Michael Handler Ruby
This article, Michael Handler Ruby, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
Comment: This page was created by two paid editors using account Michael Ruby1, in violation of our Terms of Use – please see User talk:Michael Ruby1 for details. Unless appropriate disclosure is made, this content should not become part of the encyclopaedia. Justlettersandnumbers (talk) 10:05, 14 September 2019 (UTC)
![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Michael Handler Ruby (born September 19, 1957) is an American poet and longtime editor at The Wall Street Journal. As a poet, he has primarily identified with surrealism,[1] Language poetry and the New York School, including Bernadette Mayer, whose early books he co-edited.[2]
Life and career
Ruby grew up in South Orange, New Jersey, the son of Myron Ruby and Judith Handler,[3] in a family of mostly Russian Jewish descent. He had six older half-siblings and a younger full sister, including the mathematician entrepreneur Sandy Ruby and the Democratic Party activist Alice Germond.[4] He graduated from Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, in 1975.
Ruby majored in English and American literature at Harvard College, worked on both campus poetry magazines, padan aram and The Harvard Advocate, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 1979.[3] He studied early American literature with Alan Heimert and poetry with Jane Shore, Alan Williamson, Robert Fitzgerald and Seamus Heaney. He also was part of a group associated with novelist and conspiracy theorist Harold L. Humes.[5] After studying languages in Italy and France and working as a substitute teacher in the Boston public schools, he received an MA in poetry writing in 1983 from Brown University, where he studied with Keith Waldrop. He lived with the poet Cynthia Zarin during much of that time.[6]
He started working as a financial journalist and settled in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn in 1984.[7] Since 1986, he has worked as an editor at The Wall Street Journal in Manhattan, initially covering technology and health, and later U.S. news and politics,[6] often editing articles for the front page of the newspaper and home page of wsj.com. He married the art historian Louisa Wood Ruby in 1989, and they have three daughters.
Ruby did not start publishing poetry until his forties. His first book, At an Intersection, a selection of poems from the 1980s and early 1990s, was published in 2002.[8] In his next published book, Window on the City, Ruby turned to a form of automatic writing that he called “surrealist at the level of each word or phrase, as opposed to surrealist at the level of the image or narrative, the predominant surrealist approaches,” in a 2014 interview in The Conversant. He continued that approach in The Mouth of the Bay, written over many years on the Maine coast. His 2010 book, Compulsive Words, is based on the experience of a group of words "taking over the poem,"[9] a subject he has continued to explore.[10] He is best known for the 2013 publication American Songbook, with poems based on 75 recordings of American singers from the 1920s to 1999.[1] A closely related book,[7] The Star-Spangled Banner, with poems based on the words of the U.S. national anthem, was excerpted in a chapbook in 2011 and published in 2020.
During the same years, Ruby wrote a series of books in prose and poetry that chronicled dreams, memories, inner voices and visions. The first three books— Fleeting Memories, Dreams of the 1990s and the hypnagogic Inner Voices Heard Before Sleep—were published as the trilogy Memories, Dreams and Inner Voices in 2012. A subsequent hypnagogic book,[11] Close Your Eyes, was excerpted in a chapbook in 2013 and published as an ebook in 2018.
Starting in 2010, Ruby has worked on editorial projects for Station Hill Press in Barrytown, N.Y., including co-editing with Sam Truitt Eating the Colors of a Lineup of Words: The Early Books of Bernadette Mayer,[2] and Piece of Cake, a 1976 prose collaboration between Mayer and Lewis Warsh.
A family historian, Ruby has co-written memoirs about the Supreme Court with his great uncle Milton Handler,[12] and he edited the writings of his half-brother David Herfort, a poet who served in jail and then died in a car accident in Spain at the age of 22. [13]
Other notable relatives of Ruby include his stepfather, chemist Eli M. Pearce[14]; his aunt, foreign-policy expert Antonia Handler Chayes[15]; his brother-in-law, political journalist Jack Germond[16]; his niece, rock bassist Abby Travis; and his first cousin, wartime journalist Sarah Chayes. Ruby is more distantly related to writer Ellen Handler Spitz, poet Daniel Hoffman and poet Wayne Koestenbaum, among others.
