Sharon Olds
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person Sharon Olds (born November 19, 1942) is an American poet. She won the first San Francisco Poetry Center Award in 1980,<ref>"Recipients of the Poetry Center Book Award, 1980–present", San Francisco State University Poetry Center; "Sharon Olds", Poetry Foundation.</ref> the 1984 National Book Critics Circle Award,<ref>"1984 Winners & Finalists", National Book Critics Circle.</ref> and the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.<ref name="2013 Pulitzer Prizes">"2013 Pulitzer Prizes", The Pulitzer Prizes.</ref> She teaches creative writing at New York University and is a previous director of the Creative Writing Program at NYU.<ref>"Creative Writing Program - Core Graduate Faculty," NYU Arts & Science.</ref>
Early lifeEdit
Sharon Olds was born on November 19, 1942, in San Francisco, California, but was brought up in Berkeley, California, along with her siblings.<ref name="Sharon Olds">"Sharon Olds", Poetry Foundation.</ref> She was raised as a "hellfire Calvinist," as she describes it.<ref>"Sharon Olds", Modern American Poetry.</ref> Her father, like his before him, was an alcoholic who was often abusive to his children. In Olds' writing she often refers to the time (or possibly even times) when her father tied her to a chair.<ref>The Barclay Agency Template:Webarchive</ref> Olds' mother was often either unable or too afraid to come to the aid of her children.
The strict religious environment in which Olds was raised had certain rules of censorship and restriction. Olds was not permitted to go to the movies and the family did not own a television, but her reading was not censored. She liked fairy tales, and also read Nancy Drew and Life magazine.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> By nature "a pagan and a pantheist," she has said that in childhood she was exposed in her church to "both great literary art and bad literary art," with "the great art being psalms and the bad art being hymns. The four-beat was something that was just part of my consciousness from before I was born." Of her Calvinist childhood, she said in 2011 that though she was about 15 when she conceived of herself as an atheist, "I think it was only very recently that I can really tell that there's nobody there with a copybook making marks against your name."<ref name="Sharon Olds: Blood, sweat and fears">"Sharon Olds: Blood, sweat and fears", Independent, September 22, 2011.</ref>
Olds was sent east to Dana Hall School, an all-girls school for grades 6 to 12 in Wellesley, Massachusetts, that boasts an impressive list of alumnae.<ref name="Dana Hall School: Sharon Olds 1960">Dana Hall School: Sharon Olds 1960</ref> There she studied mostly English, History, and Creative Writing. Her favorite poets included William Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, and Edna St. Vincent Millay, but it was Allen Ginsberg's Howl and Other Poems that she carried in her purse through 10th grade.<ref>"Fine Print: Poet Sharon Olds Chronicles the End of Her Marriage in a New Collection", Vogue, August 22, 2012.</ref>
For her bachelor's degree Olds returned to California where she earned her BA at Stanford University in 1964. Following this, Olds once again moved cross country to New York, where she earned her Ph.D. in English in 1972 from Columbia University.<ref name="Sharon Olds"/> She teaches creative writing at New York University. She wrote her doctoral dissertation on "Emerson's Prosody," because she appreciated the way he defied convention.<ref name="Dana Hall School: Sharon Olds 1960"/>
Personal lifeEdit
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On March 23, 1968, she married Dr. David Douglas Olds in New York City and, in 1969, gave birth to the first of their two children. In 1997, after 29 years of marriage, they divorced. She lives in the same Upper West Side apartment she has lived in for many years while working as a Professor at New York University.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In a review of her 2022 collection Balladz, Tristram Fane Saunders mentions the moving poems she wrote about her longtime partner, the late Carl Wallman of New Hampshire, who died in 2020.<ref>Tristram Fane Saunders, "Poet Sharon Olds: 'I went to the top guy, Satan'," The Telegraph, January 5, 2023,</ref>
In 2005, First Lady Laura Bush invited Olds to the National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. Olds declined the invitation and responded with an open letter published in The Nation. The editors suggested others follow her example. She concluded her letter by explaining: "So many Americans who had felt pride in our country now feel anguish and shame for the current regime of blood, wounds and fire. I thought of the clean linens at your table, the shining knives and the flames of the candles, and I could not stomach it."<ref>Sharon Olds, "Open Letter to Laura Bush," The Nation, September 19, 2005.</ref>
PoetryEdit
Following her Ph.D., Olds let go of an attachment to what she thought she knew about poetic convention and began to write about her family, abuse, and sex, focusing on the work and not the audience.
