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         Gluck Louise:     more books (100)
  1. Averno by Louise Glück, 2007-09-30
  2. On Louise Gluck: Change What You See --2005 publication. by Joanne Feit Diehl, 2005-01-01
  3. "Talked to by silence": apocalyptic yearnings in Louise Gluck's The Wild Iris. (Special Feature).(Critical Essay): An article from: Christianity and Literature by William V. Davis, 2002-09-22
  4. Biography - Gluck, Louise (Elisabeth) (1943-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2004-01-01
  5. New Yorker August 4 2008 Roberto Bolano Fiction, Lang Lang Takes Beijing, Tavis Smiley, Coldplay's "Viva la Vida", Poems by Kathryn Starbuck & Louise Gluck
  6. Louise Gluck VHS Videocassette (Lannan Literary Videos) by Gluck, 1989
  7. The First Five Books of Poems by Louise Glück, 1997
  8. Radial Symmetry (Yale Series of Younger Poets) by Katherine Larson, 2011-04-15
  9. Juvenilia (Yale Series of Younger Poets) by Ken Chen, 2010-04-20
  10. Firstborn Poems by Louise Gluck, 1968-01-01
  11. The New Yorker, Jan. 23, 1978 "The Sick Child" by Louise Gluck, 1978
  12. January 2006- Poetry by LOUISE GLUCK THYLIAS MOSS W.S. DI PIERO, 2006
  13. Radial Symmetry (Yale Series of Younger Poets) by Katherine Larson, 2011-04-15
  14. Salmagundi-a Symposium, the Culture of Narcissism-a Quarterly of the Humanities & Social Sciences #46, Fall 1979 by Robert Penn Warren, Louise Gluck, Et Al Christopher Lasch, 1979-01-01

41. Pulitzer Prize-Winning Poet Louise Gluck Reads At UI Sept. 26
319) 3840024 e-mailwinston-barclay@uiowa.edu. Release Immediate.Pulitzer Prize-winning poet louise gluck reads at UI Sept. 26.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~ournews/1998/september/0911gluck.html
WRITER: JEREMY KRYT
CONTACT: WINSTON BARCLAY
100 Old Public Library
Iowa City IA 52242
(319) 384-0073; fax (319) 384-0024
e-mail:winston-barclay@uiowa.edu
Release: Immediate Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Louise Gluck reads at UI Sept. 26 IOWA CITY, Iowa Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Louis Gluck will read from her work at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26 in Room 101 of the Becker Communication Studies Building on the University of Iowa campus. Sponsored by the UI Writers' Workshop and the UI International Writing Program, the reading is free and open to the public. A New Yorker review said of Gluck's work, "For more than a decade, Gluck has been writing books of poems that are meant to be encountered like novels." And Harvard University critic Helen Vendler wrote in the New Republic, "[Gluck] is a poet of strong and haunting presence." Gluck teaches at Williams College. She is the author of six previous books of poetry and a collection of essays, "Proofs and Theories," which won the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for nonfiction. Gluck has been the recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry, the Boston Globe Literary Press Award for Poetry, the Poetry Society of America's Melville Kane Award and the William Carlos Williams Award. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and she won the Pulitzer Prize for "The Wild Iris "in 1993.

42. DINO - Language: Englisch - Arts - Literature - Authors - G - Gluck, Louise
G gluck, louise gluck, louise, Sprache/Language. Websites,
http://www.dino-online.de/dino_page_dcd2264f17d7510273aab7714f2386bb.html
Suche Profi-Suche Katalog Video ... Produkte Suchen: Web-Seiten Video Audio Bilder Produkte Schon gewusst? Hier suchen Sie in 2 Milliarden Webseiten. Live-Suche: Was suchen andere Dino-Besucher?
You are here: DINO Language Englisch Arts ... G Gluck, Louise Gluck, Louise Sprache/Language
Websites A Conversation with Louise Gl¼ck - An interview with the author, shortly after the bookstore release of Vita Nova.
http://www.theharvardadvocate.com/summer99/14.html
[Verwandte Websites] Louise Gl¼ck - Multiple articles and insights on Gluck's work.
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/gluck/gluck.htm
[Verwandte Websites] Louise Gl¼ck Fansite - A small collection of Louise Gl¼ck's poetry, full-text.
http://www.kingsnet.com/users/monkey/~Brooke~Gluck.htm
[Verwandte Websites] Louise Gl¼ck Homepage - Devoted to the works of 20th century poet Louise Gl¼ck. Includes the full-text of some works.
http://www.artstomp.com/echo/gluck.html
[Verwandte Websites] The Academy of American Poets: Louise Gl¼ck - Presents a biography, photograph, and selected poems. Also includes an audio recording (in RealAudio file-format) of the author reading her poem "The Red Poppy."
http://www.poets.org/lit/poet/lglucfst.htm

