"Wright has a hunk of the ineffable in his teeth and he won't let go. In
poem after poem, he plumbs our deepest relationships with nature, time,
love, death, creation. Wright's search breaks all the barriers of time,
space, action, for its dramatic narrative simply refuses to acknowledge
the usual unities, as though all time were this time, all places this
place and all actions one."--Philip Levine, from his citation for the
1996 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize.
Charles Wright was named chancellor of The Academy of American Poets
in 1999 and has won a Pulitzer Prize, a National Book Critics Circle
Prize and a Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Since 1983, he has been at
the University of Virginia.