Balladz

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$30.00  $27.90
Publisher
Knopf Publishing Group
Publish Date
Pages
192
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.3 X 1.0 inches | 0.95 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780525656951

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About the Author
SHARON OLDS was born in San Francisco and educated at Stanford University and Columbia University. The winner of The Frost Medal, as well as both the Pulitzer Prize and England's T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry for her 2012 collection, Stag's Leap, she is the author of twelve previous books of poetry and the winner of many other awards and honors, including the inaugural San Francisco Poetry Center Award for her first book, Satan Says (1980), and the National Book Critics Circle Award for her second, The Dead and the Living, which was also the Lamont Poetry Selection for 1983. Olds teaches in the graduate Creative Writing Program at New York University and helped to found the NYU outreach programs, among them the writing workshop for residents of Isidor Goldwater Hospital on Roosevelt Island, and for the veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. She lives in New York City.
Reviews
GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE FINALIST

"A commanding poet . . . This substantial gathering is funny, furious, discomfiting, ravishing, mythic, and sorrowful . . . As always, Olds describes herself and her loved ones in startlingly microscopic detail, finding beauty in the ravages of age and even death . . . Passionately precise, Olds unites the primordial with the scientific, the mundane with the chthonic, flesh with spirit." --Donna Seaman, Booklist

"A gorgeous, introspective collection. Beginning with a series of quarantine poems, she also meditates on her own white privilege, on her mother's abuse, and on aging, among other subjects. At once personal and political, the book perfectly encapsulates this confounding time." --Columbia Magazine

"Ranging from quarantine to issues of whiteness, the Pulitzer and T.S. Eliot Prize-winning Olds continues her laserlike attentiveness to the life around her life as she crisscrosses childhood, young adulthood, and contemporary times, sometimes in the style of Emily Dickinson." --Library Journal