43. APR Jan/Feb 2001 Vol. 30/No. 1 | Louise Gluck
The American Poetry Review louise gluck Moonbeam. The mist rose with a littlesound. louise gluck lives in Cambridge and teaches at Williams College.
http://www.aprweb.org/issues/jan01/gluck.html
Louise Gluck Moonbeam
Louise Gluck lives in Cambridge and teaches at Williams College. The Seven Ages will be published by Ecco Harper Collins in spring 2001.
contents
previous next

44. Louise Glu?ck
General Resources louise gluck Homepage (Angela R. Strother); louise gluck Page;Book Review of Meadowlands; louise gluck's Meadowlands by Gail Rasmussen.
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/g/gluck21.htm
Louise Glu?ck

45. Poeticvoices.com July 1997 Book Review: Meadowlands By Louise Gluck
Meadowlands by louise gluck The Ecco Press 72 pp. louise gluck takes chances inher new new collection of poems now available in both cloth and paperback.
http://www.poeticvoices.com/9707Gluck.html
by Bruce Autry Meadowlands
by Louise Gluck
The Ecco Press
72 pp. $22.00 (hardcover)
$13.00 (paperback) Louise Gluck takes chances in her new new collection of poems now available in both cloth and paperback. Anyone who uses classical allusions in this day and age inevitably narrows her audience, but the beauty of these lyrics transcends any limitations of poetic allusiveness. Gluck weaves modern lyrics about a contemporary marriage breaking apart with poems about the ideal relationship of Odysseus and Penelope in Homer's epic THE ODYSSEY. Homer's THE ODYSSEY has several subjects: the returning king, the maturing prince, the supernatural adventures, but one of the foremost is the idea of nostos or "homecoming." Our word "nostalgia" literally means " the pain of home." Gluck, I think, explores the inevitable way in which modern men, like Odysseus, voyage out and away, from their loved ones. Gluck in her lyric "Nostos" writes, "We look at the world once, in childhood./ The rest is memory." D.H. Lawrence expanded the meaning of "nostalgia" to include a longing for a past period. That is how Gluck seems to use "nostos." The women in her lyrics long for an idealized past which has faded. Hence her dilemma in the postmodern world: how to regain the romantic lyric impulse in a world hostile or enimical to romance. Gluck calls seven of her poems parables. One of the best, "Parable of Swans," concerns two competing definitions of love. Gluck writes, "the male believed that love/ was what one felt in one's heart/ the femal believed/ love was what one did." Surely, these contrasting attitudes lead the couple to a crisis in their marriage. Someone once said love is what comes after the stars-in-the-eyes feeling vanishes, but how many marriages end because the man or the woman seeks out again that narcotic enchantment, that muse of fire that preys upon the heart like a panther?

46. BUY.COM - Home Vita Nova Louise Gluck 0060957956
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48. Louise Gluck Sucks!
TOP19JAS2 These Old Poems 19 louise gluck’s The Wild Iris TheRed Poppy Copyright © by Jessica Schneider, 8/29/02. louise
http://www.cosmoetica.com/TOP19-JAS2.htm
These Old Poems #19:
Louise Gluck’s The Wild Iris The Red Poppy
Louise Gluck is one of those poets who could be likeable, but on no intellectual grounds. I say this because she is, in fact, probably the only MFA styled poet I’ve read that I’ve ever liked (sometimes) Hall of Shame? I personally don’t think she’s there yet. LG is a professor at William’s College and lives in Vermont. She’s won a Pulitzer Prize for what is supposed to be known as her best book The Wild Iris . This is the only book I’ve ever read by Gluck, but I’ve been told that her book following, Meadowlands , is pretty bad. But this is just what I’ve heard. So to be fair, I chose 2 poems from The Wild Iris , in attempt to put her best work forward. Let us begin with probably what is her “signature” poem for this book, the poem entitled “The Wild Iris”, and I think it is safe to say that Gluck probably thought this one of her better poems, since after all- it’s the title of her book. ( Note - clichés are italicized). The Wild Iris At the end of my suffering there was a door.

