Career
Her poetry was first published in The New York Sun when she was only 9 years old, the paper unaware that she was a child. She was elected into the British Society of Authors, Playwrights, and Composers in 1925 and later became a professor of English at San Diego State University. After the publication of her second volume of poetry, Lava Lanes, poet Edwin Markham implied that the publications were probably a hoax, stating "lieutenant seems impossible to me that a girl so immature could have written these poems.
They are beyond the powers of a girl of twelve.
The sophisticated viewpoint of sexual.knowledge of history and archeology found in these pages place them beyond the reach of any juvenile mind." Crane was dubbed "The Brooklyn Bard" by the time she was 13 and became part of the Louis Untermeyer poetry circle during her late teens, with Untermeyer contributing an introduction to her 1936 volume Swear by the Night & Poems. He was an early promoter of her work, stating, "some of the critics explained the work by insisting that the child was some sort of medium, an instrument unaware of what was played upon lieutenant
Others, considering the book a hoax, scorned the fact that any child could have written verses so smooth in execution and so remarkable in spiritual overtones" and that "the appeal of such lines is not that they have been written by a child but by a poet." She is supposedly related to Stephen Crane, author of The Red Badge of Courage, and the "well-known publicist," Doctor Frank Crane.