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  • 2010
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  • Ken Babstock
    Don McKay
    Priscila Uppal
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    Frederick Seidel
    Charles Wright
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    GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2007

    International Shortlist

    Click here to purchase Ooga-Booga, by Frederick Seidel

    Book: Ooga-Booga
    Poet: Frederick Seidel
    Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Click the book cover or title to purchase Ooga-Booga online.

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    Biography

    Frederick Seidel, Griffin Poetry Prize 2007 International Shortlist

    Frederick Seidel's previous collections include Final Solutions: Poems, 1959 - 1979; Sunrise (1980), which who the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry and the Lamont Prize; My Tokyo (1993); Going Fast (1998); The Cosmos Poems, illustrated by Anselm Kiefer (2000); Life on Earth (2001); and Area Code 212 (2002). He is the recipient of numerous prizes including the 2002 PEN/Voelker Award for Poetry. Frederick Seidel is a founding editor of The Paris Review, a protégé of Ezra Pound and Robert Lowell, and one of the original Elaine’s crowd. He was born in St. Louis and graduated from Harvard and now lives in New York City.

    Summary

    Since his first collection appeared in 1963, Seidel has written about the present state of things – private and public, acknowledged and unacknowledged, decade by decade – with laconic craft, inspired malice, terrible hilarity and disabused omniscience.

    Judges’ Citation

    “Frederick Seidel’s work reminds us that it is not poetry’s job to reassure, to confirm expectations and habits of thought. Its beauty is often difficult and its pleasures complicated and unnerving. Violent, scary, uncomfortably funny and ferociously sad, angry, mourning, or in love, the poems’ brutal honesty of intellect and instinct is written with wicked, magnificent control. And always, they are utterly human. Morality is never excused from the mess of politics and culture. ‘Civilized is about having stuff,’ writes Seidel. ‘Too much is almost enough.’ Addressing privilege and complicity in the first person, the poems know that for all that is acquired, somebody, or something, pays. ‘The American trophies covered in tears that deck the American halls’ dog the boutique hotels, shadowing corners of those poems in which ‘We lived like hummingbirds on nectar and oxygen.’ Ooga-Booga places in uneasy proximity images and statements that, in the discomfort of the other’s glare, reveal their underpinnings and implications. Its poems refuse complacency and the inertia of despair, whether from trajectories of loss, war, movies, hunting, cocktails at the Carlyle or superbike racing. It bids us take a look at our own affairs. Seidel has written a startling, haunting book. Its risks are both its challenge and reward.”

    from Barbados

    A cane toad came up to them.
    They'd never seen anything so remarkable.
    Now they could see the field was full of them.
    Suddenly the field is filled with ancestors.
    The hippopotamuses became friendly with the villagers.
    Along came white hunters who shot the friendly hippos dead.
    If they had known that friendship would end like that,
    They never would have entered into it.
    Suddenly the field is filled with souls.
    The field of sugarcane is filled with hippopotamus cane toads.
    They always complained
    Our xylophones were too loud.
    The Crocodile King is dead.
    The world has no end.

    From Ooga-Booga, by Frederick Seidel
    Copyright © 2006 by Frederick Seidel

    Listen to Caroline Cave read from Frederick Seidel's Barbados

    Click here to view and hear Caroline Cave reading from Frederick Seidel's Barbados.

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    More about Frederick Seidel

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    Note: Summaries are taken from promotional materials supplied by the publisher, unless otherwise noted.

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