Helen Vendler (1933–2024) was a leading poetry critic and the author of nineteen books on poets from William Shakespeare to Seamus Heaney. A winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism, she contributed regularly to the New Yorker, the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Book Review, London Review of Books, and the New Republic. She was the Arthur Kingsley Porter University Professor at Harvard University.
It’s one of [Vendler’s] finest books, an impressive summation of a long, distinguished career in which she revisits many of the poets she has venerated over a lifetime and written about previously. Reading it, one can feel her happiness in doing what she loves best. There is scarcely a page in the book where there isn’t a fresh insight about a poet or poetry. -- Charles Simic * New York Review of Books * Vendler has done perhaps more than any other living critic to shape—I might almost say ‘create’—our understanding of poetry in English...Vendler brings fresh insights on Whitman, Yeats, Eliot, Bishop, Ammons, Ashbery and others, but the most crucial piece is the title essay, an argument to place the arts at the center of our educational system rather than its periphery: ‘After all, it is by their arts that cultures are principally remembered.’ And it’s through the work of exceptional critics like Vendler that those arts are made negotiable to the cultures that produced them. -- Joel Brouwer * New York Times Book Review * Poems are artifacts and [Vendler] shows us, often thrillingly, how those poems she considers the best specimens are made...A reader feels that she has thoroughly absorbed her subjects and conveys her understanding with candor, clarity, wit. -- John Greening * Times Literary Supplement * The formidable poetry critic Helen Vendler gathers together over two decades of essays, book reviews, and prose examining a broad range of nineteenth- and twentieth-century English, Irish, and American poets. Taken together, her writings serve as an eloquent argument for the necessity of poetry both in humanistic study and in modern life. -- Christine Emba * New Criterion * A generous collection of essays spanning 35 years..., by one of our best critics, is an event worth celebrating...Vendler claims, modestly, that readers including herself will always need a path into some poems and poets, and suggests that the function of criticism is to provide such a path. She does this splendidly, and creating such paths for contemporary poets who have not yet accumulated a body of interpretation for their work is a very special gift...These essays will be a pleasure for readers of poetry and a service to the poets Vendler chooses for her close readings. -- Elizabeth Greene * Times Higher Education * A new book by Helen Vendler is always occasion for gratitude, since for more than 50 years she has provided us with the most exacting writing about poetry of any American critic...She is at her best in commentaries on Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, James Merrill, and John Berryman...Vendler argues for the centrality of the arts in a humanities curriculum, since their demand for ‘subtlety of response’ can’t be duplicated. Her own essays are a vivid proof of what such response can look like. -- William H. Pritchard * Boston Globe * In this triumphant collection, Vendler reminds us why she is one of the most important living scholars of poetry...This book, with its oceans of depth, reminds us why we need poetry—as well as teachers like Vendler to bring it to transformative life. * Publishers Weekly (starred review) *