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Tracy K. Smith wins the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

April 16, 2012—Graywolf Press is pleased to announce that Life on Mars by Tracy K. Smith has been selected as the winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. The winners were announced today by the Pulitzer Prize Board and Columbia University, and the prizes will be presented to the winners at a luncheon on May 21st at Columbia University.

Of her win, Tracy K. Smith said, “This news is particularly elating, because I think of the book as a tribute to my father, who passed away in 2008.”

“This is very well deserved,” said Fiona McCrae, director and publisher at Graywolf Press. “Tracy K. Smith is a poet of great poise and grace that has grown from book to book. All of us at Graywolf are absolutely delighted about this recognition."

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Upcoming Events

Fri, May 18th, @7:00pm
Tracy K. Smith reading as part of the Loft's Poetry Conference (Minneapolis, MN)
Author: Tracy K. Smith >>
Book: Life on Mars >>

Fri, May 18th, @12:00pm
Alyson Hagy reading at Bank Square Books (Mystic, CT)
Author: Alyson Hagy >>
Book: Boleto >>

Sun, May 20th, @10:00am
Leslie Adrienne Miller featured at the Loft's Poetry Conference (Minneapolis, MN)
Author: Leslie Adrienne Miller >>
Book: Resurrection Trade >>

Tue, May 22nd, @7:30pm
Alyson Hagy reading at Tattered Cover Bookstore (Denver, CO)
Author: Alyson Hagy >>
Book: Boleto >>

Wed, May 23rd, @7:00pm
Dana Gioia reading at Diesel Bookstore (Oakland, CA)
Author: Dana Gioia >>
Book: Pity the Beautiful >>

More books from Graywolf Press:

product image By Mark Wunderlich
A chilling and masterful second poetry collection by the author of the award-winning The Anchorage.
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An essential collection of essays by important contemporary poets about the forms and rhetorical strategies of lyric poetry
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"A Postcard Memoir is the kind of book I'd secretly like to slip into my friends' back pockets, marked READ ME."—Rosellen Brown
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Look There introduces American readers to a vital new poet, whose depth and verve have earned her an international reputation.

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"Out so much farther than our present pieties, attentive to no social or sentimental voice, only passion's (so often ruinous, defiant of upshot), it is not in every case, every poem, that Carl Phillips triumphs over my timidity. As with Sappho and Pasolini, though, traces of the winged god are everywhere unmistakable, even when this new poet has kicked them over: it is a sacred entail his harsh graces make. I for one am an awed (if lacerated) heir." —Richard Howard
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