Val Warner

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Valerie Margaret Warner
Born(1946-01-15)January 15, 1946
Harrow, London, England
DiedOctober 10, 2020(2020-10-10) (aged 74)
Hackney, London, England
Occupation
  • Poet
  • editor
  • translator
Alma materSomerville College, Oxford

Val Warner was a poet, editor and translator who was best known for helping to increase the salience of poet Charlotte Mew's work.[1]

Warner was the only child of two schoolteachers and grew up in Harrow, London. She went on to study modern history at Somerville College, Oxford.[1]

She initially found work as a school librarian and freelance copy-editor[1] before holding the posts of Creative Writing Fellow at Swansea University and Writer-in-Residence at the University of Dundee.[2]

As well as publishing her own poetry collections, Warner also published a translation of The Centenary Corbière by Tristan Corbière in 1975[3] and an edition of Charlotte Mew's collected poems and prose in 1981. Along with other scholarly work in the 1980s, this collection helped in renewing wider interest in Mew's work.[1][4][5]

Warner became increasingly reclusive in the last years of her life.[1] She sold a house in Harrow that she had inherited from her parents and then subsequently moved to a late-Victorian terraced house in Hackney where she continued to live for the rest of her life.[2] The house lacked running water, heating and cooking facilities. She survived on a diet of raw onions, soya mince and chickpeas.[3]

Her body was discovered after a forced entry into her house by police on 10 October 2020,[3] due to a concerned friend contacting them about a lack of a communication with her.[1] She had died alone and no ascertainable cause of death was reported by the coroner after an autopsy was conducted in November 2020.[1][2]

Awards and recognition

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Warner received the Eric Gregory Award in 1975[6] and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1998.[3]

Bibliography

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References

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