Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The poem "Thinking up the world" (Obmyślam świat) in Szymborska's early poetry collection Calling out to Yeti (Wołanie do Yeti) from 1957 already proclaimed a "language of plants and animals." [11] Numerous poems about animals followed in her later work, for example in the selected volume Tarsjusz i inne wiersze from 1976. [12]
2001 The New Republic: "Miracle Fair: Selected Poems of Wislawa Szymborska" by Ruth Franklin; 2006 The Christian Science Monitor: A fascinating journey with two women poets by Elizabeth Lund ; 2006 Moondance magazine: Stories/Poems. Plain and Simple. – Mapping the Words of Wislawa Szymborska on Her Latest Book, Monologue of a Dog by Lys Anzia
The 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the Polish poet Wisława Szymborska (1923–2012) "for poetry that with ironic precision allows the historical and biological context to come to light in fragments of human reality." [1] [2] Szymborska is the 9th female recipient and the 5th Nobel laureate from Poland after Czesław Miłosz in ...
The Wisława Szymborska Award is a Polish annual international literature prize presented by the Wisława Szymborska Foundation. It was established in 2013, and was named in honour of the Nobel Prize-winning poet Wisława Szymborska (1923–2012). It is awarded to authors of best poetry works published the previous year.
Wislawa Szymborska (1923–2012), Polish poet, essayist and translator; won 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature; Alcira Cardona Torrico (1926–2003), Bolivian writer and poet; Mona Van Duyn (1921–2004), American poet; 36th US Poet Laureate; Phyllis Webb (1927–2021), Canadian poet and radio broadcaster
She wrote fiction and poetry and plays. She also wrote for children and translated from French. [1] Her novel Gedichte (Poems) won the Roswitha von Gandersheim Medal in 1976, an award made to outstanding women writers in German. She worked for publishers until 1998 [1] where she helped the eventual Nobel laureate Wislawa Szymborska. [2]
Robert Pinsky, The Figured Wheel: New and Collected Poems, 1966-1996 [18] James Reiss, The Parable of Fire; Patti Smith, The Coral Sea; Gary Snyder, Mountains and Rivers Without End [18] Brian Swann, editor, Wearing the Morning Star: Native American Song-Poems, New York: Random House; Henry Taylor, Understanding Fiction: Poems 1986-1996 [18]
The first poems for rent were posted in Israel during October 2005. One of those was documented in the Hebrew creation site Tzura. [2] Those were poems of famous Israeli poets such as Yehuda Amichai and Nathan Zach, as well as poems of the Polish poet, Nobel Prize winner, Wislawa Szymborska.