Ralph Angel, a second-generation American of Sephardic Jewish descent, was born in Seattle, Washington, in 1951.
He attended inner-city public schools there, and, while working freight trains for the Union Pacific Railroad, earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Washington. He then received a Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of California, Irvine.
He went on to become the Edith R. White Distinguished Professor at the University of Redlands, where he shaped the Creative Writing Department and taught for 39 years. He was also a beloved member of the MFA in Writing faculty at Vermont College of Fine Arts.
Angel traveled widely in Europe, North Africa, and Central and South America.
He commented in the “Afterword” to his translation of the Federico García Lorca collection, Poema del cante jondo: “I come from a household of three languages—Ladino, Hebrew, and English—one that I could understand but not speak, one that I could sing but not understand, and one that is the language of my country, at some distance, always, from my home.” When he came to translate Lorca’s poetry, he noted that he was familiar with the music that the poems paid homage to: “It resembled the incantatory medieval singing of the Sephardic synagogue that I grew up in.”
Angel’s spare lyrics are set in an urban landscape that seems timeless, universal, and historical.
In his 1996 Los Angeles Times review of Neither World (Miami University Press, 1995) Mark Doty stated: "The Los Angeles that Angel's poetry occupies and creates is never named, and for good reason, since it is not local but broadly American, a version of the psychological landscape of any American city today."
Angel’s work has been lauded for its extraordinary abstract lyricism and wry philosophical wisdom.
It also has been noted that his collections differ dramatically from one another, about which he has stated: “Poetry is the language for which we have no language. Given that I have only two tools—the language in which I compose and the fact of my reality—it’s my job to find the language that enacts the fact of my reality. If my poems have changed and evolved over the years, they are testimony to how my life and orientation to language have changed and evolved. It’s my job to make immediacy and presence possible.”
His first collection, Anxious Latitudes (Wesleyan University Press, 1986), was widely praised and reviewed. His second book, Neither World (Miami University Press, 1995), which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets, garnered him national prominence. A third work, Twice Removed (Sarabande Books, 2001), was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Award, and was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award. His fourth collection, Exceptions and Melancholies: Poems 1986-2006 (Sarabande Books, 2006), was honored with the 2007 PEN USA Award for Poetry. His most recent collection, Your Moon (New Issues Poetry and Prose) was awarded the 2013 Green Rose Poetry Prize. And his translation of the Federico García Lorca collection, Poema del cante jondo / Poem of the Deep Song, received a Willis Barnstone Poetry Translation Prize.
His poems have appeared in scores of magazines, both here and abroad, and have been collected in numerous anthologies, including The Plume Anthology of Poetry, Pratik International, The Heart's Many Doors, The Best American Poetry, American Hybrid, Poets of the New Century, and Forgotten Language. Other recent literary awards include a gift from the Elgin Cox Trust, a Pushcart Prize, the Gertrude Stein Award, a Fulbright Foundation fellowship, and the Bess Hokin Award of the Modern Poetry Association.
Following a brief illness, Ralph Angel passed away on March 6, 2020, with his wife, Mary, by his side.
Books, Poetry
Strays, chapbook, Buffalo, NY: Foundlings Press, 2019
Your Moon, Kalamazoo, MI: New Issues Poetry and Prose, 2014
Exceptions and Melancholies: Poems 1986-2006, Louisville, Ky: Sarabande Books, 2006
Twice Removed, Louisville, Ky: Sarabande Books, 2001
Neither World, Oxford, OH: Miami University Press, 1995
Anxious Latitudes, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1986
History, Limited-edition chapbook, San Diego, California: Atticus Press, 1982
Books, Translation, Poetry
Poema del cante jondo/Poem of the Deep Song, Federico García Lorca, Louisville, Ky: Sarabande Books, 2006
Books, Art
entropia, Tucson, AZ: Dark Spring Press, 2019
Reading the haunted, masterful poems of Ralph Angel is like being gently dropped into the ever-fluctuating substance of the day. The temperature is around 70 degrees. One could be in a languorous painting, riding this brushstroke and then the next, or just as easily, in a room somewhere, in L.A., Seattle, Amsterdam, the Mediterranean . . . on a train, in a plaza. Eventually the treacherous crevices and schisms arrive, where, everyday, we break down. All the guilt, pain, beauty, love and loathing of being alive is populated by figures who speak, speak back, and then through an omniscient, doubtful and pained visionary. This is Your Moon. It truly is. 'Of human unfinished. / The spirit in time.'
—Gillian Conoley