 2019. The final volume, as yet untitled, should appear in the autumn of 2020. Peter’s books have received the following awards: 1990 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Short Story – “Innocence”

Will there be another inspector banks book?

Not Dark Yet: A DCI Banks Novel (Inspector Banks Novels, 27) Paperback – January 25, 2022.

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