
Jonathan Fink is the author of three poetry collections: Don’t Do It – We Love You, My Heart (Dzanc, 2025), Barbarossa: The German Invasion of the Soviet Union and the Siege of Leningrad (Dzanc, 2016), and The Crossing (Dzanc, 2015). His books have received awards and recognitions from Poets&Writers, the Texas Institute of Letters, the Florida Book Awards, and the Philosophical Society of Texas, among others, and his poems have appeared in publications such as The New York Times Magazine and Poetry. He has also received the Editors’ Prize in Poetry from The Missouri Review, the Porter Fleming Award in Poetry, and fellowships or scholarships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Florida Division of Cultural Affairs, the St. Botolph Club Foundation, Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. From 2003-2006 he was the Creative Writing Fellow in Poetry at Emory University.
In 2023, Jonathan was an Artist-in-Residence Fellow at Joshua Tree National Park, working on a narrative poem (“In My Hour of Darkness, In My Time of Need”) about the life and death of Gram Parsons and Gram Parsons’s connection to Joshua Tree. A limited-edition print/art-chapbook version of the poem illustrated by Jonathan’s wife, artist Julie Fink, is available for free digitally here,
In addition to writing poetry, Jonathan also writes immersive, place-based, and personal essays that have appeared in Witness, Narrative, The Missouri Review, and Southwest Review, among other publications. He received the McGinnis-Ritchie Award for Nonfiction/Essay from Southwest Review, and he has had an essay named as one of 100 notable essays of the year in multiple editions of the Best American Essays series.
He currently lives in Pensacola with his wife and kids and is Professor and Coordinator of Creative Writing at the University of West Florida, where he also edits Panhandler Books.