John Thompson (Australian poet)
John Thompson | |
---|---|
Born |
John Joseph Meagher Thompson 20 December 1907 Kew, Victoria, Australia |
Died |
19 July 1968 60) Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia | (aged
Occupation | poet and broadcaster |
Language | English |
Nationality | Australian |
Notable works | Thirty Poems |
Notable awards | Grace Leven Prize for Poetry |
Years active | 1944-1968 |
John Thompson (20 December 1907—19 July 1968) was an Australian poet who was born in Kew, Victoria, Australia.[1]
Thompson was educated at Melbourne Church of England Grammar School and the University of Melbourne where he obtained a B.A. in 1929. In 1931 he traveled to London where he attempted to make a living as a writer. He met and married Patricia Drakeford Cole in 1938 and worked at a number of jobs before returning to Australia in early 1939. The couple landed in Perth where Thompson got a job as an announcer with the Australian Broadcasting Commission. In December 1942 he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force, serving in Australia in an educational capacity, before being discharged from the army on 2 August 1945 to work as an A.B.C. war correspondent.[2]
After the war he settled in Sydney where he became a senior feature writer and producer at the A.B.C., where he remained until he retired in 1968.[2]
Thompson wrote poetry throughout his adult life and was awarded the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry for his collection Thirty Poems in 1954.[1]
Thompson and his wife had one son, the film critic Peter Thompson, and adopted another, the actor Jack Thompson. He died in 1968.[1]
Bibliography
Poetry collections
- Three Dawns Ago (1935)
- Sesame and Other Poems (1944)
- Thirty Poems (1954)
- I Hate and I Love : Poems (1964)
Anthologies
- The Penguin Book of Australian Verse (1958) edited with Kenneth Slessor and R.G. Howarth
- Australian Poetry 1965 (1965)
Non-fiction
- Hubbub in Java (1946) history and politics
- On Lips of Living Men (1962) biography
- Five to Remember (1964) biography