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Award-Winning
Louise Glück To Kick Off 16th Annual Women Poets
At Barnard Series, Oct. 3
New
York, NY, September 9, 2002This years Women
Poets at Barnard series will begin with a reading by
the award-winning poet Louise Glück October 7, at 7
p.m. in the James Room of Barnard Hall (117th Street and
Broadway).
Glück, one of Americas leading lyric poets, writes
in a direct style that belies the complex themes addressed.
In a poem about two friends watching a sunset, Celestial
Music, she writes, "It's peaceful sitting here, not
speaking, the composition/Fixed, the road turning suddenly
dark, the air/Going cool, here and there the rocks shining
and glittering/It's this stillness we both love./The
love of form is a love of endings."
"In the work of no other contemporary American poet,"
wrote the judges of the prestigious Bollingen Prize, "is
the individual psyche so unsparingly portrayed, in both
the anguish and the humor with which it confronts its profound
solitude and the twin darknesses which precede birth and
follow life."
"I am attracted to ellipsis, to the unsaid, to suggestion,
to eloquent, deliberate silence," Glück writes
in her essay, Disruption, Hesitation, Silence. "The
unsaid, for me, exerts great power: I often wish an entire
poem could be made of this vocabulary."
Glücks distinguished career spans over 35 years,
during which she has published nine books of poetry, a collection
of essays and won numerous prizes. Vita Nova won
the Boston Book Reviews Bingham Poetry Prize,
while The Wild Iris received the Pulitzer and the
Poetry Society of Americas William Carlos Williams
Award. Ararat was awarded the Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt
National Prize for Poetry and The Triumph of Achilles
won the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Boston
Globe Literary Press Award, and the Poetry Society
of Americas Melville Kane Award. Her collection of
essays, Proof and Theories: Essays on Poetry won
the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for Nonfiction. She has also
received the Bollingen Prize in Poetry, the Lannan Literary
Award for Poetry, and fellowships from the Guggenheim and
Rockefeller foundations and from the National Endowment
for the Arts. In 1999 she was elected a Chancellor of The
Academy of American Poets.
A native New Yorker, Glück attended Sarah Lawrence
College and Columbia University. She is currently a senior
lecturer in English at Williams College.
Contact:
Petra Tuomi, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7907
James Griffith, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-1139
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