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Finalist: To 2040, by Jorie Graham (Copper Canyon Press)

A fluent yet spare volume about grief, loss and vulnerability through an array of themes, including environmental disaster and personal mortality.

Nominated Work

To 2040

It is rare to find in one collection an entire skyline burning and the quiet to follow a single worm, to hear soil breathe—in Jorie Graham’s fifteenth poetry collection, you do. Jorie Graham’s fifteenth poetry collection, To 2040, opens in question punctuated as fact: “Are we / extinct yet. Who owns / the map.” In these visionary new poems, Graham is part historian, part cartographer as she plots an apocalyptic world where rain must be translated, silence sings louder than speech, and wired birds parrot recordings of their extinct ancestors. In one poem, the speaker is warned by a clairvoyant “the American experiment will end in 2030.” Graham shows us our potentially inevitable future soundtracked by sirens among industrial ruins, contemplating the loss of those who inhabited and named them. 

In sparse lines that move with cinematic precision, these poems pan from overhead views of reshaped shorelines to close-ups of a worm burrowing through earth. Here, we linger, climate crisis on hold, as Graham asks us to sit silently, to hear soil breathe. An urgent open letter to the future, with a habit of looking back, To 2040 is narrated by a speaker who reflects on her own mortality—in the glass window of a radiotherapy room, in the first “claw full of hair” placed gently on a green shower ledge. In poems that look to 2040 as both future and event-horizon, we leave the collection warned, infinitely wiser, and yet more attentively on edge. “Inhale. / Are you still there / the sun says to me.” And, from the title poem, “what was yr message, what were u meant to / pass on?”

Biography

Jorie Graham was born in New York City, raised in Rome, and educated in France. Trilingual in English, Italian, and French, she studied philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris before attending New York University as an undergraduate student in filmmaking. She holds an MFA in poetry from the University of Iowa and is the author of fifteen collections of poetry, including [To] the Last [Be] Human, Runaway, Fast, PLACE, Sea Change, and The Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems, the winner of the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Her work has been widely translated and she is the recipient of multiple awards, including a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship, the International Nonino Prize, and the Wallace Stevens Award. From 1997 to 2003, she served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. Currently, Graham is the Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard University.

Winners

Prize Winner in Poetry in 2024:

Brandon Som

A collection that deeply engages with the complexities of the poet’s dual Mexican and Chinese heritage, highlighting the dignity of his family’s working lives, creating community rather than conflict. Poetry

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 2024:

Robyn Schiff

Poetry that chronicles the oddities, indignities, and wonders of working at a museum, a vivid compendium of musings on the nature of art and its creation.

The Jury

Vijay Seshadri(Chair)*

Professor of Writing, Sarah Lawrence College

Forrest Gander*

Poet, Translator and Novelist, San Francisco

Dana Levin

Distinguished Writer-in-Residence, Maryville University

Roger Reeves

Associate Professor of English, University of Texas at Austin

Pimone Triplett

Professor of English, University of Washington

Winners in Poetry

Carl Phillips

A masterful collection that chronicles American culture as the country struggles to make sense of its politics, of life in the wake of a pandemic, and of our place in a changing global community.  

Diane Seuss

A virtuosic collection that inventively expands the sonnet form to confront the messy contradictions of contemporary America, including the beauty and the difficulty of working-class life in the Rust Belt.

Natalie Diaz

A collection of tender, heart-wrenching and defiant poems that explore what it means to love and be loved in an America beset by conflict.

Jericho Brown

A collection of masterful lyrics that combine delicacy with historical urgency in their loving evocation of bodies vulnerable to hostility and violence.

2024 Prize Winners

Staff of Reuters

For an eye-opening series of accountability stories focused on Elon Musk’s automobile and aerospace businesses, stories that displayed remarkable breadth and depth and provoked official probes of his companies’ practices in Europe and the United States.