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    GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2004

    International Winner

    Click here to purchase The Strange Hours Travelers Keep 

    Book: The Strange Hours Travelers Keep
    Poet: August Kleinzahler
    Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux

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    Biography

    August Kleinzahler

    August Kleinzahler published his first book of poetry, A Calendar of Airs, in 1978. Since then, he has published six others, including Storm over Hackensack (1985); Earthquake Weather (1989); Red Sauce Whiskey and Snow (1995); and Green Sees Things in Waves (1998). In 2000, Farrar, Straus & Giroux published Live from the Hong Kong Nile Club: Poems 1975-1990. His poems have appeared in numerous publications including The New Yorker, The American Poetry Review, Poetry, Harper’s Magazine, Grand Street, The Threepenny Review, and The Paris Review. A native of Jersey City, Kleinzahler is the recipient of awards from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation (1989), the Lila Acheson-Reader’s Digest Award for Poetry (1991), and an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1996). In 2000 he was awarded a Berlin Prize Fellowship. His latest book, a collection of meditations entitled Cutty, One Rock: Low Characters and Strange Places, Gently Explained, was published in November, 2004 to considerable critical acclaim. He has also been named poet laureate of his hometown of Fort Lee, New Jersey.

    Kleinzahler has been a taxi driver, a locksmith, a logger, and a building manager. He has taught creative writing courses at Brown University, the University of California at Berkeley, and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, as well as to homeless veterans in the Bay Area. He lives in San Francisco.

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    Judges’ Citation

    The Strange Hours Travelers Keep is a masterful collection of work from a poet who inhabits the energies of urban life more fully than anyone currently writing. If August Kleinzahler’s poems notice birdsong, they do so by their own account as “part of a mix – footsteps, traffic, / fountains, shouts”. There is something exhilarating about passages of verse which are so ferociously on the move, between locations, between forms, between registers. These poems swagger and swerve and sing, while their moments of grace are ruthlessly sudden and just as swiftly abandoned to all the other stuff that’s happening in the universe. Kleinzahler’s poems also talk a lot about music, and they themselves live in the miraculous, conditional way that music does – finding their harmonies by moving forward.”

    The Tartar Swept

    The Tartar swept across the plain

    In their furs and silk panties

    Snub-nosed monkey men with cinders for eyes

    Attached to their ponies like centaurs

    Forcing the snowy passes of the Carpathians

    Streaming from defiles like columns of ants

    Arraying their host in a vasty wheel

    White, gray, black and chestnut steeds

    10,000 each to a quadrant

    Turning, turning at the Jenuye's command

    This terrible pinwheel

    Gathering speed like a Bulgar dance

    Faster and faster

    Until it explodes, columns of horsemen

    Peeling away in all the four directions

    Hard across the puszta

    Dust from their hooves darkening the sky

    They fall upon village and town

    Like raptors, like tigers, like wolves on the fold

    Mauling the sza-szas

    And leaving them senseless in puddles of goaty drool

    Smashing balalaikas

    Ripping the ears off hussars and pissing in the wounds

    They for whom the back of a horse

    Is their only country

    For whom a roof and four walls is like unto a grave

    And a city, ptuh, a city

    A pullulating sore that exists to be scourged

    Stinky dumb nomads with blood still caked

    On shield and cuirass

    And the yellow loess from the dunes of the Takla Makan

    And the Corridor of Kansu

    Between their toes and caught in their scalps

    Like storm clouds in the distance

    Fast approaching

    With news of the steppes, the lagoons and Bitter Lakes

    Edicts, torchings, infestation

    The smoke of chronicles

    Finding their way by the upper reaches

    Of the Selinga and the Irtysh

    To Issyk-Kul, the Aral, and then the Caspian

    Vanquishing the Bashkirs and Alans

    By their speed outstripping rumor

    Tireless mounts, short-legged and strong

    From whose backs arrows are expertly dispatched

    As fast as they can be pulled from the quiver

    Samarkand, Bukhara, Harat, Nishapur

    More violent in every destruction

    This race of men which had never before been seen

    With their roving fierceness

    Scarcely known to ancient documents

    From beyond the edge of Scythia

    From beyond the frozen ocean

    Pouring out of the Caucasus

    Surpassing every extreme of ferocity

    From the Don to the Dniester

    The Black Sea to the Pripet Marshes

    Laying waste the Ostrogoth villages

    Taking with them every last cookie

    Then dicking the help

    These wanton boys of nature

    Who shot forward like a bolt from on high

    Routing with great slaughter

    All that they could come to grips with

    In their wild career

    Their beautiful shifting formations

    Thousands advancing at the wave of a scarf

    Then doubling back or making a turn

    With their diabolical sallies and feints

    Remorseless and in poor humor

    So they arrived at the gates of Christendom

    From The Strange Hours Travelers Keep, by August Kleinzahler
    Copyright © 2003

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    More about August Kleinzahler

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    Photo credit: Star Black

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