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Poetry award winners [343] Year Title Author Ref. 2005 Everything is Burning: Poems: Gerald Stern: 2007 The Dream of the Poem: Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain, 950-1492: Peter Cole: 2009 The Book of Seventy (Pitt Poetry Series) Alicia Ostriker: 2011 Wait: Poems: C. K. Williams: 2013 Who Touches Everything: Peter Waldor: 2015 ...
His poetry, taken together, is an expansion of our new poetry for the straightforward but nonetheless interesting reason that he seems to have found a distinctive way of articulating his personal, if sometimes imagined, history while, at the same time, effusing their universal contexts quite decisively and seamlessly."
These books have been recognized by the American Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. For biographies of the prize-winning poets, see Category:Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winners . Pages in category "Pulitzer Prize for Poetry–winning works"
History portal; These books have won the American Pulitzer Prize for History. For biographies of the historians, see Category:Pulitzer Prize for History winners. See also Category:Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography–winning works.
Listed below are notable or preserved private residences in the United States of significant American writers. These writers' homes, where many Pulitzer Prize-winning books were written, also inspired the settings of many notable poems, short stories and novels.
Best book in American history: since 1957 Pulitzer Prize for History: Columbia University: Distinguished book about the history of the United States: since 1917 James A. Rawley Prize: American Historical Association: Best book in Atlantic history: since 1990 James A. Rawley Prize: Organization of American Historians: Best book on race relations ...
Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize – $25,000 for the best book of poetry published in the United States in the previous year James Laughlin Award – $5,000 to recognize and support a poet's second book Walt Whitman Award – first-book publication, $5,000, and a one-month residency at the Vermont Studio Center for an American who has not yet ...
In three sections, the poems in Still Life address Hopler's diagnosis, his Puerto Rican heritage, and other topics including a "duet" with Johnny Cash and various allusions to animals. The book ends with a self-obituary. Hopler passed in 2022 one week after the book's publication. In The Rumpus that November, Johnson wrote: