J. H. Prynne was born in Kent in 1936 and studied at  Cambridge University; he worked there as a teacher and scholar in the  Department of English and is currently a life fellow of Gonville and  Caius College. He is also an Honorary Professor at the University of  Sussex, and a Visiting Professor at Sun Yat-Sen University, People’s  Republic of China. He has published forty-one collections of poems  during the period 1968–2015, all now reprinted in the third enlarged  edition of his Poems (Bloodaxe Books, Hexham, 2015).
This volume, The White Stones,  was composed in the earlier 1960s, at the same time as working with  students in the study of English and European poetry of various  classical traditions, and also assimilating the force of the New  American Poetry of that period. A good reading knowledge of French and  German and Italian kept open a complex historical perspective, and an  extremely partial understanding of Chinese demonstrated the influence of  Ezra Pound in a new cross-light.
Since these early times there  have also been extended commentary-essays, on the Han Chinese lyric, on a  painting by Willem de Kooning, on literary/linguistic topics, and three  extended commentary-monographs: on a Shakespeare sonnet, on a poem by  Wordsworth and another by George Herbert, on Wallace Stevens, and on a  scroll-painting by the Chinese landscape painter Shen Zhou (1425–1509).  The author has traveled quite widely, in the U.S.A. and further afield;  his poems have been translated into French, German, Italian, Norwegian  and Chinese, and a brief selection is being prepared in Mexican Spanish;  there have also been a number of musical settings and workings. His  collected prose writings (2 vols) are currently in preparation. Some  website material is available, including a full online bibliography and  various talks and lectures.
Peter Gizzi is the author of several poetry collections, including Threshold Songs, The Outernationale, and most recently, In Defense of Nothing: Selected Poems, 1987–2011.  His honors include the Lavan Younger Poet Award from the Academy of  American Poets, and artist grants from the Foundation for Contemporary  Arts, the Howard Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation. He has  served as the poetry editor for The Nation and as founding editor of o·ble¯k: a journal of language arts.  In 2011 and again in 2015–16 he was the Judith E. Wilson Visiting  Fellow in Poetry at Cambridge University. He teaches at the University  of Massachusetts, Amherst.