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Sue Lenier : ウィキペディア英語版
Sue Lenier

Susan Jennifer Lenier (born 9 October 1957) is an English writer. She published two books of poetry and a number of plays.
==Biography==
Sue Lenier was born in Birmingham, schooled in Tyneside, and attended Clare College, Cambridge. After graduating from Cambridge in 1980, she spend a year writing and performing in Germany and the UK before taking a Harkness Fellowship in the US, where she studied acting and drama at the University of California, Berkeley.〔
Her first published collection of poems, ''Swansongs'', was published in 1982. It received a favourable review in a British tabloid, the ''Daily Mirror'', and led to sometimes extravagant comparisons to William Shakespeare and Charles Baudelaire. She was hailed by some as a great new poet: Reed Whittemore, a former poetry consultant to the Library of Congress, praised her as "a musician-poet, wholly in love with rhythm and sound"; the late Malcolm Bowie of Queen Mary, University of London, called her "an important writer."〔 This positive praise was not universal: Christopher Reid, writing for ''The Sunday Times'', said that she was "a striving, clumsy, humorless imitator of antiquated modes, with nothing original to say, but an earnest desire to make impressive gestures." ''Swansongs'' was published while Lenier was studying in the United States, and the book and her author made enough of an impression to warrant articles by some of the best journalists of prestigious newspapers: D.J.R. Bruckner in the ''New York Times'' and Colman McCarthy in the ''Washington Post''.
She published a second volume of poems, ''Rain Following'', also with Oleander Press. While the popular press in America and England showed great interest in Sue Lenier and her work, literary critics and academics took no notice of her work, and only one of her poems, "Finale," from her first volume, has been anthologised.
Since then, her poetic career appears to have ended; the only known works by her have been for the stage. Reportedly, she wrote ''Doctor's Orders'', ''Eden Song'', and ''Knight Fall'', the last two first being performed at the Edinburgh Festival. In 1995, the ''New Statesman & Society'' published three of her poems, "Stardom," "Breakdown," and "Hospital Visit"; the magazine also reported a radio play, ''A Fool And His Heart'', was broadcast on Radio Three's ''Drama Now''. According to a British website, a screenplay by Will Davies about the writing of her first book whilst a student at Cambridge has been optioned by Universal Studios.

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