| Share on Facebook |
Robert Bly Biography
Poet / Writer
Robert Bly is an American poet and the author of the best-selling prose work on modern masculinity, Iron John (1990). His strong poems and charismatic personality made him one of the most prominent poets of the post-World War era, and in the 1960s he made headlines as an outspoken opponent of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. After three decades as a celebrated poet and translator, Bly was credited with starting a "men's movement" in the U.S. after the publication of Iron John, a treatise urging men to reconnect emotionally with mythical and traditional masculine archetypes. His poetry has won many awards, including the 1968 National Book Award (The Light Around the Body), and he's translated the works of such poets as Kabir (India), Hafez (Iran), Pablo Neruda (Chile) and Rainer Maria Rilke (Austria-Hungary). His books include Sleepers Joining Hands (1973), The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart (1992), Morning Poems (1997) and The Night Abraham Called to the Stars (2001).
Four Good Links
Robert Bly Web Site
Official site, with a bio and bibliography
A Gathering of Men
90 minute movie with Bill Moyers
Poetic Vision
2005 interview about poetry, people and politics
Robert Bly
Background, poems and related links
Vital Stats
Birth
23 December 1926
(age 82)
Birthplace
Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota
Death
--
Best Known As
The poet who wrote the man book Iron John
