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Jack Gilbert

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Name
  
Jack Gilbert

Role
  
Poet

Partner
  
Linda Gregg


Jack Gilbert static01nytcomimages20121115artsROMNEYobi


Died
  
November 13, 2012, Berkeley, California, United States

Education
  
San Francisco State University (1963), University of Pittsburgh, Peabody High School

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Nominations
  
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, National Book Award for Poetry

Books
  
Refusing Heaven, The Great Fires, Views of jeopardy, Monolithos, The Dance Most of All: Poems

Jack gilbert a lyrical ghost


Jack Gilbert (February 18, 1925 – November 13, 2012) was an American poet.

Contents

Jack Gilbert Jack Gilbert 39A Lyrical Ghost39 YouTube

Jack gilbert s lannan foundation interview with jody allenrandolph 1995


Early life and education

Jack Gilbert Poet Jack Gilbert39s days of triumph and loss latimes

Born and raised in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania neighborhood of East Liberty, he attended Peabody High School before failing out. Gilbert then worked as a door-to-door salesman, an exterminator, and a steelworker. Due to a clerical error, he was admitted to the University of Pittsburgh and graduated in 1954. During these college years he and his classmate Gerald Stern developed a serious interest in poetry and writing. Later, he received his master's degree from San Francisco State University in 1963.

Career

Jack Gilbert Paris Review Jack Gilbert The Art of Poetry No 91

After college, Gilbert went to Paris and worked briefly at the Herald Tribune before moving to Italy. Gilbert spent several years there before moving to San Francisco and then to New York, where his life as a poet began. His work has been distinguished by simple lyricism and straightforward clarity of tone, as well as a resonating control over his emotions: “We look up at the stars and they are / not there. We see memory / of when they were, once upon a time. / And that too is more than enough.” His first book of poetry, Views of Jeopardy, (1962) won the Yale Younger Poets Prize and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, while Gilbert was quickly recognized and made into something of a media darling. He then retreated from his earlier activity in the San Francisco poetry scene, where he had participated in Jack Spicer's Poetry as Magic workshop, and moved to Europe. Living on a Guggenheim Fellowship he toured 15 countries as a lecturer on American Literature for the U.S. State Department and lived in England, Denmark, and Greece. Nearly the whole of his career after the publication of his first book of poetry was marked by what he described as "a self-imposed isolation." His books of poetry were few and far between; however he continuously maintained his writing and contributed to The American Poetry Review, Genesis West, The Quarterly, Poetry, Ironwood, The Kenyon Review, and The New Yorker. Gilbert was the 1999-2000 Grace Hazard Conkling writer-in-residence at Smith College. Gilbert was also a visiting professor and writer-in-residence at the University of Tennessee in 2004. Author Elizabeth Gilbert, who discovered Jack Gilbert when she succeeded him in the same writing chair, declared, "He became the poet laureate of my life."

Personal life

Jack Gilbert Jack Gilbert interviewed by Gordon Lish 1962 from Issue One of

Much of Gilbert's work is about his relationships with women. While in Italy, he met Gianna Gelmetti, a romantic partner who appears frequently in his work. The relationship ended after a year. Gilbert was a close friend of the poet Linda Gregg, who he met when she was nineteen and his student in San Francisco, and with whom he was in a relationship for six years. Of the poet, Gregg once said, "All Jack ever wanted to know was that he was awake—that the trees in bloom were almond trees—and to walk down the road to get breakfast. He never cared if he was poor or had to sleep on a park bench." He was also in a significant long-term relationship with the poet Laura Ulewicz during the late fifties and early sixties in San Francisco. Ulewicz was a great influence on his early work, in fact much of his characteristic style for which he later became known came directly from her, and his first book was dedicated to her. Gilbert also was in a relationship with Michiko Nogami, another former student and a Japanese language instructor 21 years his junior, about whom he wrote many of his poems. Nogami died of cancer at the age of 36. Gilbert died on November 13, 2012 in Berkeley, California. He was 87. On April 15, 2013 it was announced that Gilbert's Collected Poems was a finalist for the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. The Pulitzer jury's citation read:

Awards

Jack Gilbert Celebrating Jack Gilbert by Harriet Staff Poetry Foundation

  • 1962 Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition for Views of Jeopardy
  • 1964 Guggenheim Fellowship
  • 1994 Lannan Literary Award for Poetry
  • 1983 Stanley Kunitz Prize for Monolithos
  • 1983 the American Poetry Review Prize for Monolithos
  • 1983 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Monolithos
  • 2005 National Book Critics Circle Award for Refusing Heaven
  • 2013 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Collected Poems
  • Poetry collections

    Jack Gilbert Chicks Dig Poetry Jack Gilbert

  • Views of Jeopardy Yale University Press, 1962
  • Monolithos Graywolf Press, 1984, ISBN 9780915308422
  • Kochan (1984), A limited edition chapbook of nine poems, two of which were later republished in The Great Fires: Poems 1982-1992; seven of the poems have not been otherwise published, including "Nights and Four Thousand Mornings," the longest poem Gilbert has published
  • The Great Fires: Poems 1982-1992 Knopf, 1994
  • Refusing Heaven Knopf, 2005
  • Tough Heaven: Poems of Pittsburgh Pond Road Press, 2006
  • Transgressions: Selected Poems Bloodaxe, 2006
  • The Dance Most of All Knopf, 2010
  • Collected Poems Knopf, 2012
  • Novels

    Gilbert wrote two erotic novels with Jean Maclean which were published by the short-lived Danish Olympia Press under the pseudonym Tor Kung:

  • My Mother Taught Me (1964) From the book jacket: "This is the tale of Lars, a Swedish boy, raised in an all-male orphanage without ever seeing even pictures of women, adopted into a new household with enthusiastic siblings and an energetic foster-mother."
  • Forever Ecstasy (1968) From the book jacket: "An amazing story about schoolboys, led by Paul and the devious but cowardly Rick, who at the end of the school year find themselves holding a young geometry teacher... right where they want her."
  • Anthologies

  • 19 New American Poets of the Golden Gate (1984) Gilbert's essay "Real Nouns" appears, as do select poems.
  • References

    Jack Gilbert Wikipedia