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For a distinguished volume of original verse by an American author, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).

Native Guard, by Natasha Trethewey (Houghton Mifflin)

Lee Bollinger and Natasha Treshewey

Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger presents Natasha Trethewey with the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry.

Winning Work

Native Guard

Growing up in the Deep South, Natasha Trethewey was never told that in her hometown of Gulfport, Mississippi, black soldiers had played a pivotal role in the Civil War. Off the coast, on Ship Island, stood a fort that had once been a Union prison housing Confederate captives. Protecting the fort was the second regiment of the Louisiana Native Guards -- one of the Union's first official black units. Trethewey's new book of poems pays homage to the soldiers who served and whose voices have echoed through her own life.

The title poem imagines the life of a former slave stationed at the fort, who is charged with writing letters home for the illiterate or invalid POWs and his fellow soldiers. Just as he becomes the guard of Ship Island's memory, so Trethewey recalls her own childhood as the daughter of a black woman and a white man. Her parents' marriage was still illegal in 1966 Mississippi. The racial legacy of the Civil War echoes through elegiac poems that honor her own mother and the forgotten history of her native South. Native Guard is haunted by the intersection of national and personal experience.

(From the book jacket)

 

Biography

Natasha Trethewey is the author of Bellocq's Ophelia and of Domestic Work, which was selected by Rita Dove as the inaugural winner of the Cave Canem Poetry Prize. Among her many honors are a Guggenheim fellowship, the Groiler Poetry Prize, and a Pushcart Prize.

Her work has been widely published and anthologized, including in The New Young American Poets, Gioia and Kennedy's Introduction to Literature and Introduction to Poetry, the forthcoming Oxford Anthology of African American Poetry, and twice in The Best American Poetry.

She is an associate professor of creative writing at Emory University.

 

 

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 2007:

The Jury

Cynthia Huntington(chair )

professor of English

Rafael Campo

associate professor of medicine

Claudia Emerson*

professor of English, Arrington Distinguished Chair in Poetry

Winners in Poetry

2007 Prize Winners

The Wall Street Journal

For its creative and comprehensive probe into backdated stock options for business executives that triggered investigations, the ouster of top officials and widespread change in corporate America.

Staff

For its skillful and tenacious coverage of a family missing in the Oregon mountains, telling the tragic story both in print and online.