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Finalist: A Treatise on Stars, by Mei-mei Berssenbrugge (New Directions)

A book of meditative and expansive poems that illuminate the interconnectedness of life forms and the spirituality of our natural environment.

Nominated Work

A Treatise on Stars

An ethereal new collection that is “visceral with intellection” (David Lau)

Winner of the Bollingen Prize
Finalist for the PEN Open Book Award
Finalist for the National Book Award
Finalist for the Kingsley Tufts Prize

“My book describes how communicating with star beings can teach us to continue our world through love and grace, communal grace.” —Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, “Chaco and Olivia”

A Treatise on Stars extends Mei-mei Berssenbrugge’s intensely phenomenological poetics to the fiery bodies in a “field of heaven…outside spacetime.” Long, lyrical lines map a geography of interconnected, interdimensional intelligence that exists in all places and sentient beings. These are poems of deep listening and patient waiting, open to the cosmic loom, the channeling of daily experience and conversation, gestalt and angels, dolphins and a star-visitor beneath a tree. Family, too, becomes a type of constellation, a thought “a form of organized light.” All of our sense are activated by Berssenbrugge’s radiant lines, giving us a poetry of keen perception grounded in the physical world, where “days fill with splendor, and earth offers its pristine beauty to an expanding present.”

-- from the publisher

Biography

Mei-mei Berssenbrugge was born in Beijing and grew up in Massachusetts. She is the author of thirteen books of poetry, including Hello, the Roses; Empathy; and I Love Artists. Her collaborations include Endocrinology with Kiki Smith and Hiddenness with Richard Tuttle, as well as performances with Morita Dance Company, Blondell Cummings, and Davide Balula. She lives in northern New Mexico and New York City.

Winners

Prize Winner in Poetry in 2021:

Natalie Diaz

A collection of tender, heart-wrenching and defiant poems that explore what it means to love and be loved in an America beset by conflict. Poetry

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Poetry in 2021:

Carolyn Forché

Narrative lyrics resonant with imagery of beauty and horror that transcend the personal to offer a larger vision of our global condition.

The Jury

Marilyn Chin(Chair)

Professor Emerita of English and Comparative Literature, San Diego State University

Lee Ann Roripaugh

Professor of English, University of South Dakota

Natasha Trethewey*

Board of Trustees Professor of English, Northwestern University

Winners in Poetry

Jericho Brown

A collection of masterful lyrics that combine delicacy with historical urgency in their loving evocation of bodies vulnerable to hostility and violence.

Forrest Gander

A collection of elegies that grapple with sudden loss, and the difficulties of expressing grief and yearning for the departed.

Frank Bidart

A volume of unyielding ambition and remarkable scope that mixes long dramatic poems with short elliptical lyrics, building on classical mythology and reinventing forms of desires that defy societal norms.

Tyehimba Jess

For a distinctive work that melds performance art with the deeper art of poetry to explore collective memory and challenge contemporary notions of race and identity.

2021 Prize Winners