Jorie Graham was born in New York City, raised in Rome, and educated in France. Trilingual in English, Italian, and French, she studied philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris before attending New York University to study filmmaking. She holds an MFA in poetry from the University of Iowa and is the author of fifteen collections of poetry.Her work has been widely translated and she is the recipient of multiple honorsincluding a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship, the International Nonino Prize, and most notablythe 1996 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry forThe Dream of the Unified Field: Selected PoemsCurrently, Graham is the Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard University.
"Praise for To 2040 “Pulitzer Prize winner Graham’s 15th collection is perhaps her finest and most profound work yet, revealing such astonishing individuality in the idiosyncratic, elliptical style she has perfected over more than 40 years that fellow poets may feel tempted to throw up their hands in despair. This is a poetry of passionate intensity and conviction that reverberates with an astonishing and almost spiritual transcendence. . . . Since the death of A.R. Ammons, no U.S. poet has demanded so much of her reader or offered so rich and mysterious a reward. Here we are reminded not of Eliot or Yeats but of Habakkuk, Hosea, and especially that voice from the end of Job that cries out, ‘Gird up your loins man, and I will question you….’ VERDICT A masterpiece that belongs in every library where poetry is found.”—Library Journal, STARRED REVIEW “This is a rare gift: an ardent and pitiless anthem to a crazed, razed world.”—Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW “One of her best books yet. . . . Graham reinvents Wallace Stevens’s legacy of radiant philosophical verse as she seeks to discover how thought and language might throw off their human biases and move into spaces of liberating environmental openness. . . . A profound engagement with how our thinking about nature might change, and transform us in the process.”—The Guardian ""A Jorie Graham poem is a deep burrow into a position from which one can gather nothing but the sense of being terribly alive. It is a nakedness from which story will not appear to save you. There are many writers with righteous self-assurance, and many comfortable with bewilderment, and they are only rarely the same people. It is Graham’s unearthly self-possession in the presence of mystery that renders her poetry so strange.""—Kerry Howley, New York Magazine ""Graham’s 15th collection takes on the inevitability of extinction—of the individual narrator, of species and of the planet itself. If that sounds grim, it’s anything but: this is an urgent, vivacious book based in stark reality but written with craft and beauty.""—Financial Times ""In Jorie Graham’s hands, form is a kind of method acting, an inspiriting habitation. Breath, more than ever, is momentum in her new book, To 2040. As always in Graham’s oeuvre, the lyric explodes experience, stretches time—seems to—expanding the line’s possibilities, whether in short or long lines. To 2040 can seem both an address, an intimate but public apostrophe to a year that’s not so far away, and the title can also suggest a movement toward that year, a movement that might be fatal.""—Jesse Nathan, McSweeney's “For more than four decades, Jorie Graham’s poetry has documented the complicated, multidimensional, ever more uncertain sallies of human perception into the bristling presence of trees, birds, streams. . . . The urgency of the poet as messenger animates Graham’s new collection, To 2040, her tenth since winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1996. Its poems address the demise of the world—the vase of blossoms on the table, the tree from which they came, even the human mind attending to them—which has provided poetry with so much of its material and its source of power. Imagine, they say to the desolate future, how this world once existed, how we once lived alongside other species. They exhort us, her readers in the present, to ‘look behind you, turn, look down as much as you can, notice all / that disappears.’”—Walt Hunter, The Atlantic ""These gorgeous, dismaying, and piercing cautionary lyrics are tragic dispatches from a grim possible future spawned by our distraction and hunger for the wrong things. Clarion and virtuoso, Graham prods, 'are you not listening.' These poems must be heard.""―Donna Seaman, Booklist ""To 2040 is a powerful attempt to fathom a scale of destruction we don’t yet know how to feel, let alone mourn.""—4Columns ""Climate catastrophe is the subject of many of these poems; it’s an omnipresent groundswell elsewhere, but Graham’s particular achievement here is to find a form to evoke this anxiety and to underscore the scale of the emergency. These poems seem to offer us glimpses of two worlds: one doomed; one just about redeemable.""—Irish Times ""Curious in its approach to tradition, courageous in its vision of death and the afterlife, To 2040 deserves recognition with major acclaim in the coming year, not necessarily as the capstone of a career but as a singular and arresting engagement with mortality—neither should we, in other words, avert our eyes.""—Christopher Kempf, Preposition ""The great American poet summons frightening visions of post-apocalyptic futures, in a book where personal and planet-wide concerns collide.""—Telegraph Praise for Jorie Graham “We will always need to read Jorie Graham, and to read her closely, if we want to understand the last 40 years of poetry in America.” ―LA Review of Books “One of our great literary mappers of everything, everywhere all at once. . . . Graham is a chronicler of bigness, the overawing bigness of our planet but also the too-bigness, at times, of the self. . . . Our own comprehension of enormity, Graham writes, slides off of us ‘like a ring into the sea.’ It’s a truism that poetry’s task is finding amazement in the everyday. Graham turns this into a terrifying as well as a moral project. (In her ocean metaphor, the ring is vast, and the unknowingness in which we lose it is vaster still. Perhaps her poems are salvage divers.).”—New Yorker “Graham (Fast) begins her fifth decade of publishing with a bravura performance that probes the present for what the future will bring.” ―Publishers Weekly “Graham has long been breaking open the lyric voice, seeing how much of the vast, fractured, overwhelming present it can contain. Often she explores a self that won’t hold together but must still be held accountable―as a political entity, a citizen.” ―Harper's Magazine “Pulitzer Prize winner Graham’s poems are like those of John Donne and E.E. Cummings but on speed dial. Like Donne, Graham seeks to encounter the metaphysics of everything.” ―Library Journal “Graham is one of our great poets. Her words will long outlast all of this chatter.” ―New York Times “Every poem, Graham suggests, is part net and part wind, its finely knotted phrases and lines straining to “hold,” for longer than an instant, the presence passing through them.” ―New Yorker “Graham's poems act as the sonar devices of contemporary western consciousness, probing the depths of human existential experience.” ―The Guardian ""I look to many of our current poets to show me what poetry can do; it’s a rich time for the art. But only one or two keep teaching me what it IS. Jorie Graham, thank you.""—David Baker"