Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award
Black Zodiacoffers poems suffused with spiritual longinglyrical meditations on faith, religion, heritage, and morality. The poems also explore aging and mortality with restless grace. Approaching his vast subjects by way of small moments, Wright magnifies details to reveal truths much larger than the quotidian happenings that engendered them. His is an astonishing, flexible, domestic-yet-universal verse. As the critic Helen Vendler has observed, Wright is a poet who sounds like nobody else.
Black Zodiacconcentrates on Charles Wright's considerable poetic endowment into a new poignance that has to be termed religious. Some of the poems achieve an authentic gnosis in a rapt mode of negative transcendence. Harold Bloom
Black Zodiacoccupies the position in Wright's career thatThe Auroras of Autumnholds in Wallace Stevens's: Having long since mastered his characteristic voice, the poet has passed through the terrifying moment when mastery threatens to become mannerism, and he has emerged as a poet whose every line seems completely recognizable and at the same time utterly fresh. James Longenbach, The Nation
Combines an impeccable musical and prosaic sense with the kind of humility possessed by the masters. Carol Muske, The New York Times Book Review
Charles Wrighthas won, among other honors, the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the National Book Award, and the Academy of American Poets' 1996 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize. He teaches at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.