Poetry Fridays: Festival Poet Sharon Olds

Posted on by Dodge

Martin Farawell, Program Director, Poetry

Through nine collections of poems, Sharon Olds has turned an unflinching eye toward the ecstasies and sorrows of living in the human body. Every stage of life is meticulously observed and explored: childhood, adolescence and the awakening of sexuality, marriage, the birthing of children, divorce, the care-taking of aging parents, their deaths, and the confronting of ones own mortality.

Although a sharp observer, Olds has never allowed the fierceness of her looking to dull her compassion. Even describing acts of human cruelty, whether those of political leaders or of her own parents, it is her search for understanding that compels the reader to continue through revelations that, otherwise, might be unbearable.

In a Sharon Olds poem, attention to physical detail is the act of cherishing the world and the body in our brief moment of corporeality. Acknowledging the frailty of the body is part of this cherishing. In “Little Things,” an early poem, Olds writes, “I am/ paying attention to small beauties,/ whatever I have—as if it were our duty to/ find things to love, to bind ourselves to this world.”

While many of us might allow fear and shame to censor what we are willing to discover or reveal, Olds refuses to be so limited. It is as if for her fear and shame are absolutely reliable signals: Something is hidden behind them that we must explore if we are ever to understand our true selves. The deeper the fear or shame, the more tenaciously she will insist on exploring further.

So it is no surprise that Olds should be inspired by Neruda to write odes on such elemental subjects as “Poem for the Breasts” and “Ode to the Hymen.” Her odes, like all her poems, are unrelentingly inquisitive and tender. What may surprise some of her readers is her great sense of humor and obvious delight in sharing it.

Sharon Olds’ most recent collection is One Secret Thing. For a generous selection of poems from her first six books, see Strike Sparks: Selected Poems, 1980-2002.

Please use the “Share your thoughts with us” box below to share other resources you may have found for this poet. In this way, we can build together a mini-wiki-encyclopedia on the 2010 Festival Poets.

Return in the weeks ahead as we continue to profile the 2010 Festival Poets.

This entry was posted in Poetry 2010 Festival and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *