Nancy A. Henry



Nancy A. Henry (b. November 15, 1961) is an American poet and teacher.

Life
Henry was born Chipley, Florida to J.F. and Nancy J. Henry, and spent her early years in Gainesville, Florida. She graduated with a B.A. in Political Science from St. Andrews Presbyterian College in 1982. She moved to Maine in 1983 to attend the University of Maine School of Law, from which she graduated with her JD degree in 1986.

Henry is an adjunct instructor of English and Humanities at Central Maine Community College and Southern Maine Community College. She is also a practicing attorney, working primarily in the area of child advocacy. Formerly, she has served as Assistant Attorney General of the State of Maine in the Department of Child Protection. She lives in Westbrook, Maine with her husband, physicist Dr. Harold Persing. The couple have three grown children.

Published works
Henry is the author of three full-length collections of poetry: from Sheltering Pines Press, Our Lady of Let’s All Sing (2007, ISBN #0-9776158-9-X), Who You Are (2008, ISBN 13#: 978-0-615-17555-3), and, from Moon Pie Press, "Sarx" (2010, ISBN #978-1-4507-0739-8). She is co-founder, with Alice N. Persons, of Moon Pie Press, and served as co-editor from its founding until 2005.

Henry is also the author of two chapbooks from Musclehead Press, Anything Can Happen (2001) and Hard (2003); two chapbooks from Moon Pie Press, Eros Ion (2004) and Europe on $5 a Day (2005, ISBN 0-9765166-2-4). Her first chapbook, Brie Fly, is now out-of-print.

Her work has been anthologized in Grace Notes (Sheltering Pines Press, 2002), Infini Tea (Sheltering Pines Press, 2004); Velvet Avalanche ([Satjah Projects], 2005); Fierce With Reality (Just Write Books, 2006) ISBN 978-0-9788628-0-0, and A Sense of Place, (Bay River Press, 2002, ISBN 0-9721173-0-X)  as well as the first Moon Pie Press anthology, A Moxie and a Moon Pie (2005 ISBN 0-9769929-1-4). Henry’s poems have been featured by Garrison Keillor on The Writer's Almanac.

She has been nominated four times for the Pushcart Prize, and has served as an associate editor of the literary journal The Café Review.