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SHARON OLDS
*please note this reading has been moved from April 17 to April 18 and to the S. Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium at Benaroya Hall
Biography “Sharon Olds’s poems are pure fire in the hands—risky, on the verge of failing, and in the end leaping up. I love the roughness and humor and brag and tenderness and completion in her work as she carries the reader through rooms of passion and loss.” –Michael Ondaatje Biography Her poetry is remarkable for its honest chronicling of the everyday, for its unflinching depictions of relationships, and its continuous celebration of humans—as flawed, natural, pushing and pulling beings. Fittingly, her language has a physicality to it that cannot be denied, and her lines seem to move, drawing readers down the page with an unstoppable power. “I’ve tried to make sense of my life,” Olds says, “…make a small embodiment of ordinary life, from a daughter’s, wife’s, mother’s point of view.” It is only recently that she has admitted as much. For years she maintained that her poetry and her life were separate and refused to speak publicly about the seemingly autobiographical nature of her work. Now, she has devised her own phrase, “apparently personal poetry,” preferring it to the more commonly used “confessional” designation. Nonetheless, her work returns often to the same themes, poems and images building on one another to create a layered understanding of a woman’s life. Religion and secularism return often, as does a troubled relationship between the “I” of the poems and her parents. From her first book, Satan Says (1980), Olds has displayed a resolve to write like herself and has done so to consistent and outstanding acclaim. Her second collection The Dead & the Living was the Lamont Poetry Selection of 1983 and won the National Book Critics Circle Award. Other volumes include Strike Sparks: Selected Poems; The Unswept Room; Blood, Tin, Straw; The Gold Cell; The Wellspring; and The Father, shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. Her most recent collection is One Secret Thing, which explores her relationship with her mother and depicts her mother’s death. It was named as a finalist for the Forward Poetry Prize for Best Collection, a prestigious U.K. poetry award. Her collections have “confronted the personal details of her life with remarkable directness and honesty…lit up by a range of finely judged shifts in scale and perspective.” She has been compared to Whitman in her celebration of the body, in all of its pains and pleasures. Olds was the New York State Poet Laureate from 1998 to 2000. She is a chancellor of the Academy of American poets and was one of the founders of the workshop at Goldwater Hospital for the severely physically disabled. She currently teaches poetry at New York University’s Graduate Creative Writing Program. She divides her time between Manhattan and New Hampshire. Self-exam They tell you it won’t make much sense, at first, At Night At night my mother tucked me in, with a One Secret Thing (2008) A salon.com interview with Sharon Olds
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