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Green Squall
A01=Jay Hopler
A01=Louise Glück
Author_Jay Hopler
Author_Louise Glück
Category=DCF
Category=DSBH
Category=DSC
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
Product details
- ISBN 9780300114546
- Weight: 136g
- Dimensions: 133 x 210mm
- Publication Date: 01 Apr 2006
- Publisher: Yale University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Announcing the 2005 recipient of the prestigious Yale Younger Poets prize
Jay Hopler’s Green Squall is the winner of the 2005 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. As Louise Glück observes in her foreword, “Green Squall begins and ends in the garden”; however, Hopler’s gardens are not of the seasonal variety evoked by poets of the English lyric—his gardens flourish at lower, fiercer latitudes and in altogether different mindscapes. There is a darkness in Hopler’s work as deep and brutal as any in American poetry. Though his verbal extravagance and formal invention bring to mind Wallace Stevens’s tropical extrapolations, there lies beneath Green Squall’s lush tropical surfaces a terrifying world in which nightmare and celebration are indistinguishable, and hope is synonymous with despair.
Jay Hopler’s Green Squall is the winner of the 2005 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. As Louise Glück observes in her foreword, “Green Squall begins and ends in the garden”; however, Hopler’s gardens are not of the seasonal variety evoked by poets of the English lyric—his gardens flourish at lower, fiercer latitudes and in altogether different mindscapes. There is a darkness in Hopler’s work as deep and brutal as any in American poetry. Though his verbal extravagance and formal invention bring to mind Wallace Stevens’s tropical extrapolations, there lies beneath Green Squall’s lush tropical surfaces a terrifying world in which nightmare and celebration are indistinguishable, and hope is synonymous with despair.
Jay Hopler (1970–2022) earned degrees from New York University, Johns Hopkins University Writing Seminars, the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and Purdue University. He taught at the University of South Florida. He was a National Book Award finalist and the recipient of a Lannan Foundation fellowship, a Whiting Award, and a Joseph Brodsky Memorial fellowship. His third poetry collection, Still Life, was a finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize.
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