00:00 Acclaimed American poet and Nobel laureate in literature Louise Glouin-Forth-Caquet has
00:05 died at the age of 80.
00:07 She received a Nobel in 2020, becoming the first American poet to win the honor since
00:13 T.S.
00:14 Eliot more than 70 years earlier.
00:16 Her poems often spoke of trauma and disillusion, with her most famous poem, "Mock Orange,"
00:22 questioning the value of love and sex.
00:25 Glouin-Forth-Caquet's death was confirmed by her publishers on Friday.
00:29 Louise Glouin-Forth-Caquet's poetry gives voice to our untrusting but unstillable need
00:34 for knowledge and connection in an often unreliable world, her longtime editor Jonathan Galassi
00:40 said in a statement.
00:42 Her work is immortal.
00:43 A friend told The New York Times that she died of cancer at her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
00:49 Glouin-Forth-Caquet was the U.S. poet laureate from 2003 to 2004 and most recently worked
00:56 as a professor of English at Yale University and a professor of poetry at Stanford University.
01:03 She was awarded almost every prize an American poet might hope for.
01:07 The Nobel judges in 2020 praised her for her unmistakable poetic voice that with austere
01:13 beauty makes individual existence universal.
01:16 She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1993 for her collection The Wild Iris, a book of poems
01:22 which dealt with themes of suffering, death and rebirth.
01:26 Her other honors include the 2001 Ballinan Prize for Poetry, the Wallace-Stevens Award,
01:32 given in 2008, the National Book Award in 2014, and a National Humanities Medal, awarded
01:39 in 2015 by Barack Obama.
01:42 Glouin-Forth-Caquet, whose name is pronounced "Glick," was born in 1943 in New York and
01:49 published more than a dozen books of poetry over her lifetime.
01:53 Her works were short, often less than one page, and focused on the painful reality of
01:59 being human, dealing with themes such as death, childhood, and family life.
02:05 She also took inspiration from Greek mythology and its characters, such as Persephone and
02:10 Eurytusse, who are often the victims of betrayal.
02:14 Her debut book, released in 1968, was titled Firstborn and was published after she dropped
02:20 out of college and had her first of two divorces.
02:24 Her father, who helped invent the exacto knife, encouraged her writing.
02:28 But she had a difficult childhood, which included hospital treatment for anorexia.
02:33 "My interactions with the world as a social being were unnatural, forced, performances,
02:39 and I was happiest reading," she said of her childhood in one 2006 interview.
02:45 For a sample of her work, look to the final line of her poem Gnostos, named for a Greek
02:51 term meaning "homecoming."
02:53 We look at the world once, in childhood.
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