A reader's guide to Nobel Prize winner Louise Glück - Los Angeles Times
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Where to start with Louise Glück, winner of the 2020 Nobel Prize in literature

President Obama embraces poet Louise Gluck before awarding her the 2015 National Humanities Medal.
President Obama embraces poet Louise Glück before awarding her the 2015 National Humanities Medal. Glück has won the 2020 Nobel Prize in literature.
(Associated Press)
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The Swedish Academy has awarded this year’s Nobel Prize in literature to Louise Glück, a former U.S. poet laureate.

The 16th woman to win the prestigious prize and the first American woman since Toni Morrison in 1993, Glück is the author of 12 poetry collections and several volumes of essays on literary writing.

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“All are characterized by striving for clarity,” Anders Olsson, chairman of the Nobel Committee for Literature, said after Thursday’s announcement. “Childhood and family life, the close relationship with parents and siblings is a [theme] that has remained central to her.”

Her themes are universal, covering life and death, nature and history, desire and isolation.

“Louise Glück’s voice is unmistakable,” Olsson added. “It is candid and uncompromising, and it signals that this poet wants to be understood. But it is also a voice full of humor and biting wit.”

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If you’re just catching up on a half-century literary career, it might be hard to know where to start. Here’s brief primer.

Poet Louise Gluck has won the Nobel Prize in literature, the first American woman to be so honored since Toni Morrison in 1993.

Oct. 8, 2020

“Faithful and Virtuous Night” (2014)


Much of this collection, which won a National Book Award for poetry, is a work of fiction set in the British countryside. The book’s central orator — readers later discover — is an elderly male painter. It’s a book of reflections on mortality and the effect of mourning on art and the creative act. In a poem titled “Afterword,” Glück writes: “Fate, destiny, whose designs and warnings/ now seem to me simply/ local symmetries, metonymic/ baubles within immense confusion —/ Chaos was what I saw./ My brush froze — I could not paint it.”

A National Book Award judge said the collection “emanates from a world where darkness blurs ordinarily sharp edges around the oppositions we summon to think our lives — loss and renewal, male and female, the living and dead.”

“Poems 1962-2012” (2012)

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The winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in 2012 offers a complete collection of Glück’s poems to date, beginning with her debut, “Firstborn” (1968), and running through 2009’s “A Village Life.” At more than 600 pages, this anthology is a vast landscape into Glück’s poetic innovation and her pen’s deceptively simple verses that pierce at the heart. Its publication was called “a major event in this country’s literature” by the New York Times and underlines Glück’s quest to find clarity through words.

“The Wild Iris” (1992)


The poems in “The Wild Iris” are about change and rebirth, filtered through the lens of nature. In the title poem, Glück writes about a flower dying and coming back to life. “It is terrible to survive/ as consciousness/ buried in the dark earth,” she writes, and later: “You who do not remember/ passage from the other world/ I tell you I could speak again: whatever/ returns from oblivion returns/ to find a voice.”

The Nobel literature committee on Thursday highlighted another poem in this collection, “Snowdrops,” documenting “the miraculous return of life after winter.” It won Glück the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1993.

“Ararat” (1990)

Deemed the most “brutal and sorrow-filled book of American poetry published in the past 25 years” by the New York Times in 2012, “Ararat” is a devastating, intimate and semi-autobiographical window into the life of a family — a collection of poems that captures a mother’s struggle with conveying emotion; the death of a newborn sister; a last visit with a dying father (“Terminal Resemblance”); and the challenges of parenthood. Memory and pain are unifying themes, highlighted in poems like “First Memory”:

“Long ago, I was wounded. I lived/ to revenge myself/ against my father, not/ for what he was — /for what I was: from the beginning of time,/ in childhood, I thought/ that pain meant/ I was not loved./ It meant I loved.”

“The Triumph of Achilles” (1985)


The poems in this collection are, in many ways, about possibilities. Glück reimagines ideas about family and friendships, about myth and legend, both Greek and biblical. In the poem “Winter Morning,” Glück writes about Jesus Christ: “Today, when I woke up, I asked myself/ why did Christ die? Who knows/ the meaning of such questions?”

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It won the National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry in 1985.

“The voice in Glück’s poems reassures us that poetry isn’t and never has been explanatory at heart, but can become a wonder of spirit and symbol, touching love, passion, loss and suffering without romanticizing those large subjects,” said poet Holly Prado in a review for The Times in 1986. “[It] risks the criticism of being ‘difficult’ in order to send us into our own darkened questions, perhaps to discover our own voices there.”

Poet Louise Glück wasn’t ready for her early-morning interview about winning this year’s Nobel Prize in literature. But her reaction was certainly amusing.

Oct. 8, 2020

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