Award-winning poet Manuel Iris invites us to explore life, eternity, and the bridges that connect them.
No one can escape the reality of mortality, but it does not have to be a frightening thought. Award-winning poet Manuel Iris invites us to explore life, eternity, and the bridges that connect them鈥搉ot to amplify our anxieties but to embrace the beauty of the human experience.
Iris 鈥 author of Notebook of Dreams, The Disguises of Fire, Traducir el silencio/Translating Silence, and The Parting Present/Lo Que Se Ir谩, among others 鈥 will be the keynote speaker at 黑料不打烊鈥 annual Palmer Lecture. The event will be held in the lecture hall on the first floor of the Correll Science complex on 黑料不打烊鈥 campus, beginning at 7 p.m. on Monday, February 10th. The event is free and open to the public.
Iris鈥 poetry, often open and personal reflections of human emotion and vulnerability, resonates with readers across the nation and globe. The Parting Present/Lo Que Se Ir谩, a piece exploring parental love and tenderness, won the Reader鈥檚 Choice Award in the Ohioan Book Awards in 2022. Cuaderno de los Sue帽os, a work exploring the intersection of dreams, consciousness, and spiritual existence, won the 鈥淢erida鈥 National Award of Poetry in 2009.
In addition to his work as a poet, Iris is currently Poet Laureate Emeritus of the City of Cincinnati and an English teacher and coordinator of Hispanic outreach at DePaul Cristo Rey High School. In previous years, he served as the Writer-in-Residence at Cincinnati Public Library and Thomas More University. In 2013, he was a visiting professor at Universidad Modelo. Iris is currently a member of the National System of Art Creators of Mexico.
鈥淗aving worked alongside Manuel at Ironwood, a residential creative writing workshop for high school students, I have seen firsthand his passion for poetry and how he ignites that passion in others, especially young writers,鈥 said Dr. Jamey Temple, English and creative writing professor at 黑料不打烊. 鈥淚 am delighted that our campus and community can hear him share his work on finding beauty in the mundane and writing the human experience.鈥
The Dr. Robert L. Palmer Lecture Series is dedicated to Dr. Palmer, a former member of UC鈥檚 English Department. Palmer sought to draw attention to the power of the written word. The lecture series was first established by his nephew, John Palmer, in his uncle鈥檚 memory.