49. Thomas Lux Sux More Than Louise Gluck!
TOP20DES18 This Old Poem 20 Thomas Lux’s Virgule Copyright © byDan Schneider, 9/1/02. Thomas Lux is 1 of those smugly annoying
http://www.cosmoetica.com/TOP20-DES18.htm
This Old Poem #20:
Thomas Lux’s Virgule
GASP!

underlined = cliché
*** = poor line break
bold italics = predictable workshop trope Virgule What I love about this little leaning mark
is how it divides
without divisiveness. The left
or bottom side prying that choice up or out,
the right or top side pressing down upon***
its choice: either/or, his/her. Sometimes called a slash (too harsh), a slant (a little dizzy, but the Dickinson association*** nice: "Tell all the Truth but tell it slant"), solidus (sounding*** too much like a Roman legionnaire of many campaigns), or a separatrix reminding one of a sexual*** variant). No, I like virgule . I like the word and I like the function: "Whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense." There is something democratic about that, grown-up; a long and slender walking stick set against the house. Virgule: it feels good in your mouth. Virgule: its foot on backwards , trochaic, that's OK, American. Virgule: you could name your son that, or your daughter Virgula . I'm sorry now I didn't think to give my daughter such a name though I doubt that she and/or her mother would share that thought.

50. The Wild Iris (Louise Gluck)
The Wild Iris At the end of my suffering there was a door. Hear me out that whichyou call death I remember. Overhead, noises, branches of the pine shifting.
http://www.drizzle.com/~ash/nkang/poetry/gluck.html
The Wild Iris At the end of my suffering there was a door. Hear me out: that which you call death I remember. Overhead, noises, branches of the pine shifting. Then nothing. The weak sun flickered over the dry surface. It is terrible to survive as consciousness buried in the dark earth. Then it was over: that which you fear, being a soul and unable to speak, ending abruptly, the stiff earth bending a little. And what I took to be birds darting in low shrubs. You who do not remember passage from the other world I tell you I could speak again: whatever returns from oblivion returns to find a voice: from the center of my life came a great fountain, deep blue shadows on azure sea water. back to poetry page

51. Louise Gluck Poetry-in-the-Round - Seton Hall Univeristy
louise gluck. March 25, 700 pm. No American poet writes better thanlouise Glück; perhaps none can lead us so deeply into out own
http://artsci.shu.edu/poetry/previous/louisgluck.html
louise gluck March 25, 7:00 p.m. "No American poet writes better than Louise Glück; perhaps none can lead us so deeply into out own natures." New York Times Book Review "There are few living poets whose new poems one always feels eager to read. Louise Glück ranks at the top of the list." -The Washington Post By a broad consensus one of the finest poets writing in America today, Louise Glück has appropriately garnered the most prestigious of American literary awards: the Pulitzer Prize (for The Wild Iris , 1993), the National Book Critics Circle Award (for The Triumph of Achilles , 1985), the William Carlos Williams Award, and the Poetry Society of America's Melville Kane Award, among others. In The Wild Iris , as in The Triumph of Achilles Ararat , and the more recent Meadowlands (1996), she has maintained the stark and startling tone which distinguishes her work. Her emotional intensity, her simplicity of expression, and her formal seriousness combine in some of the most moving poetry of the late century. At Seton Hall, she will read from her latest (March 1999) book

