Ross Clark (born 30 August 1953)[1] is an Australianpoet. His poems often use strongly physical imagery and he is a strong exponent of haiku poetry.[2]
In 1990, Clark was an inaugural member of the Queensland Writers Train;[5] in 2003 he was recipient of the Centenary of Federation Medal, otherwise known as the Centenary Medal, for "contribution to poetry";[6] in 2004 he was recipient of the Queensland Writers' Centre Johnno Award, "for outstanding contribution to Queensland writers and writing";[7] and in 2008 he was recipient of the Australian Book Review Poetry Prize.[8]
Works
1982. Chameleon: Triprych 1-33. Brisbane: Queensland Community Press
1986. With Fires on Every Horizon. Kelvin Grove: Brisbane College of Advanced Education. ISBN978-0-86856-654-2
^"Q150 Steam Train". Archived from the original on 10 October 2009. Retrieved 4 July 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), accessed 07/08/2011; see also Clark, R. 2023. Stations of the Word. WQ Issue 283, Dec 2023-Feb 2024, 14-15. ISBN 1444-2922.