All the Poems: Stevie Smith (Paperback)
**Book listings on our website do not always reflect the current availability of books on our store shelves. Check a book's in-store availability above the "add to cart" button. Or to be certain that a book you've found on our website is also here on our shelves, feel free to call us at 615-953-2243**
The essential edition of one of modern poetry’s most distinctive voices: all Stevie Smith’s flabbergasting poems, now in paperback
Stevie Smith is among the most popular British poets of the twentieth century. Her poem “Not Waving but Drowning” has been widely anthologized, and her life was celebrated in the classic movie Stevie. This new and updated edition includes hundreds of works from her thirty-five-year career. In addition to the poems and illustrations from all her published volumes, the Smith scholar Will May discovered never-before-published verses and provides fascinating details about their provenance. Satirical, mischievous, teasing, disarming, Stevie Smith’s poems take readers from comedy to tragedy and back again, while her line drawings are by turns unsettling and beguiling.
Stevie Smith (1902-1971) was born in Hull, England, but when she was three she moved with her parents and sister to Avondale Road in Palmers Green. Here she stayed for over sixty years, after her parents’ death living with her beloved “Lion Aunt.” She was the author of three novels and a dozen collections of poetry. Although baptized Florence Margaret Smith, she was nicknamed Stevie after Steve Donoghue the jockey.
Will May is author of Stevie Smith and Authorship (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Will May is author of Stevie Smith and Authorship (Oxford University Press, 2010)
A landmark volume brimming with wit, surprises, sardonic pleasures, and abiding compassion.
— Donna Seaman - Booklist (starred review)
She is a great poet because almost half a century after her death, her poems are more startling and bizarre than those of many poets who deliberately set out, as one suspects Smith never did, to be startling and bizarre.
— David Orr - The New York Times Book Review
A rare bird, a Maltese falcon. A more individual talent than Stevie Smith’s you don’t get.
— Clive James - The New Yorker
A poet who deserves a place, among her follow modernists, as one of the best, silly-serious, funny-sad, mock mock-heroic poets of our time.
— Angela Leighton - The Times Literary Supplement
Those crazy about this wonderful and strange poet will obviously want Will May's splendid All the Poems
— Michael Dirda - The Washington Post
Now, forty-five years after her death, bound inside this large annotated collection, [Smith] can be celebrated as a major English poet of the twentieth century. She is a writer of astonishing skill, range, comedy, and depth of feeling; she is inimitable, strange, and utterly original.
— Hermione lee - The New York Review of Books
That sense of the uncanny, the unheimlich or the peculiar, the grip of childhood terrors, the chance—perhaps our greatest fear—of never being known, the intimacy of wickedness, they are all here, in these poems.
— Cynthia Zarin - New Yorker
Smith’s great gift is to sit on our shoulder like a feisty bird that’s traveled a long distance, has been half starved on the way, and hopes your map will be a different from hers.
— Barbara Berman - The Rumpus
My senses sharpen at the words of Stevie Smith.
— Morrissey
I am a desperate Stevie Smith addict.
— Sylvia Plath
There is variety and inventiveness, much humor and understanding and a constant poignancy. Her gift was to create a peculiar emotional weather between the words, a sense of pity for what is infringed and unfulfilled. Death, waste, loneliness, cruelty, the maimed, the stupid, the innocent, the trusting—her concerns were central ones, her compassion genuine and her vision almost tragic.
— Seamus Heaney
— Donna Seaman - Booklist (starred review)
She is a great poet because almost half a century after her death, her poems are more startling and bizarre than those of many poets who deliberately set out, as one suspects Smith never did, to be startling and bizarre.
— David Orr - The New York Times Book Review
A rare bird, a Maltese falcon. A more individual talent than Stevie Smith’s you don’t get.
— Clive James - The New Yorker
A poet who deserves a place, among her follow modernists, as one of the best, silly-serious, funny-sad, mock mock-heroic poets of our time.
— Angela Leighton - The Times Literary Supplement
Those crazy about this wonderful and strange poet will obviously want Will May's splendid All the Poems
— Michael Dirda - The Washington Post
Now, forty-five years after her death, bound inside this large annotated collection, [Smith] can be celebrated as a major English poet of the twentieth century. She is a writer of astonishing skill, range, comedy, and depth of feeling; she is inimitable, strange, and utterly original.
— Hermione lee - The New York Review of Books
That sense of the uncanny, the unheimlich or the peculiar, the grip of childhood terrors, the chance—perhaps our greatest fear—of never being known, the intimacy of wickedness, they are all here, in these poems.
— Cynthia Zarin - New Yorker
Smith’s great gift is to sit on our shoulder like a feisty bird that’s traveled a long distance, has been half starved on the way, and hopes your map will be a different from hers.
— Barbara Berman - The Rumpus
My senses sharpen at the words of Stevie Smith.
— Morrissey
I am a desperate Stevie Smith addict.
— Sylvia Plath
There is variety and inventiveness, much humor and understanding and a constant poignancy. Her gift was to create a peculiar emotional weather between the words, a sense of pity for what is infringed and unfulfilled. Death, waste, loneliness, cruelty, the maimed, the stupid, the innocent, the trusting—her concerns were central ones, her compassion genuine and her vision almost tragic.
— Seamus Heaney