He lives in Gainesville, Florida and Cambridge, England with his wife, the poet and artist, Debora Greger.
Many of these reviews have been quite controversial, leading Slate magazine to call him "the most hated man in American poetry... [and] its guiltiest pleasure".
The poet Richard Tillinghast wrote, "when he manages to avoid obscurity, Mr. Logan writes with vigor, almost classical restraint and a fine sense of musicality."
Logan's work has also received positive notices from The New York Times Book Review, Poetry and Publishers Weekly.
[2] Being a formalist poet himself, Logan's handful of positive reviews tend to go to well-established, conservative poets (usually deceased) who were/are masters of formal verse like Geoffrey Hill, Frederick Seidel, Robert Lowell, and Elizabeth Bishop.