Andrew Waterman (poet)


Andrew Waterman is an English poet.

Biography

Born in London, Waterman grew up in Woodside and Croydon, and at the age of eleven won a scholarship to the Trinity School of John Whitgift. He left before sitting his A levels, and after six years of clerical and manual jobs in London and Jersey, Waterman studied at the University of Leicester and briefly at Worcester College, University of Oxford. From 1968 to 1997 he lectured in English Literature at the University of Ulster, Coleraine, and in 1998 retired to Norfolk. He is a recipient of the Cholmondeley Award for poets. Since 1990 he has been registered blind, though in practice is partially sighted.
He was a notable fan of Moll Flanders, according to historian Brian Manning
Reviewing his Collected Poems in Ambit, Marita Over writes: "The “story” that emerges through these poems is moving and inspiring and the craftsmanship in its telling is superb. Even as it explores the darkest themes of the arbitrariness of human existence and the innate violence of the human species, brims with a vitality and an in-spite-of-itself optimism born of a keen eye and ear for what is beautiful." Waterman is a recipient of the Cholmondeley Award to Poets.
In "Ulsterectomy", Waterman commented on how writers who happened to have been born in Northern Ireland are claimed for that nationality, ignoring their other cultural influences.

Select bibliography

Poetry
Anthologies
Waterman has also written a considerable amount of critical prose.