Born in al-Turra, Jordan, Nasser was the eldest son in a military oriented Bedouin family. In high school he began writing poetry and was interested in politics and the Arabic language. Nasser grew up in
Zarqa from the age of three where he saw first hand the plight of the
Palestinian refugees in the city and was deeply affected. He was also impressed by the Palestinian militant movement, which he joined after graduating school. He worked in the Jordanian television and print media in Amman for around two years. He then left for Lebanon in 1977, following a political crisis linked to the Palestinian organization he was a part of, the
Jordanian Revolutionary People's Party. In Lebanon, he joined one of the Palestinian militant underground organizations, while at the same time studying at
Beirut Arab University. But he soon left his studies and devoted himself full-time to journalistic and cultural work in the Palestinian media. He worked as an editor for the cultural section of
al-Hadaf magazine, which was founded by
Ghassan Kanafani, he worked there until the
Siege of Beirut in the summer of 1982, when he started to work with Palestinian radio. Then as a part of his political activity, Nasser joined the "Scientific Socialism Institute" of Aden in the former
People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, where he taught political science, while
Abdul Fattah Ismail was in power. In 1979, he published his first collection of poetry
Madih li-Maqha Akhar, in which Iraqi poet
Saadi Yousef wrote the preface. This collection was well received by critics, especially in the Lebanese and Arab press. After the siege of Beirut in 1982, Amjad Nasser left for
Cyprus, where he continued to work in the Palestinian media. In 1987, he went to London to work in the Arab media in Britain, including the daily newspaper
Al-Quds al-Arabi, where he edited the newspaper's culture section . In 2014, the United States prohibited him from traveling to the country. ==Move to prose poem ==