Charles Simic, Poet of Quiet Catastrophe, Dies at 84
Charles Simic, who fled Yugoslavia as a teenager and became one of America's most decorated poets, died on 9 January 2023 at the age of 84. He leaves behind a body of work that turned everyday American life into a register of quiet catastrophe.

Charles Simic, who arrived in the United States as a sixteen-year-old refugee from Yugoslavia in 1954 and went on to become one of American poetry's most decorated and widely read voices, died on 9 January 2023 in Quantico, Virginia. He was 84. His death was confirmed by his wife, the poet Diana Derementeva.
Simic published more than twenty collections over a career spanning six decades. His first major recognition came with "A Short History of the Human Shadow," published in 1968; his breakthrough arrived with "The Book of Dreads," a sequence of haiku-like short poems that established the spare, often darkly comic register that would define his work. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry twice — for "The World Doesn't Want to Breathe" in 1989 and for "Walking the Beanfield" in 1996. He served as United States Poet Laureate from 2011 to 2012.
His poetry drew frequently on the imagery of childhood dislocation — cold kitchens, winter light through bare windows, parents arguing in a language the child half-understands. Born in Belgrade in 1938, Simic escaped with his mother and brother as the Yugoslav wars escalated; his father had already fled to the United States. Simic would later describe learning English on American streets, in contrast to the formal education he received later. That early displacement — the experience of arriving somewhere and needing to rebuild a self from fragments — never left his poetry.
Critics placed him in the tradition of American minimalism, alongside Robert Lowell's shorter works and the stripped, image-driven writing of William Carlos Williams. But Simic's inheritance was his own: he used plain language to hold ordinary American life up to a particular kind of scrutiny — the diner counter, the television news, the suburban lawn — finding in all of it a latent catastrophe, something unsaid and possibly unsayable.
"Our poetry is too much about nothing," he told an interviewer in 2005, speaking about American verse. "It avoids saying anything that matters." The remark was characteristic — Simic was an unsparing commentator on American literary culture as well as its practitioner. He was a longtime contributor of essays and reviews to literary journals and mainstream publications alike, and his criticism was known for a similar economy of language. He reviewed books for the New York Review of Books and the Partisan Review and was a founding co-editor of the literary journal
Simic taught at the University of New Hampshire for thirty years. He was a professor emeritus at the university at the time of his death. In 2012, during his laureateship under the Obama administration, he described the ceremonial duties of the role — the receptions, the ribbon-cuttings — as "crap," while acknowledging the platform it gave him to talk about poetry with people who would otherwise never encounter it.
He is survived by his wife, a son from a previous marriage, and several grandchildren.
Simic's poetry does not easily yield paraphrase. Its power is in the particular — the exact weight of a phrase, the angle of an image — and any attempt to extract its argument into plain statement tends to flatten it into something that sounds like ordinary, if unsettling, observation. That is by design. Readers who find their way to his work tend to find it again, and again, and to find in it a record of something the usual forms of American writing do not quite capture: the texture of ordinary life under the knowledge of its fragility.
Simic's death was reported by multiple outlets on 9 January 2023.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Simic
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulitzer_Prize_for_Poetry
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Poet_Laureate