Annal:1997 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
From AwardAnnals
Results of the Pulitzer Prize in the year 1997. For a ranked list of books, try an honor roll:
Alive Together: New and Selected Poems
- 1997 Pulitzer–Poetry winner
- Score: 10.47
The Willow Grove: Poems
- 1997 Pulitzer–Poetry finalist
- Score: 6.47
Laurie Sheck interweaves the contemporary with the mythic, creating a realm in which such things as radios, skyscrapers, expressways, and mannequins are at once familiar and strange; immediate, yet tinged with the light of distance and myth. It is a realm where faces on a television newscast disappear “into the undertow / of hunger for the next thing and the next,” and mannequins “stand in their angelic armor.”
Placed at intervals throughout these pages is a series of poems entitled “From The Book of Persephone,” poems that explore the underworld through a fractured contemporary lens, depicting it as a psychological landscape of isolation and desire.The Figured Wheel: New and Collected Poems, 1966-1996
- 1997 Lenore Marshall winner
- 1997 Pulitzer–Poetry finalist
- 1996 LATimes–Poetry finalist
- Score: 22.47
The Figured Wheel fully collects the first four books of poetry, as well as twenty-one new poems, by Robert Pinsky, the former U.S. Poet Laureate.
Critic Hugh Kenner, writing about Pinsky’s first volume, described this poet’s work as “nothing less than the recovery for language of a whole domain of mute and familiar experience.” Both the transformation of the familiar and the uttering of what has been hitherto mute or implicit in our culture continue to be central to Pinsky’s art. New poems like “Avenue” and “The City Elegies” envision the urban landscape’s mysterious epitome of human pain and imagination, forces that recur in “Ginza Samba,” an astonishing history of the saxophone, and “Impossible to Tell,” a jazz-like work that intertwines elegy with both the Japanese custom of linking-poems and the American tradition of ethnic jokes. A final section of translations includes Pinsky’s renderings of poems by Czeslaw Milosz, Paul Celan, and others, as well as the last canto of his award-winning version of the Inferno.



