Swenson, May - Sue Russell (essay date 1994)
Sue Russell (essay date 1994)
SOURCE: "A Mysterious and Lavish Power: How Things Continue to Take Place in the Work of May Swenson," in The Kenyon Review, n.s., Vol. XVI, No. 3, Summer, 1994, pp. 128-39.
[In the following essay, Russell compares Swenson to other women poets such as Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, and Emily Dickinson and considers Swenson's refusal of the label "lesbian poet. "]
May Swenson, who died in 1989 at the age of seventysix, was a lover of riddles. She liked to write them as well as to solve them—the harder the better. Like the riddle poems she assembled in two books for young readers, all her poems have the capacity to tease and delight. "A poem is a thing," Swenson tells us in her introduction to one of these collections, More Poems to Solve (1972). Often based on intricate mechanisms that are not easily replicated, Swenson's poems seem more to have been constructed than composed. Excerpting them is...
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Criticism
- John Berryman (essay date 1956)
- Nat Hentoff (essay date 1958)
- Winfield Townley Scott (essay date 1959)
- Barbara Gibbs (essay date 1959)
- Anthony Hecht (essay date 1963)
- X. J. Kennedy (essay date 1964)
- Richard Howard (essay date 1966)
- May Swenson (essay date 1966)
- Peter Davison (essay date 1968)
- Ann Stanford (essay date 1969)
- Nancy Sullvian (essay date 1971)
- Alicia Ostriker (essay date 1978)
- Michael Heller (essay date 1988)
- Michael Collier (essay date 1991)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date 1992)
- Alfred Corn (essay date 1993)
- Sue Russell (essay date 1994)
- Grace Schulman (essay date 1994)
- Langdon Hammer (essay date 1995)
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