2007-08 Reading Series
Richard Wilbur
Thursday | Sept. 27, 2007 | 7:30 p.m. | Ely Room, Wyndham
Richard Wilbur, two-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize, is the author of 11 books of poems, including Mayflies: New Poems and Translations and Collected Poems 1943-2004. He is also the leading English translator of the works of Molière and Racine. His other works include such children’s classics as Opposites and the books of prose Responses: Prose Pieces, 1948-1976 and The Catbird’s Song: Prose Pieces, 1963-1995. With Leonard Bernstein and Lillian Hellman he wrote Candide: a Comic Operetta Based on Voltaire’s Satire. His new translation is of The Theatre of Illusion by Pierre Corneille.
Sponsored by the Marianne Moore Fund for the Study of Poetry and by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Derek Walcott
Thursday | Oct. 11, 2007 | 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall
Poet Derek Walcott from St. Lucia received the 1992 Nobel Prize for Literature. Founder of the Trinidad Theatre Workshop, he has distinguished himself in lyric, dramatic and narrative poetry through such works as Dream on Monkey Mountain, Omeros, The Prodigal, Tiepolo’s Hound, The Bounty, and The Arkansas Testament. His prose works include his Nobel address The Antilles: Fragments of Epic Memory and What the Twilight Says. His new Selected Poems, edited by Edward Baugh, appeared in the spring of 2007. Critic Peter Balakian describes Walcott’s work as “an epic song that has already taken its place in the history of Western literature.”
Sponsored by the Marianne Moore Fund for the Study of Poetry.
E.L. Doctorow
Thursday | Nov. 8, 2007 | 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall
E.L. Doctorow’s many novels include The Book of Daniel, Ragtime, Loon Lake, World’s Fair, Billy Bathgate, The Waterworks and The March. His stories are gathered in Lives of the Poets: Six Stories and a Novella, and his nonfiction in Reporting the Universe and, most recently, Creationists: Selected Essays 1993-2006. Critic John Leonard writes of Doctorow, “In The March, he dreams himself backward from The Book of Daniel to Ragtime to The Waterworks to the Civil War, into the creation myth of the Republic itself, as if to assume the prophetic role of such 19th-century writers as Emerson, Melville, Whitman and Poe.”
Lucille Clifton
Thursday | Dec. 6, 2007 | 7:30 p.m. | Ely Room, Wyndham
Lucille Clifton is the author of 12 collections of poetry and one book of autobiographical prose, including Mercy; Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems, 1988-2000 (recipient of the National Book Award); The Book of Light; and Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980 (nominated for a Pulitzer Prize the same year her volume Next: New Poems was nominated). She has also published 19 children’s books.
Sponsored by the Marianne Moore Fund for the Study of Poetry.
Olga Grushin
Thursday | Feb. 7, 2008 | 7:30 p.m. | Ely Room, Wyndham
Recently chosen as one of Granta's “21 Best American Fiction Writers Under 35,” and also a recipient of the New York Public Library’s Young Lions Fiction Award, Olga Grushin was born in Moscow and educated in Prague and at Moscow State University; she also earned a full scholarship to Emory University. She has worked as a researcher, interpreter and editor. Her first novel, The Dream Life of Sukhanov, was described by critic James Lasdun as being “steeped in the tradition of Gogol, Bulgakov and Nabokov.”
Patricia Hampl
Thursday | March 27, 2008 | 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall
Poet and memoirist Patricia Hampl is the author of books including Woman Before an Aquarium; Blue Arabesque: a Search for the Sublime (about a work by Matisse); I Could Tell You Stories: Sojourns in the Land of Memory; A Romantic Education; and Virgin Time: In Search of the Contemplative Life. Her new book is The Florist’s Daughter. Writer Phyllis Rose comments, “I love few writers as I love Patricia Hampl. Reading her, I feel in conversation with a deliciously matured and balanced, lively and comprehensive mind…Blue Arabesque is a marvel—so free, so inventive and so unpretentiously deep.”
James Salter
Thursday | April 17, 2008 | 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall
Susan Sontag has written, “Salter particularly rewards those for whom reading is an intense pleasure. He is among the very few North American writers all of whose work I want to read, whose as yet unpublished books I wait for impatiently.” James Salter is the author of the novels Solo Faces, Light Years, A Sport and a Pastime, The Arm of Flesh (revised as Cassada), and The Hunters, as well as the memoirs Gods of Tin and Burning the Days. His story collections include Dusk and Other Stories (recipient of a PEN/Faulkner Award) and Last Night.