Charles Wright is the recipient of national
awards for his poetry, including the National Book Award in 1983
for Country Music (Wesleyan) and the Pulitzer Prize in
Poetry in 1998 for Black Zodiac (Noonday Press, Farrar,
Straus and Giroux), which also won the Los Angeles Book Prize,
the National Book Critic's
Circle Prize, and the Ambassador Book Award. He is the author of
many books of poems and essays, including Buffalo Yoga (2004),
A Short History of the Shadow (2002), Negative Blue:
Selected Later Poems (2001), Appalachia (1998), all
from Farrar, Straus and Giroux, and Halflife: Improvisations
and Interviews, 1977-87 (University
of Michigan, 1989), a collection of essays and interviews. Wright
has translated the work of Dino Campana and received the PEN Translation
Prize for his translation of Eugenio Montale's The Storm and
Other Poems (Oberlin, 1978). He has taught at the University
of California-Irvine, the University of Iowa, Columbia University,
and Princeton University.
He is currently the Souder Family Professor at the University of
Virginia. His many awards and honors include an Ingram Merrill
Fellowship in Poetry, an American Academy and Institute of Arts
and Letters Grant, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship,
two NEA Fellowships, the Lenore Marshall Prize, the Ruth Lilly
Poetry Prize, and the Academy of American Poets' Edgar Allan
Poe Award. He has been a member of the American Academy of Arts
and Letters since 1995.
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