PBS NewsHour - Louise Glück's words don't shy away from anxiety-inducing situations, like loneliness or a failed marriage. Indeed, there are moments in her poems where the words linger in a sense
![The Paris Review on Twitter: "Congratulations to Louise Glück, winner of the 2020 #NobelPrize in Literature. Read her poem “The Denial of Death” from issue no. 226, Fall 2018: https://t.co/xeW6FAbRlS https://t.co/Q7qrZRoE4m" / The Paris Review on Twitter: "Congratulations to Louise Glück, winner of the 2020 #NobelPrize in Literature. Read her poem “The Denial of Death” from issue no. 226, Fall 2018: https://t.co/xeW6FAbRlS https://t.co/Q7qrZRoE4m" /](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Ejz1SOjXkAAgobm.png)
The Paris Review on Twitter: "Congratulations to Louise Glück, winner of the 2020 #NobelPrize in Literature. Read her poem “The Denial of Death” from issue no. 226, Fall 2018: https://t.co/xeW6FAbRlS https://t.co/Q7qrZRoE4m" /
Nobel Prize - Have you read any poems by 2020 Literature Laureate Louise Glück? Glück is not only engaged by the errancies and shifting conditions of life, she is also a poet
![John Freeman on Twitter: "Among other things Louise Glück wrote one of the finest solstice poems ever https://t.co/opeZkBr1gm" / Twitter John Freeman on Twitter: "Among other things Louise Glück wrote one of the finest solstice poems ever https://t.co/opeZkBr1gm" / Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EjzaLbYWoAAK3Gf.jpg)