
NICHOLAS CHRISTOPHER was born and raised in New York City. He was educated at Harvard College, where he studied with Robert Lowell and Anthony Hecht. Afterward, he traveled and lived in Europe. He became a regular contributor to the New Yorker in his early twenties, and began publishing his work in other leading magazines, both in the United States and abroad, including Esquire, the New Republic, the New York Review of Books, the Nation, and the Paris Review. He has appeared in numerous anthologies, including the Norton Anthology of Poetry, the Paris Review 50th Anniversary Anthology, the Best American Poetry, Poet's Choice, the Everyman's Library Poems of New York and Conversation Pieces, the Norton Anthology of Love, the Faber Book of Movie Verse, and the Grand Street Reader. He has edited two major anthologies himself, Under 35: The New
Generation of American Poets (Anchor, 1989) and Walk
on the Wild Side: Urban American Poetry Since 1975 (Scribner, 1994) and has translated Martial and Catullus and several modern Greek poets, including George Seferis and Yannis Ritsos.
He is the author of fourteen books:
Five novels: The Soloist (Viking, 1986;
reissued in 2007), Veronica (1996), A Trip
to the Stars (2000), Franklin
Flyer (2002), and The Bestiary (2007), all published by the Dial Press.
Eight
volumes of poetry: On Tour with Rita (Knopf, 1982), A
Short History of the Island of Butterflies (1986), Desperate
Characters: A Novella in Verse (1988),
In the Year of the Comet (1992), and 5 Degrees (1995), all published by Viking
Penguin, and The Creation of the Night Sky (1998), Atomic
Field: Two Poems (2000), Crossing the Equator: New & Selected
Poems, 1972-2004, published
by Harcourt.
Nonfiction: Somewhere in the Night: Film Noir & the
American City (Free Press, 1997; expanded tenth-anniversary edition (Shoemaker & Hoard,
2006).
His books have been translated and published many other countries, and
he is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships from various institutions, including the Guggenheim Foundation, the Academy of American Poets, the Poetry Society
of America, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
He is currently at work on a new novel, It Was Freddie Moran Who Betrayed Me, a poetry collection entitled 14 rue Serpentine (much of which has already been published in the New Yorker, the New York Times Book Review, TriQuarterly, Ploughshares, & the Georgia Review), and a book about the mythography of islands.
He has taught at Yale, Barnard College, and New York University, and is now a Professor on the
permanent faculty of the Writing Division of the School of the Arts at Columbia
University. He lives in New York City with his wife, Constance Christopher, and continues to travel widely, most frequently to Venice, the Hawaiian island of Kauai, and the Grenadines.
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