52. Links To Literature: Louise Gluck
GENERAL RESOURCES. louise Glück Homepage. Photo, bibliography, selectedpoetry, and related links. Academy of American Poets louise Glück.
http://www.linkstoliterature.com/gluck.htm
LINKS TO LITERATURE HOME BULLETIN BOARD LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUGGEST-A-SITE ... SEARCH THE WEB NEW! Enter to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Certificate simply by referring friends to this site! To begin earning entries in the next drawing, please visit our Refer-A-Friend Page GENERAL RESOURCES WORKS GENERAL RESOURCES Photo, bibliography, selected poetry, and related links. Photo, selected poetry, biography, and links. Photo, selected poems, bibliography, criticism and reviews of her work, and links. WORKS ARCHIVES Archive of about a dozen poems. INDIVIDUAL POEMS Cottonmouth Country Need a second opinion? Try Search the Web. GoTo Half.com Audible.com Amazon ... eBay

53. Orfeo By Louise Gluck
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. Orfeo By louise gluck Posted Thursday,January 21, 1999, at 1230 AM PT To hear the poet read Orfeo, click here.
http://slate.msn.com/id/13110/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
Orfeo
By Louise Gluck
Posted Thursday, January 21, 1999, at 12:30 AM PT
To hear the poet read "Orfeo," click here "J'ai perdu mon Eurydice ..." I have lost my Eurydice,
I have lost my lover,
and suddenly I am speaking French and it seems to me I have never been in better voice; it seems these songs are songs of a high order. And it seems one is somehow expected to apologize for being an artist, as though it were not entirely human to notice these fine points. And who knows, perhaps the gods never spoke to me in Dis, never singled me out, perhaps it was all illusion. O Eurydice, you who married me for my singing, why do you turn on me, wanting human comfort? Who knows what you'll tell the Furies when you see them again. Tell them I have lost my beloved; I am completely alone now. Tell them there is no music like this without real grief.

54. The Open Grave By Louise Gluck
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. The Open Grave By louise GluckPosted Thursday, September 17, 1998, at 1230 AM PT To hear
http://slate.msn.com/id/3442/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
The Open Grave
By Louise Gluck
Posted Thursday, September 17, 1998, at 12:30 AM PT
To hear the poet read "The Open Grave," click here My mother made my need,
my father my conscience.
De mortius nil nisi bonum. Therefore it will cost me bitterly to lie, to prostrate myself at the edge of a grave. I say to the earth be kind to my mother, now and later. Save, with your coldness, the beauty we all envied. I became an old woman. I welcomed the dark I used so to fear. De mortius nil nisi bonum. Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and author Louise Gl¼ck's forthcoming book of poems, Vita Nova , will be published in March 1999. Her collection of essays, , won the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for Nonfiction. More poem "Two Poems" posted March 18, 2003 Michalle Gould "As Close as Breathing" posted March 11, 2003 Mark Jarman "Trampoline" posted March 4, 2003

55. William Howard Taft, The Ice Age, Louise Gluck, And RALPH's Best Reviews
The Seven Ages louise Glück (ECCO/HarperCollins) It came to us very late perceptionof beauty, desire of knowledge. We think, Wait a minute, louise.
http://www.ralphmag.org/folio-summer2001.html
R A L P H
The Review of Arts, Literature, Philosophy and the Humanities Summer, 2001
The Folio
is the print version of
RALPH: The Review of Arts, Literature,
Philosophy, and the Humanities http://www.ralphmag.org/ It comes out every month or so, and contains what we believe to be some of our best on-line reviews and articles.
It is sent to regular subscribers, and - on a one-time basis - to any stray visitors who request a free copy.
Reviews may be reprinted by anyone, for any purpose whatsoever - outside of the obviously scrofulous ones - but should include information that readers can find us on the web at the address given above. - A. W. Allworthy,
Folio Editor
poo@cts.com The Art of
War on Land David G. Chandler (Penguin) Wars were much more easy-going in the past. The Assyrians (1380 BC) had two operating strategies: their soldiers were required to be monsters, and their main purpose was to get loot. On the other hand, Napoleon said that "The Channel is a mere ditch, and will be crossed as soon as someone has the courage to attempt." He never made it to England, but he did get to Moscow and, in the process, brought war home to the people by introducing universal conscription and by having his soldiers "live off the land" (robbing the poor peasants). He divided his army into "large self-contained formations" which moved quickly to surprise the enemy. Instead of marching as a disciplined mass to the next encounter, his soldiers would be dispersed, go off, lollygag about, forage some wine and truffles, and then, at the appropriate time, would come together for the attack. This made for speed, and the famous French military stomach, on which, according to him, they traveled.

