Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
The masterful collection from the acclaimed Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of The Wild Iris and Vita Nova
Louise Glück has long practiced poetry as a species of clairvoyance. She
began as Cassandra, at a distance, in league with the immortal; to read
her books sequentially is to chart the oracle's metamorphosis into
unwilling vessel, reckless, mortal and crude. The Seven Ages is
Glück's ninth book, her strangest and most bold. In it she stares down
her own death, and, in doing do, forces endless superimpositions of the
possible on the impossible--an act that simultaneously defies and
embraces the inevitable, and is, finally, mimetic. over and over, at
each wild leap or transformation, flames shoot up the reader's spine.