John Greening (born 20 March 1954 in Chiswick, London) is an English poet, critic, playwright and teacher. He has published over twenty poetry collections large and small, including To the War Poets (2013) and The Silence (2019), both from Carcanet Press, and The Interpretation of Owls: Selected Poems, 1977-2022 (2023), from Baylor University Press. He has edited a major illustrated edition of Edmund Blunden’s war memoir, Undertones of War, for Oxford University Press and produced editions of poetry by Geoffrey Grigson and Iain Crichton Smith. His anthologies include Accompanied Voices: Poets on Composers from Thomas Tallis to Arvo Pärt (Boydell and Brewer, 2015), Hollow Palaces: An Anthology of Modern Country House Poems (Liverpool University Press, 2021), and Contraflow: Lines of Englishness, 1922-2022 (Renard Press, 2023), the latter two co-edited with Kevin Gardner. He has reviewed poetry for the Times Literary Supplement since the 1990s. His collected reviews and essays, Vapour Trails (Shoestring Press), appeared late in 2020. He is a recipient of the Alexandria International Poetry Prize (1981), the Bridport Prize (1998), the TLS Centenary Prize (2001) and a Cholmondeley Award (2008).

John Greening
John Greening
John Greening
Born20 March 1954
Chiswick, England
OccupationPoet, editor, critic
NationalityBritish
Period1976 – present

Background

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John Greening was born in Chiswick and brought up in Kew and Hounslow. He attended Wellington Primary School and Isleworth Grammar School. Greening studied English Literature at Swansea University. He won a studentship to the University of Mannheim in Germany and then spent a year at the University of Exeter, where he wrote a dissertation on verse drama for his M.A.[1] He married Jane Woodland in 1978.

He has written a series of plays, one of which, about Robert Louis Stevenson, was awarded Best New Play at the Edinburgh Festival. Another, about the Lindbergh kidnapping, was premiered in Asheville, North Carolina in 2002.[2] Others he has staged with young people while teaching at Kimbolton School, and he took a one-man play about Gordon of Khartoum to the Edinburgh Fringe in 1984. He corresponded about his early verse plays with Ronald Duncan and with Ted Hughes. His first play was staged in Exeter – about Robert Schumann.

Greening has taught for much of his life, including two years with Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) in Aswan, Upper Egypt.[1] Shortly before leaving in 1981, he was awarded the Alexandria International Poetry Prize and received the medal and papyrus certificate from Jehan Sadat on the site of the ancient Pharos. In 1983, after some time teaching Vietnamese boat people in northeastern Scotland, he and Jane moved to Kimbolton, Cambridgeshire (originally Huntingdonshire) where they have lived ever since – apart from a year on a Fulbright exchange in New Jersey 1990-91 – and where their two daughters were born. Greening taught for many years at Kimbolton School and established a poetry reading series at Kimbolton Castle. He has tutored all ages for the Indian King Arts Centre in Camelford, Cornwall, for the Arvon Foundation and currently for the Poetry School in Cambridge, where he was until recently RLF Writing Fellow at Newnham College.[3]

Poetry publications

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Greening’s first poems were published in Emma Tennant’s Bananas,[4] and his earliest Egyptian-themed poems appeared in Poetry Review. In the early 1980s, he received a Scottish Arts Council Award while living in Arbroath. His first collection was published in 1982.[5] Over the past forty-plus years, he has published more than twenty volumes of poetry, including two full Carcanet Press collections, To the War Poets[6] (2013) and The Silence[7] (2019), the latter featuring his long poem about Jean Sibelius. Earlier books include his 1991 Bloodaxe collection, The Tutankhamun Variations,[8] the more pastoral sequences of Fotheringhay and Other Poems,[9] The Coastal Path[10] and The Bocase Stone, then in 1998 a first "Selected" – Nightflights[11] – and two long poems: Gascoigne’s Egg and Omm Sety,[12] both of which showed a growing interest in the occult. The substantial collection The Home Key[13] appeared in 2003, followed in 2008 by Iceland Spar[14] (the result of a pilgrimage to Akureyri, sponsored by the Society of Authors). These were followed by a more substantial "Selected" – Hunts: Poems 1979-2009[15][16] – and the chapbook Knot[17] (2013). In 2016, there was a Heathrow collaboration with Penelope Shuttle, Heath.[18] A further collaboration, consisting of thirty-five years’ holiday sonnets exchanged with Stuart Henson, a Postcard to, appeared in 2020. Other recent volumes include Achill Island Tagebuch[19] (2018), Europa’s Flight (2019), Moments Musicaux[20] (2020), The Giddings (2021), Omniscience (2022), The Interpretation of Owls: Selected Poems (2023, edited by Kevin Gardner), and From the East: Sixty Huntingdonshire Codices (2024). The long poem Cleopatra-Antony will be published as a pamphlet by Dare-Gale Press in summer 2026 and details of a further full collection, Crowning, will appear soon.

