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

Alive Together: New and Selected Poems, by Lisel Mueller (Louisiana State University Press)

Columbia University President, George Rupp (left), presents Lisel Mueller with the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.

Winning Work

Alive Together: New and Selected Poems

In a collection that represents over thirty-five years of her writing life, this distinguished poet explores a wide range of subjects, which include her cultural and family history and reflect her fascination with music and the discoveries offered by language. In fact, her book is a testament to the miraculous power of language to interpret and transform our world. It is a testament that invites readers to share her vision of experiences we all have in common: sorrow, tenderness, desire, the revelations of art, and mortality ­ "the hard, dry smack of death against the glass."

To this community Lisel Mueller presents moment after moment where the personal and public realms intersect, where lives ranging from her own to those of Mary Shelley and Anton Webern illuminate the ways in which history shapes our lives. In "Brendel Playing Schubert," Mueller's breathtaking linguistic virtuosity reminds us how music can transport us out of ourselves and into "the nowhere where the enchanted live"; in "Midwinter Notes," the crepuscular world, stripped of its veil, shines forth as a signal from some realm where the sense of things may be revealed. In the title piece Mueller brings a sense of enduring and unclouded wonder to a recognition of all those whose lives might have been our own. "Speaking of marvels," says the poem's speaker, "I am alive." Thus we, too--alive together--are marvels, and so are our children. Who--but for endless ifs--might have missed out on being alive together with marvels and follies.

 

Biography

A native of Germany and now a U.S. citizen, Lisel Mueller was born on February 8, 1924. She earned a B.A. in sociology at the University of Evansville and did graduate work in comparative literature, with an emphasis on folklore and mythology, at Indiana University. She has been a visiting writer at a number of institutions, including the University of Chicago and Washington University in St. Louis.

Mueller is the author of seven books of poetry: Dependencies (1965); The Private Life (1976), which was the Lamont Poetry Selection of the Academy of American Poets; Voices from the Forest (1977); The Need to Hold Still (1981), which received the National Book Award; Second Language (1986); Waving from Shore (1989), which received the Carl Sandburg Prize and Alive Together: New and Selected Poems (1996). She has also translated several works from the German.

In addition to the National Book Award and the Lamont prize, Mueller has received the Emily Clark Balch Prize, the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize, the English-Speaking Union Prize, the Jacob Glatstein Translation Award, the Theodore Roethke Prize, and a Pushcart Prize.

Mueller lives in Lake Forest, Illinois.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 1997:

The Jury

Rita Dove(chair )*

poet, Commonwealth Professor of English

Mary Karr

poet, professor of literature and creative writing

Alan Williamson

poet, professor of English

Winners in Poetry

1997 Prize Winners

Byron Acohido

For his coverage of the aerospace industry, notably an exhaustive investigation of rudder control problems on the Boeing 737, which contributed to new FAA requirements for major improvements.