Olds has said that she is more informed by the work of poets such as Galway Kinnell, Muriel Rukeyser and Gwendolyn Brooks than by confessional poets like Anne Sexton or Sylvia Plath. Plath, she comments "was a great genius, with an IQ of at least double mine" and while these women charted well the way of women in the world she says "their steps were not steps I wanted to put my feet in."<ref name="Sharon Olds: Blood, sweat and fears"/>
When Olds first sent her poetry to a literary magazine she received a reply saying, "This is a literary magazine. If you wish to write about this sort of subject, may we suggest the Ladies' Home Journal. The true subjects of poetry are … male subjects, not your children."<ref name="Sabine Durrant">Template:Cite news</ref>
Olds eventually published her first collection, Satan Says, in 1980, at the age of 37. Satan Says sets up the sexual and bodily candour that would run through much of her work. In "The Sisters of Sexual Treasure" she writes, "As soon as my sister and I got out of our/ mother's house, all we wanted to/do was fuck, obliterate/her tiny sparrow body and narrow/grasshopper legs."<ref name="independent.co.uk">Quoted in "Sharon Olds: Blood, sweat and fears", Independent, September 22, 2011.</ref>
The collection is divided into four sections: "Daughter," "Woman," "Mother," "Journeys." These titles echo the familial influence that is prevalent in much of Olds' work.
The Dead and the Living was published in February 1984. This collection is divided into two sections: "Poems for the Dead" and "Poems for the Living." The first section begins with poems about global injustices. These injustices include the Armenian genocide during WWI, the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot, the reign of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, and even the death of Marilyn Monroe.
Olds' book The Wellspring (1996), shares with her previous work the use of raw language and startling images to convey truths about domestic and political violence and family relationships.<ref name="Author Page: Sharon Olds">"Author Page: Sharon Olds", New York State Writers Institute.</ref> In a New York Times review, Lucy McDiarmid hailed her poetry for its vision: "like Whitman, Ms. Olds sings the body in celebration of a power stronger than political oppression."<ref>Lucy McDiarmid, "Private Parts", New York Times, September 15, 1996.</ref> Alicia Ostriker noted Olds traces the "erotics of family love and pain." Ostriker continues: "In later collections, [Olds] writes of an abusive childhood, in which miserably married parents bully and punish and silence her. She writes, too, of her mother's apology "after 37 years," a moment when "The sky seemed to be splintering, like a window/someone is bursting into or out of."<ref name="independent.co.uk"/> Olds' work is anthologized in over 100 collections, ranging from literary/poetry textbooks to special collections. Her poetry has been translated into seven languages for international publications. She has been published in Beloit Poetry Journal. She was the New York State Poet Laureate for 1998–2000.<ref name="Author Page: Sharon Olds"/>
Stag's Leap was published in 2013. The poems were written in 1997, following the divorce from her husband of 29 years. The poems focus on her husband, and even sometimes his mistress. The collection won the T. S. Eliot Prize.<ref name="autogenerated1">Template:Cite news</ref> She is the first American woman to win this award.<ref name="autogenerated1" /> It also won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.<ref>"The 2013 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Poetry", The Pulitzer Prizes.</ref>
Women's MovementEdit
Olds did not participate in the Women's Movement at first, but she says, "My first child was born in 1969. In 1968 the Women's Movement in New York City—especially among a lot of women I knew—was very alive. I had these strong ambitions to enter the bourgeoisie if I could. I wasn't a radical at all. But I do remember understanding that I had never questioned that men had all the important jobs. And that was shocking—well, I was 20 years old! I'd never thought, "Oh, where's the woman bus driver?" So there's another subject—which was what it felt like to be a woman in the world."<ref>"Advice to Young Poets: Sharon Olds in Conversation", Michael Laskey, Poets.org, May 12, 2010.</ref>
Honors and awardsEdit
- 1978 Creative Artists Public Service Grant<ref name="OLDS, Sharon">OLDS, Sharon</ref>
- 1978 Madeline Sadin Award, New York Quarterly<ref>Issue 22</ref>
- 1979 Younger Poets Award, Poetry Miscellany<ref name="OLDS, Sharon"/>
- 1980 Satan Says inaugural San Francisco Poetry Center Award.