56. Louise Gluck | Hortense Powdermaker | Anti-Matter | Diplomatic Cargo Boxes
Hortense Powdermaker, AntiMatter, Diplomatic Cargo Boxes, and Moreon the Poetry of louise Glück Dear AW Allworthy After reading
http://www.ralphmag.org/BS/letters1.html
Hortense Powdermaker,
Anti-Matter,
Diplomatic Cargo Boxes, and
Dear A. W. Allworthy: Utter bulshit. The fact that you incessantly refer to poets such as Larkin, Keats, Donne, Hardy, Elliot, ee cummings - and this in the context of discussing contemporary American poetry - proves only that you have taken some community college English Lit survey course and that you didn't have the imagination to read outside of the course curriculum. You probably think that alliteration is akin to profundity, that bombast is a good thing. If garish linguistic cleverness is all you're looking for in a poem then I suggest you limit your discussions to the works of Swinburne.
John Newlove
newlove_john@hotmail.com

Go to the review in question
Subject: What is Anti-Matter!!? Sirs: Well, I seem to be lost when it come to a complete understanding of exactly what the Physicist are saying. I recall my college days, when Dr. White said; "I believe that the Physicists are discovering (Referencing Quark Discoveries) the Physics they create." Well...Is it true?!?

57. Louise Gluck: Cottonmouth Country
Birth, not death, is the hard loss. I know. I also left a skin there. louise Glück,The Young American Poets. More Transformation Poems. Poetry Personality.
http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/cottonmouth.htm
Out of the Box Coaching and
WORKING WITH THE ENNEAGRAM
, Mary R. Bast, Ph.D.
Cottonmouth Country Fish bones walked the waves off Hatteras
And there were other signs
That Death wooed us, by water, wooed us
By land: among the pines
An uncurled cottonmouth that rolled on moss
Reared in the polluted air.
Birth, not death, is the hard loss.
I know. I also left a skin there. Louise Glück
The Young American Poets More Transformation Poems

58. Louise Gluck: Unwritten Law
of those years. And you in your wisdom and cruelty gradually taughtme the meaninglessness of that term. louise Glück, Vita Nova.
http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/unwrittenlaw.htm
Out of the Box Coaching and
WORKING WITH THE ENNEAGRAM
, Mary R. Bast, Ph.D.
Eight: Unwritten Law Interesting how we fall in love:
In my case, absolutely. Absolutely, and, alas, often
so it was in my youth.
And always with rather boyish men
unformed, sullen, or shyly kicking the dead leaves:
in the manner of Balanchine.
Nor did I see them as versions of the same thing.
I, with my inflexible Platonism,
my fierce seeing of only one thing at a time: I ruled against the indefinite article. And yet, the mistakes of my youth made me hopeless, because they repeated themselves, as is commonly true. But in you I felt something beyond the archetype a true expansiveness, a buoyance and love of the earth utterly alien to my nature. To my credit, I blessed my good fortune in you. Blessed it absolutely, in the manner of those years. And you in your wisdom and cruelty gradually taught me the meaninglessness of that term. Louise Glück Vita Nova More Eight Poems More Enneagram Poems Site Search x

59. Louise Gluck
It was winter I couldn't imagine anything but the past.I couldn't even imagine the past, if it came to that.
http://wso.williams.edu/~cbirtche/mpm/gluck.html
It was winter I couldn't imagine ... but the past . I couldn't even imagine the past, if it came to that

60. 17 Dec 2002 - Louise Gluck
17 Dec 2002 louise gluck. http//www.artstomp.com/gluck/ TodayI read my epaper and found this name. She is a quite cool lady.
http://www.deardiary.net/show/diaries/58408/1040083200
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17 Dec 2002 - Louise Gluck http://www.artstomp.com/gluck/ Today I read my epaper and found this name. She is a quite cool lady. I like her and want to read her poems. I never dreamed of being interested in english poetry before. It maybe shows that my english has improved recently.
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