Works
Books
- The Star-Spangled Banner. Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 2020
- The Mouth of the Bay. Buffalo: BlazeVOX [books], 2019
- American Songbook. Brooklyn: Ugly Duckling Presse, 2013
- Memories, Dreams and Inner Voices. Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 2012 (a trilogy)
- Compulsive Words. Buffalo: BlazeVOX [books], 2010
- The Edge of the Underworld. Buffalo: BlazeVOX [books], 2010
- Window on the City. Buffalo: BlazeVOX [books], 2006
- At an Intersection. New York: Alef Books, 2002
Ebooks
- Titles & First Lines. Jacksonville, Fla.: Mudlark, 2018
- Close Your Eyes. Liverpool, U.K.: Argotist Online, 2018
- Inner Voices Heard Before Sleep. Liverpool, U.K.: Argotist Online, 2011
- Fleeting Memories. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Ugly Duckling, 2008
- First Names. Jacksonville, Fla.: Mudlark, 2004
Chapbooks
- Poems for Texts for Nothing, a collaboration with Nancy Graham. Kingston, R.I.: Dusie Kollektiv, 2019
- Coastal Elements. Kingston, R.I.: Dusie, 2015
- Foghorns. Kingston, R.I.: Dusie, 2014
- Close Your Eyes. Zurich, Switzerland: Dusie, 2013
- The Star-Spangled Banner. Zurich, Switzerland: Dusie, 2011
Editing projects
- Piece of Cake by Bernadette Mayer and Lewis Warsh. Co-edited with Sam Truitt. Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 2019
- Eating the Colors of a Lineup of Words: The Early Books of Bernadette Mayer. Co-edited with Sam Truitt. Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 2015
- Washtenaw County Jail and Other Writings by David Herfort. Philadelphia: Xlibris, 2005
Reviews
Dan Chiasson wrote of American Songbook: “Ruby’s poems are ‘American songs’ in their transformation of tune into ‘sound,’ noise, traffic, as well as their loneliness (he calls to mind Edward Hopper and the early Eliot of ‘Preludes’)…. They are also, in their broken way, up-to-date, streetwise.”[1] Jerome Rothenberg wrote on the back cover of trilogy Memories, Dreams and Inner Voices: “His project here—to explore ‘the varieties of unconscious experience’ as they come to him—is an aspect of what Gary Snyder once described as ‘the real work of modern man: to uncover the inner structure and actual boundaries of the mind.’”
References
- ^ a b c Chiasson, Dan. "Go Poets". The New York Review of Books.
- ^ a b Mayer, Bernadette. "Thirteen Poems by Bernadette Mayer, Edited by Michael Ruby and Sam Truitt". Jacket2.
- ^ a b "Michael H. Ruby, An Editor, Is Wed To Louisa Wood". The New York Times.
- ^ Weber, Bruce. "Sandy Ruby, Co-Founder of Tech Hifi, Dies at 67". The New York Times.
- ^ Ruby, Michael. "From Inner Voices Heard Before Sleep". Drunken Boat.
- ^ a b Ruby, Michael. "Fleeting Memories" (PDF). Ugly Duckling Presse.
- ^ a b "Poet of the Week/Michael Ruby". Brooklyn Poets.
- ^ "At an Intersection". Publishers Weekly.
- ^ mclennan, rob. "12 or 20 (second series) questions with Michael Ruby". rob mclennan’s blog.
- ^ Whyte, Thomas. "poetry mini interviews with Michael Ruby". poetry mini interviews.
- ^ Mayer, Bernadette. "Top Ten". ARTFORUM.
- ^ Handler, Milton C.; Ruby, Michael. "Justice Holmes and the Yearbooks and Justice Cardozo, One-Ninth of the Supreme Court" (PDF). Yearbook 1988/Supreme Court Historical Society.
- ^ Herfort, David. "Washtenaw County Jail and Other Writings, Edited by Michael Ruby". worldcat.org.
- ^ Ainsworth, Susan J. "Eli Pearce Dies At 86". Chemical & Engineering News.
- ^ "Judith Pearce". The New York Times.
- ^ Martin, Douglas. "Jack Germond, Political Reporter of the Old School, Dies at 85". The New York Times.
External links
- Ruby’s page at PennSound, including recordings of six complete books, performances and an hourlong interview in 2004
- Recordings of multiple performances with musicians for the Greetings reading series at Unnameable Books in Brooklyn in 2013-2018
- Video of Ruby reading “Waiting for a Train,” accompanied by Jed Shahar, in Jacket2 in 2013
- Video of Ruby reading “Subway Poems” for Don Yorty's Blog in 2019
- Three poems from American Songbook in The Brooklyn Rail in 2011
- Interview with Ruby in rob mclennan’s blog in 2015
- Interview with Ruby in Brooklyn Poets in 2017
- Radio interview with Ruby about writing poems based on animal sounds on WGXC in 2017
- Ruby’s page at the Academy of American Poets
- Ruby’s page at the Poetry Foundation
- Ruby’s page at Poets & Writers
Category:1957 births
Category:Living people
Category:Surrealist poets
Category:New York School poets
Category:Language poets
Category:Poets from New Jersey
Category:Harvard College alumni
Category:Brown University alumni
Category:People from South Orange, New Jersey
Category:Writers from Brooklyn
Category:The Wall Street Journal people
Category:American male poets
Category:20th-century American male writers
Category:21st-century American male writers
Category:American male journalists
Category:20th-century American poets
Category:21st-century American poets
Category:Jewish American poets
Category:Jewish American authors