Carol Ann Duffy

@Poets, Facts and Childhood

Carol Ann Duffy is an award-winning British poet and children’s book writer

Dec 23, 1955

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: December 23, 1955
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Atheists, Feminists, Lesbians, Writers, Poets
  • Spouses: Peter Benson
  • Known as: Dame Carol Ann Duffy
  • Childrens: Ella
  • Universities:
    • University of Liverpool

Carol Ann Duffy born at

Glasgow

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Birth Place

Carol Ann Duffy is openly bi-sexual. Always a rebel with an unconventionally independent streak, she was only 16 when she first met the poet, musician and artist Adrian Henri who was 39 at that time. Their huge age gap did not deter the teenager from developing a romantic liaison with the much older man, a relationship that lasted for 12 years.

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Personal Life

Later Duffy entered into a relationship with the Scottish poet and novelist Jackie Kay who is lesbian. The two women were together for 15 years before breaking up.

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Personal Life

*Duffy is the mother of one daughter, Ella, born in 1995. Ella’s father is the writer Peter Benson.

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Personal Life

Carol Ann Duffy was born in Gorbals, a poverty struck and underprivileged part of Glasgow, United Kingdom to Frank Duffy, an electrical fitter and Mary Black.

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Childhood & Early Life

At the age of six, her family re-located to Stafford, England, where she attended the Austin's RC Primary School from 1962 to 1967 and later she was enrolled at St. Joseph's Convent School and Stafford Girls' High School.

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Childhood & Early Life

She was a voracious reader from her school days and by the age of eleven she authored many poems. At the age of fifteen, her poems were published by ‘Outposts’, a pamphlet publishing house.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1974, she enrolled at the University of Liverpool, where she studied philosophy. While at the university, she wrote for a pamphlet titled ‘Fifth Last Song’.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1988, she began to work for The Guardian as a poetry critic. She also worked as an editor for ‘Ambit’, a poetry magazine.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1985, she published ‘Standing Female Nude’, a collection of poems. The title poem of the book is written from the point of view of a nude female model.

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Career

In 1987, she published one of her highly acclaimed works of poetry, ‘Selling Manhattan’. The book was very well-received and is regarded as one of her best works.

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Career

In 1990, she came out with ‘The Other Country’, a collection of poems that was well appreciated and positively reviewed by literary critics. The book takes readers on a fascinating journey into a fantastical world.

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Career

In 1993, she published her award-winning poetry collection, ‘Mean Time’, a compilation of verses inspired from childhood, adolescence and adulthood incidents.

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Career

In 1999, she published ‘Meeting Midnight’, which was a collection of poems for young readers. That year, she also came out with ‘The World's Wife’, a selection of verses on sexism, equality, bereavement and birth.

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Career

Her poem collection ‘Standing Female Nude’ is one of her most popular and critically acclaimed works. It was the recipient of the Scottish Arts Council Award.

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Major Works, Awards & Achievements

Her collection of poems titled ‘Selling Manhattan’ was one her most revered and admired publications. It was the recipient of the Somerset Maugham Award.

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Major Works, Awards & Achievements

‘Mean Time’ is one of her most significant works. It received the Forward Poetry Prize and the Whitbread Poetry Award, a British literary award.

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Major Works, Awards & Achievements

In 1984, she received the Eric Gregory Award.

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Major Works, Awards & Achievements

In 1999, she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

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Major Works, Awards & Achievements