His collections of poems include Ripening for which he was named Ohio Co-Poet of the Year in 1985, Possible Debris, Mill and Smoke Marrow, appearing in the four-book collection A Red Shadow of Steel Mills, Garden, Alive in Hard Country and named 2004 Poetry Book of the Year by the Appalachian Writers Association, The Time It Takes Light, and Lives of The Poem, as well as five chapbooks, Crossings, A Week of Nights Down River, A Bestiary, Greatest Hits: 1968–2000, and Burst: Poems Quickly. Milltown Natural: Essays And Stories from A Life was a 1997 National Book Award nominee. More recently, he has published Public Hearings, Learning How: Stories, Yarns, & Tales, During The Recent Extinctions: New & Selected Poems and winner of the Weatherford Award in Poetry, Where Drunk Men Go, Beasts, River, Drunk Men, Garden, Burst & Light: Sequences and Long Poems, and Studied Days: Poems Early & Late in Appalachia.
Credits
His poems, essays, and stories have appeared in many magazines and reviews and in over two dozen anthologies. He is a recipient of grants and fellowships from The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, The Council for Basic Education, The Southern Poverty Law Center, the Marianist Education Consortium, and three Ohio Arts Council Individual Artists Fellowships in two genres. He won the $1,000 First Prize in the year 1999's Sow's Ear Poetry Review contest, and was, for the second time, a Finalist in the 1999 Pablo Neruda Prize for Poetry, sponsored by Nimrod: International Journal. He is winner of the James Still Short Fiction Award for 2004, sponsored by Wind: A Journal of Writing & Community, and judged by novelist and short story writer Lee Smith. Smith writes of Hague's "Fivethree Filson and the Looking Business." This is a wildly original story in the great American tradition of the tall tale, by a writer who's clearly punch-drunk on language. Dickensian in scope, this exuberant story is both literary and wildly entertaining." He also sits on the board of Ink Tank in Cincinnati.
Awards
Hague received the 1982 Cincinnati Post-Corbett Award in Literary Arts, and his performance piece, "Where Drunk Men Go" won Critic's Choice in the 2009 Cincinnati Fringe Festival. Richard Hague was twice named Master Teacher by the Faculty at Purcell Marian High school and was the 2003 Teacher of the Year as voted by the Senior Class. He also received the school's Praestans Award in 2007. His book During the Recent Extinctions: New and Selected Poems 1984-2012 won the 2012 Weatherford Award for Poetry. He has presented professionally at the National Council of Teachers of English, the Ohio Council of Teachers of English and Language Arts, and the Ohio Catholic Education Association.
Personal life
Richard Hague lives in Cincinnati's Madisonville neighborhood with his wife Pam Korte, a potter and Assistant Professor of Ceramics at The College of Mt. St. Joseph, and his two sons, Patrick, an alumnus of Indiana University, and Brendan, a graduate of Purcell Marian High School.