Gregory Corso - biography, career, poetry

birthday poems poetry

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  

love poems

friendship poems
funny poems
inspirational poems
birthday poems
wedding poems
child poems
mother poems
sister poems
  sad poems
  funeral poems
 anniversary poems
 family poems
daughter poems
death poems
baby poems
broken heart poems
graduation poems
retirement poems
haiku poems
short poems
sweet poems
teen poems
thank you poems
sympathy poems
life poems
Christian poems
nature poems
black poems
romantic poems

This is the place to search for a free poet biography. The best resource for quotes and poetry.

 

Gregory Corso

Gregory Corso Gregory Corso was born in New York City on 26 March 1930. His mother, sixteen years old when Gregory was delivered, abandoned the family a year later and returned to Italy. Afterwards, Corso spent most of his childhood in orphanages and foster homes. His father remarried when Gregory was eleven years old, and he had his son stay with him, but the boy repeatedly ran away. He was removed to a boy’s home, from which he also ran away. His troubled adolescence included a stint of several months in the Tombs, the New York City jail, for a case involving a stolen radio, and three months of observation in Bellevue. At seventeen, he was convicted of theft and sentenced to Clinton State Prison for three years. During his incarceration, he read avidly from the prison library and began writing poetry. After his release in 1950, he met Allen Ginsberg, through whom he also became acquainted with William Burroughs and Jack Kerouac, as well as other New York writers and artists. In 1952 he worked for the Los Angeles Examiner and later served as a merchant seaman. In 1954 he unofficially attended Harvard University, where students contributed to the publication of his first collection of poems, The Vestal Lady on Brattle and Other Poems. Two years later he joined Ginsberg in San Francisco, where Lawrence Ferlinghetti published his volume of poems Gasoline. In 1957 Corso joined Kerouac and Ginsberg for a series of unconventional readings and interviews. Since that time he has traveled extensively, especially in Mexico and Eastern Europe. He taught briefly at the State University of New York at Buffalo and occasionally during summer sessions at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. His major publications after Gasoline include The Happy Birthday of Death (1960), The American Express (1961), Long Live Man (1962), Elegaic Feelings American (1970), Herald of the Autochthonic Spirit (1981), and Mindfield (1991).


About the author:
Biography by Michael Skau
http://www.famouspoetsandpoems.com

Home -Link to this page



Free Poetry Contest
Poetry.com will award over 1,200 awards and prizes totaling over $100,000 to amateur poets in the coming months. All contestants are eligible for both of our contests. Join Now!

 

Copy and paste this into the code of your webpage:

Various information on poets - their biographies and other info.

poem contest - poem of the day - terms and conditions - tell a friend - our goals - contact us - bookmark this site - links - poetry contest
This page is best viewed in 1024X768 resolution
Copyright © 2005 LoveThePoem.com - Poets biographies