Clive James is an essayist, poet,
translator of Dante, cultural historian, critic, travel writer, lyricist, and novelist. As a television
critic, he has had a large influence on the development of both British and
American television. He’s published five collections of poetry. His translation
of The
Divine Comedy by Dante was a Sunday
Times bestseller. He’s received national honors from both his native
Australia and Great Britain.
In 2010,
James was diagnosed with leukemia, with a poor prognosis. In 2012, his marriage
broke up after he admitted
a years-long affair. In 2014, in a poem entitled “Japanese
Maple” for The New Yorker, James
predicted his own death within a year. He’s sailed close to it a few times, but
it is now 2016, and he
recently told The Independent
that the fact he’s still alive after predicting his death was “embarrassing.”
Embarrassment
is better, I’d say.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
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