Karen Swenson (born July 29, 1936 New York City) is an American poet and journalist.
She grew up in Chappaqua, New York, and studied at Barnard College and New York University.
Swenson has been Poet-in-Residence at Skidmore College, the University of Idaho, Denver University, Clark University, Scripps College and Barnard College. She taught at City College, New York.
Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Beloit Poetry Journal, Paris Review, American Poetry Review, "Saturday Review", and "The New Yorker".
We read the same books as children- Kipling,
Haggard, Stevenson- and dreamt adventure,
but they went off, the boys, to munch on sago
...
They've come on board their grocery baskets full
to gossip and shake off the clinging sand
from bare feet and vegetables. They pull
...
In a museum of the city
once called Saigon, are snapshots. One's
been blown up so we can all see
it clearly. An American,
...
The point of clothes was line
a shallow fall of cotton over childish hips
or a coat ruled sharply, shoulder to hem
...
The sheets and nightgowns semaphore a breeze,
next door to Kali's multicolored dome,
the sun-bleached, tattered signals from the dying.
...