C.K. Williams(1936-2015)
- Writer
- Script and Continuity Department
C.K. Williams was the son of a salesman and a homemaker, born during
the Depression. He attended the University of Pennsylvania and started
writing poetry when he was 19. He began his career as a poet in the
mid-1960s, after writing to a magazine editor about the violence
directed against civil rights activists. The process of writing this
letter led Williams to create a new paradigm for writing his poetry.
The result was "A Day for Anne Frank," a meditation that linked the
civil rights movement with the Holocaust and became the opening poem of
his first collection, 'Lies' (1969). Since then, Williams has emerged
as one of America's major poets, with over a dozen books of poetry and
prose, winning a National Book Critics Circle Award for 'Flesh and
Blood' (1987) and the Pulitzer Prize for 'Repair' (1999). He is known
for his long, sinuous lines (often so long, they must be severed to fit
on the page) and what one critic called his "novelistically urban"
settings. Williams currently teaches at Princeton University, and
divides his time between Princeton and Paris, France.