His translations from the German include poems of Goethe, Nightwalker’s Song (Arc Publications, 2022) and the complete two volumes of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Neue Gedichte/New Poems (to be published by Baylor University Press in late 2025 to mark the 150th anniversary of Rilke’s birth).

Other writings

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His memoir of life in Egypt, written in prose and verse, Threading a Dream: A Poet on the Nile,[21] was published by Gatehouse Press in 2017.

He has been a reviewer for journals such as Poetry Review, London Magazine, Hudson Review and the Times Literary Supplement.[22] His collected reviews and essays, Vapour Trails (Shoestring Press), was released in 2020. In May 2025, Renard Press will bring out Greening’s large format illustrated guide to poetry - a series of linked essays and poems, A High Calling, or Where Do You Get Your Ideas From?

Other books include guides to poetry (Poetry Masterclass) and to poets (Elizabethan Love Poets, W. B. Yeats, Thomas Hardy, Edward Thomas, the First World War Poets, and Ted Hughes).[23]

His editorial projects include an expanded, illustrated edition of Edmund Blunden's WW1 memoir Undertones of War[24] as well as editions of the poetry of U. A. Fanthorpe (Not My Best Side, with an introduction by A.E. Stallings, Baylor University Press, 2024), Iain Crichton Smith (Deer on the High Hills, Carcanet, 2021), and Geoffrey Grigson (Selected Poems, Greenwich Exchange, 2017).[25] His edition of Matthew Arnold’s poetry, True to One Another, appears from Renard Press in March, 2025.

His anthologies include Accompanied Voices: Poets on Composers from Thomas Tallis to Arvo Pärt (Boydell & Brewer, 2015),[26] Hollow Palaces: An Anthology of Modern Country House Poems, with Kevin Gardner (Liverpool University Press, 2021),[27] and Contraflow: Lines of Englishness 1922-2022, also with Kevin Gardner (Renard Press, 2023). He has collaborated with composers Roderick Williams, Cecilia McDowall, Ben Parry (musician), David Gibbs, and Philip Lancaster.[3]

Criticism and reviews

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Of Hunts: Poems 1979-2009, Glyn Pursglove writes in the poetry magazine Acumen, "Since the end of the 1970s, John Greening has steadily established himself a significant presence in contemporary English poetry... Beyond the admirable craftsmanship that characterises almost all of his work, one of Greening’s great strengths is his historical imagination... Greening’s major sequences are splendid examples of the poetry of place, extended reflections upon the individual’s place in his community, upon place as the creator (and creation) of individuals, full of specifics, but never merely parochial... There is much here to enjoy and admire in the work of a serious (but never excessively solemn) poet, who cares about both ‘facts’ and ideas and makes his poetry out of the interpenetration of the two."

On To the War Poets, Denis Joe writes in Manchester Salon, "Too many poets, since [the world wars], seem intent on trying to capture an idea of ‘what it was like’.... So it is refreshing to come across this volume of poems from John Greening. None of the poems in this volume make any pretence in attempting to capture some sort of feeling of the war, as one critic put it: 'These are not poems as history lessons.' There is no faux rage about the slaughter of so many men, instead Greening takes us on a journey through the century still recovering from the upheaval of that war.... Greening realises that there is no need for dramatics to put across the feel of war; in this sense he displays a great deal of respect for his audience: allowing them to respond to his poetry in their own way and at their own time. In doing so he captures the humanity of the war poets, who, in their own way, also rejected hysteria in regards to their own work, and in many ways gave a feeling of ordinariness to their experience of the war.... [To the War Poets] is a volume of contemporary poetry in the truest sense that I hope will be read in many years to come, alongside the works of the War Poets."[28]

On The Silence, David Malcolm writes in Poetry Salzburg Review, "John Greening’s The Silence is a fine collection of verse – coherent and yet varied, constantly fresh and insightful, often deeply moving, deploying a language that is as vibrant as its vision of the world. It is a collection to return to frequently, in order to immerse oneself in its richness, its darkness, and its felicity of voice."[29] Frank Beck writes in Manhattan Review, "It’s a loving and inventive meditation on the sources of creative inspiration; the vagaries of artistic confidence; and the ability of the mind to keep observing, associating and struggling to build connections, even when those connections unravel, again and again."[30] Kevin Gardner writes in PN Review of the long poem about Sibelius, "The Silence is a compelling exploration of the pressure of fame and the burden of creativity. It is, moreover, an affecting and exquisite poem. The structure sets order at odds with chaos: formal quatrains work in counterpoint against lines of variable syllabic count, while a steady slant-rhyme scheme is disrupted by an adroit use of enjambment."[31]

Of Achill Island Tagebuch, Martyn Crucefix writes, "Greening’s long-established deftness with poetic form is on full display here but it is the (seeming) ease of encompassing that is so impressive. The hedgerows of 'trickling fuchsia' and the 'decayed tooth' of Slievemore are conjoined with be-helmeted cycling jaunts, ill-informed tourists and European research students, while the writer frets about whether the Muses are going to turn up or the disturbing nature of his own dreams – all this alongside more newsworthy items like forest fires on the Greek mainland, Brexit (of course), the discovery of water on Mars and the release of the new Mission Impossible film."[32]

On Hollow Palaces: An Anthology of Modern Country House Poems, Rishi Dastidar writes in Wild Court, "Even if you are someone for whom the city is thrill, escape and potential, when in Britain – and especially England – you cannot escape the lure, the lurking presence of the country house. How could you? So much history, so much of who we are runs under their eaves, through their landscaped gardens. The ruins and relics they are today both tourist attractions and repositories of social memory. A posit: going round country houses is almost the perfect form of recreation for the English, combining as it does walking, queuing, snooping, and property. Very expensive property. And this is history very much alive, right now.... [T]hese piles of bricks clearly still retain a symbolic power, beyond that of being sumptuous settings for Sunday night TV dramas. Unsurprisingly, these houses are fertile territory for poets to roam across, as documented in Hollow Palaces ... a fabulous assemblage of work that does make you think about these buildings in new ways. What appeal does this anthology have to those of us in boxes of concrete and glass, starter Barratt homes or suburban mock Tudor villas? As it turns out, a lot. Mostly this is driven by the way the book is organised, grouped into what at first glance are surprising themes: Insiders, Ghosts & Echoes, Rites & Conversions, Fixtures & Fittings, Loyalties & Divisions, Arrivals & Departures, Dreams & Secrets, and Outsiders. What this allows for is pleasing commonalities to pop up (Wendy Cope in conversation with Yeats in Lissadell is a particular treat), as we go below stairs, explore the gothic, peel back layers of artifice and patterning, on the walls and in the gardens."[33]

Of The Interpretation of Owls, John Forth writes in London Grip, "Edited in consultation with the poet, this first American collection presents a poetic journey of more than forty years, and it is exceedingly well-travelled. Arranged in sections to illustrate abiding interests and influences, the book comprises nearly 300 poems from twenty-two collections by eighteen publishers, and also previously uncollected and unpublished work. . . . It is both joy and jolt to be confronted by eleven ‘mini-selecteds’ of thirty-odd pages organised by theme. Surprises and new relationships between poems abound. . . . This collection lays down a challenge for all young poets approaching their seventies: how to be more profound, allusive and observant whilst also prolific and user-friendly. I struggle to grasp how he’s doing it, but I can see it’s being done. . . . It’s a treasure, hopefully to boost bucks and fame across the pond for one of our best, brightest and busiest poets of the last forty-odd years."[34]

Of From the East, John Whale writes in Stand, "In his hands the tercet is capable of a fine range which includes bold humour, subtle wit and delicate emotion. Throughout the sequence ingenuity is apparent, but never pushes for attention in its own right."[35]

Honors and awards

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Greening received the Alexandria International Poetry Prize in 1981 and the Scottish Arts Council Award. Greening was one of the top six of the Observer Poetry Prize in 1987. He has won the Bridport Prize and the TLS Centenary Prize, and he received a Cholmondeley Award from the Society of Authors. He is the recipient of two Hawthornden Castle fellowships and a Fulbright teaching fellowship. Greening has been one of the judges for the Eric Gregory Award.[3] His poem "Sibelius" was chosen by Carol Rumens as her "Poem of the week" in The Guardian, 4 January 2021.[36] Contraflow: Lines of Englishness, 1922-2022 was named a 2023 best poetry book of the year by Rishi Dastidar in The Guardian[37] and by Graeme Richardson in the Sunday Times.[38]

Bibliography

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Poetry collections

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  • 1982 Westerners (Hippopotamus Press)
  • 1984 Winter Journeys (Rivelin Press)
  • 1991 The Tutankhamun Variations (Bloodaxe Books)
  • 1995 Fotheringhay and Other Poems (Rockingham Press)
  • 1996 The Coastal Path (Headland Books)
  • 1996 The Bocase Stone (Dedalus Press, Ireland)
  • 1998 Nightflights, New & Selected Poems (Rockingham Press)
  • 2000 Gascoigne’s Egg (Cargo Press), 2000
  • 2001 Omm Sety (Shoestring Press)
  • 2003 The Home Key (Shoestring Press)
  • 2008 Iceland Spar (Shoestring Press)
  • 2009 Hunts: Poems 1979-2009 (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2013 Knot (Worple Press)
  • 2013 To the War Poets (Carcanet Press/Oxford Poets)
  • 2016 Nebamun’s Tomb (Rack Press)
  • 2016 Heath (with Penelope Shuttle, Nine Arches Press)
  • 2019 Achill Island Tagebuch (Redfoxpress)
  • 2019 The Silence (Carcanet Press)
  • 2019 Europa’s Flight (New Walk Editions)
  • 2020 Moments Musicaux (Poetry Salzburg)
  • 2020 a Postcard to (with Stuart Henson, Red Squirrel Press)
  • 2021 The Giddings (Mica Press)
  • 2022 Omniscience (Broken Sleep Books)
  • 2023 The Interpretation of Owls: Selected Poems (Baylor University Press)
  • 2024 From the East: Sixty Huntingdonshire Codices (Renard Press)
  • 2026 Cleopatra-Antony (Dare-Gale Press)
  • TBD Crowning (to be announced)

Prose

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  • 2004 Poets of the First World War (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2005 W.B.Yeats (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2007 Thomas Hardy: The Emma Poems (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2007 The Poetry of Ted Hughes (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2008 Edward Thomas (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2010 Elizabethan Love Poets (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2011 Poetry Masterclass (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2017 Threading a Dream: A Poet on the Nile (Gatehouse Press)
  • 2020 Vapour Trails: Reviews and Essays (Shoestring Press)
  • 2025 A High Calling, or Where Do You Get Your Ideas From? (Renard Press)

As translator

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As editor

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  • 2015 Accompanied Voices: Poets on Composers (Boydell & Brewer)
  • 2015 Edmund Blunden’s Undertones of War (Oxford University Press)
  • 2017 Geoffrey Grigson: Selected Poems (Greenwich Exchange)
  • 2018 Ten Poems about Sheds (Candlestick Press)
  • 2021 Iain Crichton Smith: Deer on the High Hills (Carcanet Press)
  • 2021 Hollow Palaces (with Kevin Gardner, Liverpool University Press)
  • 2023 Ten Poems about Rubbish (Candlestick Press)
  • 2023 Contraflow: Lines of Englishness 1922-2022 (with Kevin Gardner, Renard Press)
  • 2024 U.A. Fanthorpe: Not My Best Side: Selected Poems (Baylor University Press)
  • 2025 Matthew Arnold: True to One Another: Selected Poems (Renard Press)

Plays

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  • 1976 Schumann (premiered at University of Exeter in 1977)
  • 1979 Domna (stage play about Septimius Severus, performed at Kimbolton School, 1985)
  • 1980 High Dam (stage play about Nubians)
  • 1981 The Isis Myth (stage play about ex-colonials given rehearsed reading at Riverside Studios, Hammersmith)
  • 1982 The Stevenson Play (stage play awarded Best New Play (Ind Coop Award) at the Edinburgh Festival)
  • 1984 Gordon (one-man stage play later adapted for radio as Between the Two Niles, performed by Stephen Hanvey at the 1984 Edinburgh Fringe)
  • 1986 The Maskes of Oliver Cromwell (stage play, first performed at Kimbolton School)
  • 1991 A Ladder in Hopewell (stage play premiered in 2002 in Asheville, North Carolina by Jericho Productions directed by Franklin Harris)
  • 1992 Philemon and Baucis in the Fens (radio verse play)
  • 1993 Voyage of the Argo (stage play first performed at Kimbolton School)
  • 2000 Minotaur (radio verse play)
  • 2002 Ether (stage play about Sir Oliver Lodge and spiritualism)

