Delmore Schwartz (1913-1966) was one of the finest writers of his
generation. Winner of the prestigious Bollingen Prize and the Poetry
Society of America's Shelley Memorial Award, he was hailed by John
Ashbery as "one of the major twentieth-century poets." Schwartz's
stories were also widely read and loved, admired by James Atlas for
their "unique style that enabled Schwartz to depict his characters with
a sort of childlike verisimilitude." Graced with an introduction by
Cynthia Ozick, this New Directions Bibelot, Screeno: Stories & Poems,
gathers many of Schwartz's most popular works, including: "In Dreams
Begin Responsibilities," "America, America!" "The Heavy Bear who Goes
with Me," and "Screeno." Also included is a newly discovered story, "The
Heights of Joy," which appeared in the magazine Boulevard in 2002.
Delmore Schwartz's life is legendary. The brightest star of the
Partisan Review's post-war intellectual circle, a lecturer at Harvard
and Princeton, and perhaps the greatest poet of his generation, he was
stricken by a cruel mental illness and died after living in solitude in
a Manhattan hotel. Yet it is his work that endures: "What complicates
and enriches Schwartz's comedy," says Irving Howe, "is, I think, a
reaching out toward nobility, a shy aspiring spirituality, a moment or
two of achieved purity of feeling."