Northshire Bookstore Northshire Bookstore
VIEW BASKET
SHIPPING
& RETURNS
CONTACT US
Established 1976 Northshire Bookstore
Hours: Sunday - Wednesday 10 am - 7 pm
Thursday - Saturday 10 am - 9 pm
802-362-2200 · 800-437-3700
 
  Search
Browse Advanced Search Bestsellers Staff Picks Events e-Newsletter About Us Award Winners Northshire Selects Wish List
Books
Children's Books
Children's Gifts
DVD's
Gifts
Music
Antiques
Architecture
Art
Audio Books
Bargain Books
Biography
Business
Computers
Cookbooks
Crafts
Diet & Nutrition
Gardening
Gender
Graphic Novels
Health
History
Horror
House & Home
Humor
Interior Design
Large Print
Literature & Fiction
Mind Body Spirit
Music
Mystery
Nature
New England
Performing Arts
Poetry
Psychology
Reference
Religion
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Small Gift Books
Sports
Transportation
Travel
Vermont
Affiliates
Employment
Donations
Privacy
Security
Help
Links

  Book Information

  

Seven Ages
Gluck, Louise
Poetry

Additional photos
Price: $12.95

Availability: 1

Paperback

ISBN: 0060933496

Published: 04/11/2002

Secure Shopping
Add to Cart

Add to Wishlist

Write your own review and share your opinion with other readers!
 
Author Tracker
Want to receive notice of this author's new books, tour dates, and promotions? Sign up now!
Enter your e-mail address below.

 Privacy Policy

HTML Text Only

Northshire Bookstore Review(s)

Reviewed By...

Louise Gluck was Vermont’s third State Poet. Born in New York City, she grew up on Long Island. Her works have won the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Boston Globe Literary Press Award, the Poetry Society of America's Melville Kane Award, and won the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for Nonfiction. She has also received the Bollingen Prize in Poetry, the Lannan Literary Award for Poetry, and fellowships from the Guggenheim and Rockefeller foundations, and from the National Endowment for the Arts. Glück teaches at Williams College. From her poem “Vespers”: “Once I believed in you; I planted a fig tree. / Here, in Vermont, country / of no summer. It was a test: if the tree lived, / it would mean you existed.”


Publisher Comments

Louise Glück has long practiced poetry as a species of clairvoyance.She began as Cassandra, at a distance, in league with the immortal; to read her books sequentially is to chart the oracle's metamorphosis into unwilling vessel, reckless, mortal, and crude.The Seven Ages is Glück's ninth book, her strangest and most bold.In it she stares down her own death, and, in so doing, forces endless superimpositions of the possible on the impossible -- an act that simultaneously defies and embraces the inevitable, and is, finally, mimetic.Over and over, at each wild leap or transformation, flames shoot up the reader's spine.

Louise Glück won the Pulitzer Prize for The Wild Iris in 1993. The author of eight books of poetry and one collection of essays, Proofs and Theories: Essays on Poetry, she has received the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry, the William Carlos Williams Award, and the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for Nonfiction. She was named the next U.S. poet laureate in August 2003. Her most recent book is The Seven Ages. Louise Glück teaches at Williams College and lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

80 pages

 
©1999 - 2008 Northshire Information, Inc.
4869 Main Street Manchester Center, Vermont 05255
802-362-2200 • 800-437-3700