Michael Schmidt OBE FRSL (born 2 March 1947) is a Mexican-British poet, author, scholar and publisher.
Schmidt was born in Mexico City, Mexico, on 2 March 1947. He was educated at The Hill School from 1959 to 1965 and earned an English-Speaking Union Scholarship to attend Christ's Hospital School (1965âÂÂ66). He studied at Harvard University and at Wadham College, Oxford University, subsequently settling in England.
Schmidt was Professor of Poetry at Glasgow University until 2014, Writer-in-Residence at St. John's College, Cambridge, from 2012 to 2015 and a visiting fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge, from 2017 to 2018. He is founder (1969) and editorial and managing director of Carcanet Press and a founder (1973) and general editor of PN Review.
A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (elected in 1993), Schmidt was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2006 for services to poetry. His literary career has been described as having "a strong sense of internationalism and cultural 'connectedness. Schmidt refers to himself in his 1998 book Lives of the Poets as "an Anglophone Mexican publisher".
In 2006, Schmidt delivered the keynote address at the StAnza Poetry Festival, entitled "What, How Well, Why?: A leading poetry publisher wonders why criticism has got a bad name".
Schmidt's 2014 book, The Novel: A Biography, is a loosely chronological history of the development of the novel. The book aims to explore the relationships between great novelists, including views by other novelists, while avoiding literary critics who were not also writers. In August 2015, Schmidt was one of 20 authors of Poets for Corbyn, an anthology of poems endorsing Jeremy Corbyn's campaign in the Labour Party leadership election.