Home Griffin Poetry Prize 10th Anniversary Tributes Learn more about the Griffin Poetry Prize 2010 International and Canadian Shortlist Purchase Griffin Poetry Prize Anthologies Adrienne Rich receives Lifetime Recognition Award Site Map Subscribe to Griffin Mailing List and Podcasts Privacy Policy Copyright Information Home
About The Griffin Trust See and Hear Poetry How to Enter Related Links
News and Events Awards and Poets Judges Contact


Awards Summary
  • 2010
  • 2009
  • 2008
  • 2007
  • 2006
  • 2005
  • 2004
  • Di Brandt
    Leslie Greentree
    Anne Simpson
    Suji Kwock Kim
    David Kirby
    August Kleinzahler
    Louis Simpson
  • 2003
  • 2002
  • 2001
  • Lifetime Recognition Award
    Winners Press Release
    Shortlist Press Release
    Speeches
    Photo Galleries
    Griffin Poets Stay in Touch
    Poetry Publishers' Newsletters

    GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2004

    International Shortlist

    Click here to purchase The Owner of the House, by Louis Simpson 

    Book: The Owner of the House
    Poet: Louis Simpson
    Publisher: BOA Editions, Ltd.

    Click the book cover or title to purchase The Owner of the House online.

     

    Read an excerpt from The Owner of the House.
    Enjoy audio and video clips of Louis Simpson reading from The Owner of the House.

     

    Biography

    Louis Simpson

    Louis Simpson is the author of 17 books of original poetry. He has won the Pulitzer Prize, and the Academy of American Poets 1998 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award. Among his many other honors are the Prix de Rome, fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Columbia Medal for Excellence. He published his first book of poems, The Arrivistes (1949) in France. His other books of poetry include The Owner of the House: New Collected Poems, 1940-2001 (BOA Editions, 2003); Nombres et poussière; There You Are (Story Line, 1995); In the Room We Share (1990); Collected Poems (1988); People Live Here: Selected Poems 1949-83 (1983); The Best Hour of the Night (1983); Caviare at the Funeral (1980); Armidale (1979); Searching for the Ox (1976); Adventures of the Letter I (1971); Selected Poems (1965); At the End of the Open Road, Poems (1963), and A Dream of Governors (1959). He translated Modern Poets of France: A Bilingual Anthology and is author of the memoir, The King My Father’s Wreck (Story Line 1995), and published a volume entitled Selected Prose (1989). He earned wide acclaim for his books of criticism, which include: Three on the Tower (1975), a study of Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, and William Carlos Williams; Ships Going Into the Blue: Essays and Notes on Poetry (1994); The Character of the Poet (1986); A Company of Poets (1981) and A Revolution in Taste: Studies of Dylan Thomas, Allen Ginsberg, Sylvia Path, and Robert Lowell (1978).

    Born in Jamaica, Simpson studied at Columbia University; served in the Second World War followed by studies at the University of Paris after which he earned his Ph.D. at Columbia where he went on to teach. He also taught at the University of California at Berkeley, and the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Simpson lives in Setauket, New York.

    Judges’ Citation

    Louis Simpson has been enriching the tradition of poetry in English for over 60 years, from his eloquent poems of the Second World War to the later understated, sometimes dyspeptic, tales of contemporary suburban life. He is one of the few poets of our time to have kept the art of narrative, of story-telling, alive in poetry, and yet he has done so without any sacrifice of lyric power: the work in The Owner of the House enchants and disenchants in equal measure. These conversations with America, held over many decades, are informed by a melancholy clear-sightedness, a generous, wry sense of humour, and a determination to celebrate the true lives and capacities of ordinary people. If Chekhov were reincarnated as a poet into the world where we live, this is surely what he would sound like.”

    The Unwritten Poem

    You will never write the poem about Italy.
    What Socrates said about love
    is true of poetry – where is it?
    Not in beautiful faces and distant scenery
    but the one who writes and loves.

    In your life here, on this street
    where the houses from the outside
    are all alike, and so are the people.
    Inside, the furniture is dreadful –
    flock on the walls, and huge color television.

    To love and write unrequited
    is the poet's fate. Here you'll need
    all your ardor and ingenuity.
    This is the front and these are the heroes –
    a life beginning with "Hi!" and ending with "So long!"

    You must rise to the sound of the alarm
    and march to catch the 6:20 –
    watch as they ascend the station platform
    and, grasping briefcases, pass beyond your gaze
    and hurl themselves into the flames.

    From The Owner of the House, by Louis Simpson
    Copyright © 2003

    Back to top

    More about Louis Simpson

    The following are links to other Web sites with information about poet Louis Simpson. (Note: All links to external Web sites open in a new browser window.)

    Have you read The Owner of the House, by Louis Simpson?

    Click here to send us your comments.

    Back to top

    right side
    bottom navbar