Description
Salon compared the poems in Ryan's last collection to "Faberge eggs, tiny, ingenious devices that inevitably conceal some hidden wonder." The exquisite poems in The Niagara River provide similarly hidden gems. Bafflingly effective, they seem too brief and blithe to pack so much wallop. Intense and relaxed at once, both buoyant and rueful, their singular music appeals to many people. Her poems, products of an immaculately off-kilter mind, have been featured everywhere from the Sunday funnies to New York subways to plaques at the zoo to the pages of The New Yorker.
Reviews
"Ryan's poems make a singular, angular music that's not quite like any you've heard, with sharp edges, densities of sound and syntax that can acquire the most mysterious clarity, and rhymes that come at you in the same off-kilter way that the observations do. These poems feel as if they were built to last, and they have the passion, precision, and sheer weirdness to do so." Christian Wiman, editor of Poetry, from the citation accompanying The Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize
"Her poems are compact, exhilarating, strange affairs, like Erik Satie miniatures or Joseph Cornell boxes. She is an anomaly in today's literary culture: as intense and elliptical as Dickinson, as buoyant and rueful as Frost." J.D. McClatchy
"Ryan's poems leave the reader elevated or changed or moved but at a loss to say exactly how this effect has been wrought. It's like arm wrestling with the scrawny kid in the schoolyard who pins you before you know what's happened." David Yezzi, Poetry
"Full-brained poems in a largely half-brained world." Kirkus Reviews
"It's not Ryan's logic that makes her poems breathe fire, it's her illogic, delivered with calm precision, like a masterful change-up pitch." Kate Moos, Ruminator Review
"I can't think of another poet who makes me laugh as often as she makes me ponder the imponderables." Laura Miller, Salon
"Ryan brazenly questions the extent to which we are in control of, and thus responsible for, our own and others' suffering. Her work . . . operates in an American tradition stretching from Dickinson through Stevens and Frost to Ammons and Bronk, where fidelity to the natural world works as a scrim for staging such self-exploration. . . . Empathic and wryly unforgiving of the human condition, the poems are equal parts pith and punch. The effect is bracing." Publishers Weekly
Book Information
ISBN 9780802142221
Author Kay Ryan
Format Paperback
Page Count 96
Imprint Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Publisher Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Weight(grams) 141g