BIOGRAPHY
Catherine Frances Murray (1918-1990) was a teacher, writer, and poet
from Staten Island, New York. Born Catherine O'Malley, she attended
NYC public grammar schools and Curtis High School. She had "skipped"
grades three times in primary school and graduated from Curtis High
School earlier than her peers. Too young to attend college, after graduation
she enrolled for one term at Tottenville High School.After high school,
she enrolled at Notre Dame College of Staten Island where she earned
her undergraduate degree in English with honors in 1939. She later earned
her teaching credentials at Fordham University and Wagner College.
While at Notre Dame College, she was an editor, columnist, and reporter
for the college newspaper. In addition, she wrote poetry and dramatic
literature; one of her plays was produced by the college drama department.
Her love of literature and writing was nurtured at Notre Dame College
in her youth.
As an adult returning to the classroom,Murray attended a poetry workshop
in 1962 at Wagner College with Kenneth Koch. He encouraged Murray
to pursue the serious study of poetry at The New School, a magnet for
New York avant-garde poets and their students. While there, she won
awards for her poetry, including The Dylan Thomas Memorial Award, which
she shared with Mary Ferrari and Bill Kushner. In addition to poetry,
Murray studied fiction with Hayes Jacobs and wrote short stories and
two novels. Murray and poets Frances Waldman, Annette Hayn and Mary
Ferrari were friends who continued their collegial work beyond the New
School. Members of the New York School of Poetry, they critiqued
each others work, offering practical advice and support. In this way,
Murray, Waldman, Hayn, and Ferrari created community and found success
within the male-dominated New York City poetry scene. Throughout the 60's
and the 70's, Murray was an active participant in the St.
Mark's Poetry Project reading with and being published alongside many
notable contemporary poets including John Ashbery, Jim Carroll, Frank
O'Hara, Anne Waldman, Mary Ferrari, Diane di Prima, and Gary Snyder,
among many others.
While pursuing a full-time writing career, Murray worked both as a New
York City public school teacher and later as a teaching artist for the
New York Poets in the Schools program. The period of Murray's greatest
literary production was from the late 1960's to 1982. She completed
two novels in the latter part of her career. Her work was published
in prestigious journals and magazines including Poetry, Virginia Quarterly
Review, Commonweal, and Prairie Schooner, among other publications.
She was the author of two books of poetry, The Transatlantic Flight
of the Angel of Death (1990) and Lights in the Water (1993), which was
published posthumously. Murray's writing career was cut short when she
was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease, making it difficult for her
to write. "Awake at Five" was her last poem. It memorializes her struggle
as a writer with Parkinson's. Murray died in 1990.









