Guy Goffette (born 18 April 1947) is a Belgian-born poet and writer.
Goffette published his first book of poems in 1969.
Since then he has worked as an editor at the publishing company Gallimard.
Goffette's poetry has been compared to Verlaine (of whom Goffette has written a fictional "biography") - the contemporary French poet Yves Bonnefoy remarked Goffette is an heir to Verlaine.
A poet who very courageously has decided to remain faithful to his own personal life, in its humblest moments.
He keeps things simple, he is marvelously able to capture the emotions and desires common to us all.
For several years, the American poet and critic Marilyn Hacker has translated a number of his poems, which have appeared in The Paris Review, TriQuarterly, Barrow Street, and Poetry London.
A bilingual anthology of her translations of Goffette's poetry, Charlestown Blues , was published in 2007 by University Of Chicago Press
In addition to his poetry and his fiction, Goffette is a prolific essayist and a critic who regularly contributes to the Nouvelle Revue Française.