Background
Gardinier grew up in Scituate, Massachusetts.
Gardinier grew up in Scituate, Massachusetts.
She completed her Bachelor of Arts at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1981, and her Master of Fine Arts at Columbia University, in 1986.
She is the author of a long poem called The New World. Her work appears in The Kenyon Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and AGNI. SOMETIMES it seems sweetness exists in a voice. A child who sang, for whom life had no business being sweet.
"I had the fortune to sing well, and to sing in the church choir from the age of 5 until I was 16," said the young poet Suzanne Gardinier, whose new book of poems was awarded the yearly Pitt Prize by the University of Pittsburgh Press, who in it has taken on the choral voices of both city and land, as she circles the 50-mile radius from the foot of the statue of Columbus in Columbus Circle, and then out through New Jersey, New York and Long Island, calling back the ghosts of harvests past and trades untenable, and the souls of new immigrants just coming.
lieutenant is a book that does not look flinchingly at violence, whether between schoolchildren for whom nobody "turned a face to them judged/ their dispute wiped their cheeks sent them back to their lessons," or the men who cruelly, sensuously fight one another outside bars, the soldiers who forget even the old Greek sensuality of why they are fighting.
(Dialogue with the Archipelago Paperback Apr 01, 2009 Gard...)
She teaches at Sarah Lawrence College, is a member of Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists and Novelists association, and lives in Manhattan.