NEW YORK ā Charles Simic, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who awed critics and readers with his singular art of lyricism and economy, tragic insight and disruptive humor, has died at age 84.
The death of Simic, the countryās poet laureate from 2007-2008, was confirmed Monday by executive editor Dan Halpern at Alfred A. Knopf. He did not immediately provide additional details.
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Author of dozens of books, Simic was ranked by many as among the greatest and most original poets of his time, one who didnāt write in English until well into his 20s. His bleak, but comic perspective was shaped in part by his years growing up in wartime Yugoslavia, leading him to observe that āThe world is old, it was always old.ā His poems were usually short and pointed, with surprising and sometimes jarring shifts in mood and imagery, as if to mirror the cruelty and randomness he had learned early on.
In āTwo Dogs,ā Simic writes of how one dog in āsome Southern townā and another in the New Hampshire woods reminded him of a ālittle white dogā who became āentangledā in the feet of marching German soldiers. āReading Historyā is a sketch of the āvast, dark and impenetrableā skies for those āled to their death.ā In āHelp Wanted,ā life is a cosmic joke, and the narrator a willing dupe:
They asked for a knife
I come running
They need a lamb
I introduce myself as the lamb
But Simic also loved wordplay (āThe insomniacās brain is a choo-choo trainā), catcalls (āAmerica, I shouted at the radio/Even at 2 a.m. you are a loony bin!ā) and the interplay of great thoughts and everyday follies: āWhat was that fragment of Heraclitus/You were trying to remember/As you stepped on the butcherās cat?ā he wrote in āThe Friends of Heraclitus.ā In āTransport,ā sex becomes a near-literal feast of the senses:
In the frying pan
On the stove
I found my love
And me naked
Chopped onions
Fell on our heads
And made us cry
Itās like a parade,
I told her, confetti
When some guy
Reaches the moon
His notable books included āThe World Doesnāt End,ā winner of the Pulitzer in 1990; āWalking the Black Cat,ā a National Book Award finalist in 1996; āUnending Bluesā and such recent collections as āThe Lunaticā and āScribbled in the Dark.ā In 2005, he received the Griffin Poetry Prize and was praised by judges as āa magician, a conjuror,ā master of āa disarming, deadpan precision, which should never be mistaken for simplicity.ā He was fluent in several languages and translated the works of other poets from French, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, and Slovenian.
His 2022 collection āNo Land in Sight" presented a dark vision of contemporary life, such as the poem āCome Springā and its warning: āDon't let that birdie in the tree/Fool you with its pretty song/The wicked are back from hell."
In 1964, Simic married fashion designer Helene Dubin, with whom he had two children. He became an American citizen in 1971 and two years later joined the faculty of the University of New Hampshire, where he remained for decades.
Born Dusan Simic in Belgrade in 1938, the year before World War II began, he would describe his youth as āa small, nonspeaking part/In a bloody epic.ā His father fled to Italy in 1942 and was apart from the family for years. Home was so oppressive that Simic came to see the war as a needed escape.
āThe war ended the day before May 9, 1945, which happened to be my birthday,ā he told the Paris Review in 2005. āI was playing in the street. I went up to the apartment to get a drink of water where my mother and our neighbors were listening to the radio. They said, āWar is over,ā and apparently I looked at them puzzled and said, āNow there wonāt be any more fun!ā In wartime, thereās no parental supervision; the grown-ups are so busy with their lives, the kids can run free.ā
Simic would refer to Hitler and Stalin as his ātravel agents.ā Nazi rule gave way to Soviet-backed oppression and Simic emigrated to France with his mother and brother in the mid-1950s, then soon to the U.S. His family settled in Chicago, where his high school was once attended by Ernest Hemingway, and he became interested in poetry ā for the art and for the girls. His parents unable to pay for college, he spent a decade working at jobs ranging from a payroll clerk to house painter while taking night classes at the University of Chicago and eventually New York University, from which he graduated in 1966 with a degree in Russian studies.
His first book, āWhat the Grass Says," came out in 1967. He followed with āSomewhere Among Us a Stone is Taking Notesā and āDismantling the Silence,ā and was soon averaging a book a year. A New York Times review from 1978 would note his gift for conveying āa complex of perceptions and feelingsā in just a few lines.
āOf all the things ever said about poetry, the axiom that less is more has made the biggest and the most lasting impression on me,ā Simic told Granta in 2013. āI have written many short poems in my life, except āwrittenā is not the right word to describe how they came into existence. Since itās not possible to sit down and write an eight-line poem thatāll be vast for its size, these poems are assembled over a long period of time from words and images floating in my head.ā