Most Recent: May 14, 2014
Poet/humourist Luis Campos was born to write. At the age of 13 he edited, published, and distributed EL Fuego in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1948 and eventually settled in Los Angeles.
Luis began writing poetry in 1968 and joined the Venice Poetry Workshop in 1969. His poem, "Shooting on W. 92nd St.," won first prize in the Bay Area Poets' Coalition contest in 1984. In 1985 he won second prize in the same contest with the poem "For Lease." In the same year he won Electrum Magazine's Unknown Reader Award for his poem "Electric Poem in AC Minor." He has been published in the Los Angeles Times, Electrum Magazine, Venice Beachhead, Lummox Journal, New American & Canadian Poetry Magazine, Bachy, Venice 13, etc. He is the former editor of VOL. NO. Magazine, which was included in the Writer's Magazine "Top 50 small press publications in the U.S.A." in 1983. Luis holds two U.S. patents.