- Jane Kenyon
Jane Kenyon (
May 23 ,1947 -April 22 ,1995 ) was an Americanpoet and translator. Her work is often characterized as simple, spare, and emotionally resonant.Life
Kenyon was born in 1947 in
Ann Arbor, Michigan , and grew up in themidwest . She earned a B.A. from theUniversity of Michigan in 1970 and an M.A. in 1972. She won aHopwood Award at Michigan. Also, while a student at the University of Michigan, Kenyon met the poetDonald Hall ; though he was some nineteen years her senior, she married him in 1972, and they moved to Eagle Pond Farm, his ancestral home in Wilmot,New Hampshire . Kenyon was New Hampshire'spoet laureate when she died in April 1995 fromleukemia .Career
Four collections of Kenyon's poems were published during her lifetime: "Constance" (1993), "Let Evening Come" (1990), "The Boat of Quiet Hours" (1986), and "From Room to Room" (1978). She spent some years translating the poems of
Anna Akhmatova from Russian into English (published as "Twenty Poems of Anna Akhmatova," 1985), and she championed translation as an important art at which every poet should try her hand. When she died, she was working on editing "Otherwise: New and Selected Poems", which was released posthumously in 1996. In 1999,Graywolf Press published "A Hundred White Daffodils: Essays, Interviews, the Akhmatova Translations, Newspaper Columns, and One Poem," which most reviewers regarded as less stellar than her previous work but worthwhile nonetheless. In 2004, Ausable Press published "Letters to Jane," a compilation of letters written by the poetHayden Carruth to Kenyon in the year between her diagnosis and her death.Kenyon's poems are filled with rural
India in the early 1990s led to a crisis of faith, as Hall (in introductions to her books and in his own memoirs),Alice Mattison , and her biographer John Timmerman have described..Her poem "Let Evening Come" was featured in the film "
In Her Shoes ", in a scene where the character played byCameron Diaz reads the poem to a blind nursing home resident.Bibliography
Books
*"From Room to Room". Cambridge: Alice James, 1978.
*"The Boat of Quiet Hours". Saint Paul: Graywolf, 1986.
*"Let Evening Come". Graywolf, 1990.
*"Constance". Graywolf, 1993.
*"Otherwise: New and Selected Poems". Graywolf, 1996.
*"A Hundred White Daffodils". Graywolf, 1999.
*"Collected Poems". Graywolf, 2005.References
*Mattison, Alice. "Let It Grow in the Dark Like a Mushroom: Writing with Jane Kenyon." "Michigan Quarterly Review" 39 (2000), 121-37. Reprinted in "Bright Unequivocal Eye": Poems, Papers and Remembrances from the First Jane Kenyon Conference", 11-26. New York: Peter Lang, 2000.
*Timmerman, John H. "Jane Kenyon: A Literary Life". Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002.External links
* [http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/361 Biography from the Academy of American Poets]
* [http://www.tear.com/poems/kenyon/ Three poems by Jane Kenyon]
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