Praise for WESTPORT POINT ? Poems
A sailor, commercial fisherman, and published poet, Richard Dey has inhabited the several worlds of Westport Point. He has found love there and the wrenching absence of love. He has become a witness to its seasons. This remarkable gathering is both Deys tribute to this riverine world and an unforgettable account of his Westport passages.
Llewellyn Howland III, author of No Ordinary Being: W. Starling Burgess and The New Bedford Yacht Club: A History
With experience both as a fisherman and a sailor, Richard Dey represents a unique American voice. For those of us that work and play and identify intimately with small boats, he is our Robert Frost. Dey is the author of clean, powerful, and personal verse about coastal New England life: on the docks, at the tiller, walking the marsh’s edge, or gazing in the shed in winter and seeing far more than a boat under a tarp.
Richard J. King, series editor of ‘Seafaring America’ and author of The Devil’s Cormorant
Richard Dey is the laureate of southeastern Massachusetts and its shoreline. He writes with a sturdy New England eloquence and makes poetry from what many of us take for granted: this sandy, rocky coast; the changeable offshore waters; the stubborn, deep-souled people who live and work here.
Charles Mc Grath, former editor of The New York Times Book Review
关于作者
RICHARD DEY studied with Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Fitzgerald at Harvard College, and was poetry editor of The Harvard Advocate. He had previously attended a writers’ conference featuring James Dickey, and served in the U.S. Army as a journalist. A graduate of Tabor Academy where he sailed in the schooner Tabor Boy, he has worked as a commercial fisherman, yacht skipper, freelance journalist, editor, and as a professor of maritime history and literature in a college program along the Atlantic seaboard and Lesser Antilles. He is included on the Williams College-Mystic Seaport website for Searchable Sea Literature, https://sites.williams.edu/searchablesealit/.