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Poet
ACT Theatre, January
29 , 2001
Biography
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Charles Kenneth Williams was born in Newark, New Jersey, the son of a
salesman and a homemaker, during the middle of the Depression. His upbringing
was the subject of his recent memoir Misgivings: My Mother, My Father,
Myself (2000)a book that defies the conventions of the contemporary
memoir. Williams explained, I wanted to write an autobiographical
meditation stripped of all but the absolute essentials, with no extraneous
narrative details or information.
Williams started writing poetry when he was 19, shortly after taking his
last required English class at the University of Pennsylvania. Poetry
didnt find me, in the cradle or anywhere near it: I found it,
he recalled. I realized at some pointvery late, its
always seemedthat I needed it, that it served a function for meor
someday wouldhowever unclear that function may have been at first.
Williams found his voice as a poet in the mid-sixties when writing to
a magazine editor about the violence directed against civil rights activists.
The process of writing this letter opened up a new way of thinking for
Williamsa paradigm for writing all of his poetry. The result was
A Day for Anne Frank, a meditation that linked the civil rights
movement with the Holocaust and became the opening poem of his first collection,
Lies (1969). After the Anne Frank poem . . . I seemed to
be able to write poems I wanted to write, in a way that satisfied me,
that made the struggle with the matter and form and surface of the poems
bearable, and, more to the point, purposeful, wrote Williams.
Since then, Williams has emerged as one of Americas major poets,
winning a National Book Critics Circle Award for Flesh and Blood
(1987) and the Pulitzer Prize for Repair (1999). He is known for
his long, sinuous lines and what one critic called his novelistically
urban settings. He remains a political poet, in that
he refuses to draw a simple line between public and private life: His
fearless inventions, with their rangeness of language and big long lines,
quest after the entirety of life, writes Robert Pinsky. Williams
and his wife live half of the year in Princeton (where he teaches) and
the other half in Paris, France.
C.K. Williamss many honors include an award in literature from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters and the PEN/Voelcker Career Achievement
Award in poetry. His collection Flesh and Blood won the National
Book Critics Circle Award, and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, as
was The Vigil. In 1999 he won the Pulitzer Prize for Repair.
Selected
Works
Lies (1969)
Women of Trachis, by Sophocles (with Gregory Dickerson, 1978)
The Lark, The Thrush, and The Starling (Poems from Issa) (1983)
Tar (1983)
Flesh and Blood (1987)
The Bacchae of Euripides (1990)
I Am the Bitter Name (1992)
A Dream of Mind (1992)
Selected Poems of Francis Ponge, translation (1994)
With Ignorance (1997)
The Vigil (1997)
Repair (1999)
Misgivings (2000)
Web
Site Links
Poets.org web page
for Williams
Book review
of The Vigil
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