- 1981–1982 Guggenheim Fellowship, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation<ref>Sharon Olds Guggenheim Fellowship Member Page Template:Webarchive</ref>
- 1982–1983 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship<ref>Creative Writing Fellowship Winners and National Awards</ref>
- 1983 The Dead and the Living Lamont Poetry Prize,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and the National Book Critics Circle Award.
- 1992 The Father, shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize<ref name="Sharon Olds: Blood, sweat and fears"/> and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.<ref>University of Illinois</ref>
- 1993–1996 Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writers Award<ref>Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writers' Awards Template:Webarchive</ref>
- 1998–2000 New York State Poet Laureate<ref name="Author Page: Sharon Olds"/>
- 2002 Academy of American Poets Fellowship<ref>Academy of American Poets Fellowship Winners</ref>
- 2002 The Unswept Room, Finalist for the National Book Award for Poetry<ref>National Book Awards – 2002</ref>
- 2003 Judge, Griffin Poetry Prize; for "distinguished poetic achievement at mid-career"<ref>2003 Judges</ref>
- 2004 Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Awards<ref>Writers for Writers Awards</ref>
- 2004 Became member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences<ref>List of Active Members by Class</ref>
- 2006–2012 Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets<ref>American Academy of Poets Chancellors</ref>
- 2009 One Secret Thing, shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize<ref>BBC article and audio files 15 January 2010</ref> and the Forward Prizes for Poetry<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- 2012 T. S. Eliot Prize, Stag's Leap<ref name="Sabine Durrant"/>
- 2012 Stag's Leap, named as one of "Oprah's Favorite Reads of 2012"<ref>The Best Nonfiction of 2012</ref>
- 2013 Pulitzer Prize, Stag's Leap<ref name="2013 Pulitzer Prizes"/>
- 2014 Donald Hall-Jane Kenyon Prize in American Poetry<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- 2015 Elected to become a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters (to be inducted mid-May 2015)<ref>2015 Newly Elected Members, American Academy of Arts and Letters, February 24, 2015.</ref>
- 2016 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets
- 2020 Shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize, Arias<ref>The Griffin Poetry Prize Announces the 2020 International and Canadian Shortlist, The Griffin Trust, April 7, 2020.</ref>
- 2022 Poetry Society of America's Robert Frost Medal awardee <ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- 2023 Awarded the inaugural Joan Margarit International Poetry Prize<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
BibliographyEdit
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CollectionsEdit
- 1980 Satan Says, University of Pittsburgh Press Template:ISBN
- 1984 The Dead and the Living, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 1987 The Gold Cell, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 1987 The Matter of This World, Slow Dancer Press Template:ISBN
- 1991 The Sign of Saturn, Secker & Warburg Template:ISBN
- 1992 The Father, Secker & Warburg Template:ISBN
- 1996 The Wellspring, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 1999 Blood, Tin, Straw, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 2002 The Unswept Room, Tandem Library Template:ISBN
- 2004 Strike Sparks: Selected Poems 1980–2002, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 2008 One Secret Thing, Random House Template:ISBN
- 2012 Stag's Leap, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 2016 Odes, Knopf Template:ISBN
- 2017 Penguin Modern Poets 3: Your Family, Your Body by Malika Booker, Sharon Olds, Warsan Shire. Penguin. Template:ISBN
- 2019 Arias Penguin Random House Template:ISBN
- 2022 Balladz Alfred A. Knopf Template:ISBN
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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- Official website
- Audio recording (.mp3) of Sharon Olds reading from her work at the Key West Literary Seminar, January 2003
- "Advice to Young Poets: Sharon Olds in Conversation" from the 2009 Aldeburgh Poetry Festival Recorded by The Poetry Trust
- Sharon Olds: Poems and Profile at Poets.org
- Poems by Sharon Olds at PoetryFoundation.org
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign – Modern American Poetry's Sharon Olds section
- Sharon Olds, Gwen Harwood and Dorothy Hewett: Truth, Lies, Poetry Cordite Poetry Review
- Reviews of Blood, Tin, Straw
- Olds' Poet Laureate site
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- Interview recorded at the Lensic Theater in Santa Fe, New Mexico on April 10, 2002. (Audio 1hr 30 mins)
- "Sharon Olds: 'I want a poem to be useful'", Kate Kellaway, The Observer, 5 January 2013
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