Interviews

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  • 2012 I Don't Call Myself a Poet: Interviews with Contemporary Poets Living & Working in Britain: "John Greening," by Sophie Wilshaw, 8 Aug. 2012 [39]
  • 2016 Cambridge 105 Radio: "Bookmark: Ruth Dugdall," 12 Jan. 2016 [40]
  • 2018 Wombwell Rainbow Interviews: "John Greening," 20 Oct. 2018 [41]
  • 2021 Fire River Poets: "John Greening," by Graeme Ryan, 1 Nov. 2021 [42]
  • 2021 Cambridge 105 Radio: "Bookmark: John Greening," by Leigh Chambers, 22 Nov. 2021 [43]
  • 2023 Church Times: "John Greening, poet, teacher," by Terence Handley MacMath, 8 Dec. 2023 [44]
  • 2024 BBC 1 Songs of Praise: "Faith in Poetry," by Aled Jones, 29 September 2024 [45]
  • 2024 Poetry Worth Hearing: Episode 27, by Kathleen McPhilemy, 24 October 2024 [46]

References

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  1. ^ a b John Greening, Newcastle University Special Collections and Archives
  2. ^ Crime of the Century: The Lindbergh Kidnapping Hoax
  3. ^ a b c John Greening biography at Carcanet Press
  4. ^ "Bananas, issues 10 (Spring 1978, p. 43) and 14 (Spring 1979, p. 9)". Archived from the original on 2020-10-27. Retrieved 2020-11-25.
  5. ^ Hippopotamus Press, at Open Library
  6. ^ Review of To the War Poets, by John Greening
  7. ^ Fringe Review UK 2019
  8. ^ Tim Dooley, "Poet on the Margins," TLS 20 December 1991; Ian McMillan, "Long Odds for Laureate," Poetry Review 82.1 (Spring 1992)
  9. ^ Rodney Pybus, "Poetry Chronicle," Stand 37.3 (Summer 1996)
  10. ^ Peter McDonald, "Past Places," Poetry Quarterly Review (Winter 1996)
  11. ^ R. V. Bailey, Envoi, 2000
  12. ^ Matthew Jarvis, "Shoestring Poetry," English: The Journal of the English Association 52.203 (Summer 2003), pp. 175-180
  13. ^ Paul Groves, "Home Ground," London Magazine (2004)
  14. ^ Alan Gould, "Double Vision," Quadrant 7 October 2008
  15. ^ Neil Powell, "Hunting Ground," PN Review 190 (November-December 2009)
  16. ^ Emily Grosholz, "Echoes of Romanticism," Hudson Review 64.2 (Summer 2011), pp. 341-351
  17. ^ Pippa Little, "How Poets and Poetry Can Matter," Elsewhere: A Review of Contemporary Poetry (2013)
  18. ^ Review of Heath by Penelope Shuttle and John Greening
  19. ^ Review of Achill Island Tagebuch by John Greening
  20. ^ David Malcolm, Poetry Salzburg Review 35 (Summer 2020)
  21. ^ Dawn Wood, Review of Threading a Dream: A Poet on the Nile by John Greening, Dundee University Review of the Arts (2018)
  22. ^ Selection of Greening's essays at Muck Rack
  23. ^ John Greening's books at Greenwich Exchange[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ Robyn Marsack, "Going Over the Ground," PN Review 230 (July-August 2016)
  25. ^ Review of Selected Poems by Geoffrey Grigson edited John Greening
  26. ^ Review of Accompanied Voices: Poets on Composers, ed John Greening
  27. ^ Review of Hollow Palaces and launch at Kimbolton
  28. ^ Denis Joe, Manchester Salon, December 2014
  29. ^ Poetry Salzburg Review 35 (Summer 2020)
  30. ^ Frank Beck, "John Greening, Poetry and Anthology," The Manhattan Review, 2020
  31. ^ Kevin Gardner, "A Bunch of Keys," PN Review 249 (Sept-Oct 2019)
  32. ^ John Greening's Achill Island Sonnets
  33. ^ Review of Hollow Palaces by Rishi Dastidar
  34. ^ London Grip Poetry Review – John Greening
  35. ^ Stand 241, March-May 2024, editorial by John Whale
  36. ^ Carol Rumens’ Poem of the Week: Sibelius by John Greening, The Guardian, 4 January 2021
  37. ^ Dastidar, Rishi (2023-12-05). "Best poetry books of 2023". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-02-26.
  38. ^ 16 Best Literature and Poetry Books of 2023
  39. ^ I Don't Call Myself a Poet wordpress interview
  40. ^ John Greening and Margi Blunden discuss Undertones of War
  41. ^ Wombwell Rainbow Interviews: John Greening
  42. ^ Fire River Poets: John Greening
  43. ^ Bookmark: John Greening interview
  44. ^ Church Times interview
  45. ^ Songs of Praise interview
  46. ^ Poetry Worth Hearing on Spotify
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