Skip to main content
For a distinguished volume of original verse by an American author, Five thousand dollars ($5,000).

Black Zodiac, by Charles Wright (Farrar)

Columbia University President George Rupp (left) presents Charles Wright with the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.

Winning Work

Black Zodiac

"There are precious few contemporary poets in whose work I find as much sheer wisdom as in Wright's . . . His ascetic discipline is an instruction and an aesthetic. The whole world seems to orbit in a kind of meditative, slow circle around Wright's grave influence."
--David Baker, Poetry 

As Helen Vendler wrote of Charles Wright's last collection, Chickamauga, his poems "are conceived in a manner that never ceases to astonish...he sounds like nobody else." Entering by way of a small moment, Wright magnifies details to reveal a truth much larger than the quotidian happening that engendered it. The investigations of faith, religion, heritage, and morality in Black Zodiac bring Wright's lyrical meditations to new heights of achievement.

"The premier poet in America...No one makes the music Charles Wright makes."--Virginia Quarterly Review

(From the book jacket)

Copyright: 1997, Farrar

Biography

Charles Wright was born in Pickwick Dam, Tennessee, in 1935. He was educated at Davidson College and, after four years in the army, attended the Writers Workshop at the University of Iowa, where he received his M.F.A. He served as a Fulbright lecturer at the University of Rome and the University of Padua, and has lectured at the University of Iowa, Princeton University, Columbia University, and the University of California at Irvine.

Mr. Wright's previous books of poetry included The Grave of the Right Hand (1970), Hard Freight (1973), Bloodlines (1975), China Trace (1977), The Southern Cross (1981), Country Music: Selected Early Poems (1982), The Other Side of the River (1984), Zone Journals (1988), The World of the Ten Thousand Things: Poems 1980-1990 (1990), and Chickamauga (1995).

Mr. Wright has received a National Endowment for the Arts grant (1974), a Guggenheim Fellowship (1975), the Academv of American Poets' Edgar Allan Poe Award (1976) an Academy Institute grant from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters (1977), the National Book Award in Poetry (1983), and the Brandeis Creative Arts Citation for Poetry (1987). Mr. Wright has also been awarded the PEN Translation Prize for his translation of the Italian poet Eugenio Montale's The Storm and Other Things. Most recently, he won the Academy of American Poets' Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize (1996) for Chickamauga.

Mr. Wright is a professor of English at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, where he lives with his family.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 1998:

The Jury

Dave Smith(chair )

editor

Jorie Graham*

professor of English

Stephen Yenser

professor of English

Winners in Poetry

1998 Prize Winners