Susan Hampton
Encyclopedia

Biography

Susan Hampton was born in Inverell. New South Wales in 1949, and lived in Annandale in Sydney for many years. She has written eight books including poetry, fiction and and non-fiction, and her work is collected in many anthologies. Several of her books have won national awards. Her work has been translated into Spanish, Chinese and Ukrainian. A selection of her poems appears in ‘Australian Poetry since 1788’, edited by Geoffrey Lehmann and Robert Gray (UNSW Press 2011).

After graduating from Newcastle Teacher's College in 1967 she went on to a BA (honours) in English Literature, studying at Newcastle, Macquarie and Sydney Universities. In the 1980s she taught writing at UTS in Sydney. She has been a Writer-in-Residence at the Varuna Writer's Retreat, and at seven universities including the Australian National University, the University of Canberra, and the University of New England.

In 1977 she was a joint winner of the Patricia Hackett Prize (Westerly), and in 1979 won the Dame Mary Gilmore Award for poetry. She also won the Shire of Eltham Short Story Award. Her early books include ‘Costumes’ poems, (Transit Poetry, 1981,) and ‘White Dog Sonnets’ ( Fab Press 1987). ‘The Penguin Book of Australian Women Poets’, which she co-edited with Kate Llewellyn, which became a set text on many writing courses.

Susan has also edited trade fiction and non-fiction books including ‘Stravinsky's Lunch’ (Drusilla Modjeska), ‘Gilgamesh’ (Joan London), and ‘The Poison Principle’ (Gail Bell), which have all won major prizes.
Her next book ‘Surly Girls’, short stories and performance pieces, (A&R/Collins Imprint, 1989) won the Steele Rudd Award in 1990. ‘A Latin Primer’, published by Cerberus Press in 1999, was written in one day, though it was edited over many months. A sequence of 23 sonnets about Mozart, Latin, addiction and love, it was recorded for ABC Radio National’s program ‘Poetica’ in 2003. The program features poems from early works and a selection from ‘ A Latin Primer’.

‘The Kindly Ones’ a 43 page narrative poem (Five Islands Press, 2005) has also been recorded and is available from www.riverroadpress.net. It tells the story of the three Furies of Ancient Greece who decide to take a holiday from punishing people at the gate of hell and come to contemporary Sydney, stay at the backpackers in Glebe and keep in touch by mobile. ‘…a weird satirical travelogue written by one of the Furies. . . It is an extraordinary poem: bold, bitter, intelligent and fantastical.’ (Lisa Gorton) Containing another 50 pages of poems ‘On the Bright Road’, ‘The Kindly Ones’ won the 2006 Judith Wright Award and was shortlisted for the NSW and Victorian Premiers’ Awards for poetry, the Age Book of the Year Award, and the ACT Book of the Year Award.

Susan’s latest book ‘News of the Insect World’ (poems, Five Islands Press, 2009) riffs on infinity, nightclubs, fugues, Caracas, the cordless drill, Dante’s ‘Purgatory’, and scarabs and dragonflies.

Poetry

  • Costumes: poems and prose (Transit New Poetry, 1981) ISBN 0-959-4377-2-X
  • White Dog Sonnets (Sydney: Fab, 1987) ISBN 0-9587831-0-1
  • A Latin Primer (Cerberus, 1998)ISBN 0-9587293-2-8
  • The Kindly Ones (Five Islands, 2005) ISBN 1-74128-093-1 reviews:
  • News of the Insect World (Five Islands, 2005) ISBN 978-0-7340-4105-0

Edited

  • The Penguin Book of Australian Women Poets. With Kate Llewellyn (Penguin, 1986) ISBN 0-14-058575-3 review

Non-fiction

  • About Literature HSC English Textbook, with Sue Woolfe. (Macmillan, 1984) ISBN 0-333-35666-7
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