Reginald Harris
Born in Annapolis,
Maryland, Reginald Harris is a graduate of The Gilman School,
Randolph-Macon College, and the Cave Canem: African-American Poetry
Workshop/Retreat. Recipient of Individual Artist Awards for both
poetry and fiction from the Maryland State Arts Council, he was a
finalist for the 2000 Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize and winner of
the POZ Magazine/Artery Rage and Remembrance 2001 Literary Contest.
His work has appeared in the anthologies Brown Sugar, Bum Rush the
Page, Role Call, and Black Silk, as well as numerous
literary magazines. Reginald Harris is Head of the Information
Technology Support Department for the Enoch Pratt Free Library in
Baltimore, and he is also Editor of Kuumba: Poetry Journal for
Black People In The Life.
"What is important is
craft and Harris delivers a gorgeous book of well-crafted poems which
articulate an intimacy akin to Sharon Olds and Tony Hoagland's works."
- Barbara
DeCesare, Author of Jiggsaw Eyesore
"For years you have wanted
to know what stories go in that house, behind those curtains, with
those men and in those minds. At last Reginald Harris breaks his
family's silence and answers the gossip's questions with poetry so
fraught with truth, that you finally feel like you got all the dirt on
him you need. And it is more tragic and more beautiful than you
ever imagined." - Marvin K. White, Author of Last Rights
I love the way the poems
move, the risks they take, and the surprising turns. The sweep
and passion kept us listening!" - Toi Derricotte, Author of The
Black Notebooks
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