About the Author:
John Igo is a San Antonio educator, writer, artist, photographer, producer, and critic. In 2007, the San Antonio Public Library system named a branch library in his honor. Igo has published twelve books of poetry, including The Third Temptation of St. John (National Society of Arts and Letters National Award), God of Gardens (Southwest Writers Conference Publication Award), Alien, Bozzetti and The Mitotes of John Igo. In addition, he has authored several books of prose—including On Poetry and Poetics—and several plays. The producer of numerous plays, he is the founding producer/director of Renegade Theater and was the volunteer Project Manager of the Theater Archive, San Antonio Public Library, a Friends project. Igo has served as a drama critic for several San Antonio publications and was for several years a well known broadcast personality. In 1985, Igo received an Emmy for his script, “Our Children: the Next Generation.” In the 1960s he won two Translation Awards (German/Spanish) from Poet Lore International. In 1974 he received the Speech Arts Association’s First Distinguished Medal. In the 1980s he received the Grothaus medallion for Distinguished Service to area libraries (the only non-librarian ever to receive it). In 1997 he was named Deputy director General of the International Biographical Centre (Cambridge, England). A native of San Antonio and a graduate of Trinity University, he has taught at Trinity, St. Mary’s Hall, San Antonio College, and the University of the Incarnate Word. He received the Piper Professor of the Year Award in 1991 and the NISOD Teaching Excellence Award, International Convention, in 1992. Igo has been mentor to generations of area poets, and he has also taught poetry to the totally deaf adult in a privately-funded project.
Review:
"This is a book of obsessions: those of the brilliant and troubled New Yorker writer Mendez Marks and those of John Igo as he spends years honing in on Marks’s difficult life. Much of that life remains unsolvable mystery, but the real obsessions Marks and Igo share, without ever having met, are crucial and make us human: language, reading, and writing. We are all enriched." —Rosemary Catacalos, author of Again for the First Time; 2013 Poet Laureate of Texas
"If there is a more haunting tale about a San Antonian—or any gifted youth—I don’t know what it is. John Igo has researched and labored for decades to create a lively, generously thorough homage to the interrupted story of the luminous Mendez Marks. Here is a testament to creativity, and to the mysteries and delicacies of the human mind—a deeply caring tribute for an original soul." —Naomi Shihab Nye, author of The Turtle of Oman; Chancellor, Academy of American Poets
"A richly detailed and entertaining profile of a young man who had little patience for pretentiousness, a highly observant eye, an empathetic heart capable of projecting itself far and wide into the human condition, and a style and wit comparable to that of H.L. Mencken." —Ed Conroy, San Antonio Express-News
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