Stockholm: American poet Louise Glück won the Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday for her “candid and uncompromising” work, which looks unflinchingly and with biting humor at loss and trauma, especially in family life.
She joins a handful of American poets who have received the prize, which has been dominated by novelists since the first award in 1901. She is also one of the few women honored — the 16th female Nobel Literature laureate.
Glück, who shuns most publicity, told Sweden’s TT news agency from her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that her phone was ringing off the hook, and she was struggling to express her feelings about the award.
The Nobel Committee praised Glück “for her unmistakable poetic voice that with austere beauty makes individual existence universal" in its citation.
Announcing the award in Stockholm, Mats Malm, the Swedish Academy permanent secretary, said he had spoken to Glück, and the news "came as a surprise — but a welcome one as far as I could tell.”
In a 2012 interview with the Academy of Achievement, Glück noted that “worldly honor makes existence in the world easier” but said he true goal as an artist was “not capable of being had in my lifetime.”
“I want to live after I die, in that ancient way,” she said. "And there’s no way of knowing whether that will happen, and there will be no knowing, no matter how many blue ribbons have been plastered to my corpse.”
New York-born Glück, 77, who is a faculty member at Yale University, made her debut in 1968 with “Firstborn,” and “was soon acclaimed as one of the most prominent poets in American contemporary literature,” the committee said.
Glück's “unsparing explorations of the self and its place in the world in volume after volume have created poems of beauty and revelation,” Yale President Peter Salovey said in a statement.
He added that Glück is a “galvanizing teacher, who has given herself unstintingly to students who revere her.”
Raised in a family with Hungarian Jewish origins, Glück has spoken of how a teenage struggle with anorexia, and the therapy she received for it, influenced her incisive writing.
“Louise Glück’s voice is unmistakable. It is candid and uncompromising, and it signals that this poet wants to be understood. But it is also voice full of humor and biting wit,” said Anders Olsson, chairman of the Nobel literature committee. “This is a great resource when Glück treats one of our great topics, radical change, where the leap forward is made from a deep sense of loss.”
Olsson said Glück’s 12 collections of poetry were “characterized by striving for clarity.” Her verses, which often draw on classical Greek and Roman myths and examine family life, were marked by an “austere but also playful intelligence and a refined sense of composition,” he said.